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A40672 The history of the worthies of England who for parts and learning have been eminent in the several counties : together with an historical narrative of the native commodities and rarities in each county / endeavoured by Thomas Fuller.; History of the worthies of England Fuller, Thomas, 1608-1661.; Fuller, John, b. 1640 or 41. 1662 (1662) Wing F2441; ESTC R6196 1,376,474 1,013

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making I behold his as the second accounting the Lord Tiptoft the first noble hand which since the decay of Learning took a Pen therein to be Author of a Book He dyed on the 16. of March 1532. and is buryed in the great church in Calice And I have read that the estate of the Berners is by an Heir-general descended to the Knyvets of ●…shwelthorp in Norfolk Since the Reformation ROGER HUTCHINSON was born in this County and bred Fellow of St. Johns Colledge in Cambridge where he was very familiar with Mr. Roger Askam who disdained Intimacy with Dunces And as this is euough to speak him Scholar so it is a sufficient Evidence to an Intelligent Jury to prove him Protestant that being commended by Bale for writing a book in English of the Image of God he is wholly omitted by John Pits He flourished Anno Dom. 1550. and probably dyed in the happy Reign of Edward the sixth before the following persecution THOMAS CARTVVRIGHT was born in this County and was admitted in St. Johns Colledge in Cambridge Anno 1550. In the Reign of Queen Mary he left the University being probably one of those Scholars which as Mr. Fox observeth went alias were driven away from this Colledge all at one time and betook himself to the service of a Counsellour Here he got some skill in the Common-Law which inabled him afterwards to fence the better for himself by the advantage thereof In the Reign of Queen Elizabeth he returned to Cambridge was chosen Fellow first of St. Iohns then of Trinity How afterwards he was made Margaret Professour outed thereof for his Non-conformity travelled beyond Seas returned home became the Champion of the Presbyterian partie is largely related in our Ecclesiastical History Onely I will add that the Non conformists not a greeing which of them where there is much choice there is no choice should answer Dr. Whitgifts Reply I read that Mr. Cartwright at last was chosen by lot to undertake it It seems the Brethren concluded it of high and holy concernment otherwise I know what Mr. Cartwright hath written of the appeal to Lots Non nisi in rebus gravioribus alic●…jus magni momenti ad sortis judicium recurrendumm maxime cum per sortem Deus ipse in judicio sedeat One saith for riches he sought them not and another saith that he dyed rich and I beleive both ●…ay true God sometimes making Wealth to find them who seek not for it seeing many and great were his Benefactors He dyed and was buryed in Warwick where he was Master of the Hospital Anno. 1603. DANIEL DIKE was born at Hempstead in this County where his Father was a Minister silenced for his Non-conformity He was bred in ....... Colledge in Cambridge and became afterwards a profitable Labourer in Gods Vineyard Witness besides his Sermons his worthy books whereof that is the Master-peice which treateth of the deceitfulnesse of mans heart wherein he layes down directions for the Discovery thereof As also how in other Cases one may be acquainted with his own Condition seeing many men lose themselves in the Labyrinths of their own hearts so much is the Terra incognita therein This Book he designed for his pious Patron John Lord Harrington But alas when the Child was come to the Birth there was no strength to bring forth before the Book was fully finished the Author thereof followed his honourable Patron into a better World so that his Surviving brother of whom immediately set it forth And to the Lady Lucy Countesse of Bedford the Lords Sister the same was dedicated A Book which will be owned for a Truth whilst men have any badness and will be honoured for a Treasure wilst men have any goodnesse in them This Worthy man dyed about the Year 1614. JEREMIAH DIKE his Younger Brother was bred in Sidney Colledge in Cambridge beneficed at Epping in Essex one of a chearful Spirit And know Reader that an Ounce of Mirth with the same degree of Grace will serve God farther then a pound of Sadnesse He had also a gracious heart and was very profitable in his Ministry He was a Father to some good Books of his own and a Guardian to those of his Brother whose Posthume Works he set forth He was one peaceable in Israel And though no Zelot in the practice of Ceremonies quietly submitted to use them He lived and dyed piously being buryed in his own Parish-Church Anno Dom. 1620. ARTHUR CAPEL Esquire of Had●…m in this County was by King Charls the first created a Baron 1641. He served the King with more Valour and Fidelity then Success during the Civil Wars in the Marches of Wales After the Surrender of Oxford he retired to his own house in this Shire and was in some sort well cured of the so then reputed Disease of Loyalty when he fell into a Relaps by going to Colcbester which cost him his life beheaded in the Palace Yard in Westminster 1648. In his Life time he wrote a book of Meditation published since his death wherein much judicious piety may be discovered His mortified mind was familiar with afflictions which made him to appear with such 〈◊〉 Resolution on the Scaffold where he seemed rather to fright Death then to be frighted with it Hence one not unhappily alluding to his Arms a Lyon Rampant in a Field Gules betwixt three Crosses thus expresseth himself Thus Lion-like Capel undaunted stood Beset with crosses in a Field of Blood A Learned Dr. in Physick present at the opening and embalming of him and Duke Hambleton delivered it at a publike Lecture that the Lord Capels was the least Heart whilst the Dukes w●…s the greatest he ever beheld Which al●…o is very proportionable to the Observation in Philosophy that the Spirits contracted in a lesser model are the cause of the greater courage God hath since been the Husband to His Widow who for her goodnesse may be a Pattern to her Sexe and Father to his Children whom not so much their Birth Beauty and Portions as Vertues married to the best Bloods and Estates in the Land even when the Royalists were at the lowest condition EDVVARD SYMONDS born at Cottered in this County was bred in Peter House in Cambridge where he commenced Master of Arts afterwards Minister of Little Rayne in Essex a man strict in his Life and profitable in his preaching wherein he had a plain and piercing faculty Being sequestred from his Living for siding with the King with David 1 Sam. 23. 13. He went wheresoever he could go to Worcester Exeter Barnstable France and lastly returned to London He wrote a Book in VINDICATION OF KING CHARLES and was Instrumental in setting forth his Majesties book called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pens were brondished betwixt him and Mr. Stephen Marshal though all was fair betwixt them before his Death For Mr. Symonds visited him lying in his bed at Westminster told him Had I taken you for a
Tattered Cowle a Shirt of Hair a Girdle of Hempe a Pair of Beads a Plain Crucifix and Picture of some Saint passed for all the wealth and Wardrobe of a Friar yet by hearing Feminine Confessions wherewith Wilton twitteth them and abusing the Key of Absolution they opened the Coffers of all the Treasure in the Land He wrot also a smart Book on this subject An validi Mendicantes sint in 〈◊〉 Perfectionis Whether Friars in health and Begging be in the state of perfection The Anti-Friarists maintaining that such were Rogues by the Laws of God and Man and fitter for the House of Correction then State of Perfection This Dean Wilton flourished Anno Dom. 1460. Since the Reformation WILLIAM HOREMAN was saith my Author Patria Sarisburiensis which in the Strictest sence may be rendred born in the City in the Largest born in the Diocess of Salisbury and in the Middle-sence which I most embrace born in Wiltshire the County wherein Salisbury is situated He was bred saith Bale first in Eaton then in Kings-colledge in Cambridge both which I doe not deny though propably not of the Foundation his name not appearing in the exact Catalogue thereof Returning to Eaton he was made Vice-Provost thereof where he spent the remainder of his 〈◊〉 He was one of the most Generall Scholars of his age as may appear by the Diffusiveness of his Learning and Books written in all Faculties Grammar   Of Orthography Poetry   Of the Quantities of penultime syllables History   A Chronicle with a Comment on some Index of most Chronicles Controversial Divinity A Comment on Gabriel Biel. Case   On the divorce of King Henry the eighth Hnsbandry   A Comment on Cato Varro Columella Palladius de Re Rusticâ Other books he left unfinished for which Bale sends forth a sorrowfull sigh with a Proh Dolor which his passion is proof enough for me to place this Horeman on this side of the line of Reformation He dyed April 12. 1535. and lieth buried in the Chappel of Eaton Masters of Musick WILLAM LAWES son of Thomas Lawes a Vi●…ar Choral of the Church of Salisbury was bred in the Close of that City being from his Childhood inclined to Musick Edward Earl of Hertford obtained him from his Father and bred him of his own cost in that Faculty under his Master Giovanni Coperario an Italian and most Exquisite Musician Yet may it be said that the Schollar in time did Equal yea Exceed his Master He afterwards was of the Private Musick to King Charles and was respected and beloved of all such Persons who cast any looks towards Vertue and Honour Besides his Fancies of the three four five and six parts to Vyol and Organ he made above thirty severall sorts of Musick for Voyces and Instruments neither was there any Instrument then in use but he composed to it so aptly as if he had only studied that In these distracted times his Loyalty ingaged him in the War for his Lord and Master and though he was by Generall Gerrard made a Commissary on designe to secure him such Officers being commonly shot-free by their place as not Exposed to danger yet such the activity of his Spirit he disclaimed the Covert of his Office and betrayed thereunto by his own adventurousness was casually shot at the Siege of Chester the same time when the Lord Bernard Stuart lost his life Nor was the Kings soul so ingrossed with gr●…ef for the death of so near a Kinsman and Noble a Lord but that hearing of the death of his dear servant William Laws he had a particular Mourning for him when dead whom he loved when living and commonly called the Father of Musick I leave the rest of his worth to be expressed by his own Works of Composures of Psalms done joyntly by him and his brother Master Henry Laws betwixt which two no difference either in Eminency Affection or otherwise considerable save that the one is deceased and the other still surviving Master William Laws dyed in September 164. Benefactours to the Publique T. STUMPS of the Town of Malmesbury in this County was in his Age one of the most eminent Clothiers in England of whom there passeth a story told with some variation of circumstances but generally to this purpose King Henry the eighth Hunting near Malmesbury in Bredon Forrest came with all his Court Train unexpected to Dine with this Clothier But great House-keepers are as seldome surprised with Guests as vigilant Captains with Enemies Stumps commands his little Army of Workmen which he fed daily in his house to fast one Meal untill night which they might easily doe without indangering their health and with the same Provision gave the King and his Court-train though not so delicious and various most wholesome and plentifull entertainment But more Authentick is what I read in the great Antiquary speaking of the plucking down of Malmesbury Monastery The very Minster it self should have sped no better then the rest but being Demolished had not T. Stumps a wealthy Clothier by much suit but with a greater summe of Money redeemed and bought it for the Iowns-men his Neighbours by whom it was converted to a Parish-church and for a great part is yet standing at this day I find one William Stumps Gentleman who in the one and thirtieth year of King Henry the eight bought of him the demeans of Malmesbury Abby for fifteen hundred pound two shillings and a half penny Now how he was related to this T. Stumps whether son or father is to me unknown It will not be a sin for me to wish more branches from such Stumps who by their bounty may preserve the Monuments of Antiquity from destruction Memorable Persons SUTTON of 〈◊〉 Tradition and an old Pamphlet newly vamped with Additions make him a great Clothier Entertaining King Henry the first and bequeathing at his death one hundred pounds to the Weavers of Salisbury with many other benefactions I dare not utterly deny such a person and his bountifull Gifts but am ●…ured that he is notoriously mis-timed seeing Salisbury had scarce a stone laid therein one hundred years after King Henry the first and as for old Sarum that age knew nothing of Clothing as we have proved before Thus these Mungrell Pamphlets part true part false doe most mischief Snakes are less dangerous then Lampries seeing none will feed on what is known to be poison But these books are most pernicious where truth and falshoods are blended together and such a Medly Cloth is the Tale-story of this Clothier MICHEL born at ........... in this County was Under-sheriffe to Sir Anthony Hungarford a worthy Knight Anno 1558. in the last year of Queen Mary Of this Master Michel I find this Character A right and a perfect godly man Under sheriffs generally are complained of as over-crafty to say no worse of them but it seems hereby the place doth not spoil the person but the person the
partial Reflections CHAP. XIX Of the Number of Modern Shires or Counties in England And why the WORTHIES in this Work are digested County-wayes I Say Modern not meaning to meddle with those antiquated ones which long since have lost their Names and bounds as Winchelcomb-shire united to Gloucester-shire Howdon-Shire annexed to York-shire and Hexham-Shire to Northumberland As little do we intend to touch on those small Tracts of Ground the County of Poole and the like being but the extended Limits and Liberties of some Incorporations We add Shires or Counties using the words promiscuously as the same in sense I confess I have heard some Criticks making this distinction betwixt them that such are Shires which take their Denomination from some principal Town as Cambridgeshire Oxford-shire c. Whilest the rest not wearing the Name of any Town are to be reputed Counties as Norfolk Suffolk c. But we need not go into Wales to confute their Curiosity where we meet Merioneth-shire and Glamorgan-shire but no Towns so termed seeing Devon-shire doth discompose this their English Conceit I say English Shires and Counties being both Comitatus in Latine Of these there be nine and thirty at this day which by the thirteen in Wales are made up fifty two England largely taken having one for every Week in the year Here let me tender this for a real Truth which may seem a Paradoxe that there is a County in England which from the Conquest till the year 1607 when Mr. Camdens last Latine Britannia was set forth never had Count or Earl thereof as hereby may appear In his Conclusion of Bark-shire Immediately it followeth Haec de Bark shire quae hactenus Comitis honore insignivit neminem In hujus Comitatus complexu sunt Parochiae 140. Now this may seem the more strange because Comes and Comitatus are relative But under favour I humbly conceive that though Bark shire never had any Titular Honourary or Hereditary Earl till the year 1620. when Francis Lord Norris was created first Earl thereof yet had it in the Saxons time when it was first modelled into a Shire an Officiary Count whose Deputy was termed Vice-comes as unto this day Why the Worthies in this Work are digested County-ways First this Method of Marshalling them is new and therefore I hope neverthelesse acceptable Secondly it is as informative to our judgements to order them by Counties according to their place as by Centuries so oft done before according to the time seeing WHERE is as essential as WHEN to a mans being Yea both in some sort may be said to be jure divino understand it ordered by Gods immediate providence and therefore are coupled together by the Apostle Acts 17. 26. And hath determined the times before appointed and the bounds of their habitation If of their habitation in general then more especially of the most important place of their Nativity The Spirit of God in Scripture taketh signal notice hereof The Lord shall count when he writes up the people That this man was born there Philip was of Bethsaida the City of Andrew and Peter and all know how St. Paul got his best Liberty where he saw the first light in Tarsus a City of Cilicia When Augustus C●…ar issued out a decree to taxe the whole World it was ordered therein that every own should go into his own City as the most compendious way to prevent confusion and effectually to advance the businesse I find the same to expedite this work by methodizing the Worthies therein according to the respective places of their Nativities If some conceive it a pleasant sight in the City of London to behold the Natives of the several Shires after the hearing of a Sermon passe in a decent equipage to some Hall there to dine together for the continuance and increase of Love and Amity amongst them Surely this Spectacle will not seem unpleasant to ingenuous Eyes to see the Heroes of every particular County modelled in a body together and marching under the Banners of their several Eminencies Here may you behold how each County is Innated with a particular Genius inclining the Natives thereof to be dexterous some in one profession some in another one carrying away the credit for Souldiers another for Seamen another for Lawyers another for Divines c. as I could easily instance but that I will not forestall the Readers Observation seeing some love not a Rose of anothers gathering but delight to pluck it themselves Here also one may see how the same County was not always equally fruitful in the production of worthy persons but as Trees are observed to have their bearing and barren years So Shires have their rise and fall in affording famous persons one age being more fertile then another as by annexing the dates to their several Worthies will appear In a word my serious desire is to set a noble emulation between the several Counties which should acquit themselves most eminent in their memorable off spring Nor let a smaller Shire be disheartned herein to contest with another larger in extent and and more populous in persons seeing Viri do not always hold out in proportion to Homines Thus we find the Tribe of Simeon more numerous than any in Israel Judah and Dan only excepted as which at their coming out of Egypt afforded no fewer than fifty nine thousand and three hundred Yet that Tribe did not yeild Prince Preist Prophet or any remarkable person Apocrypha Judith only excepted Multi gregarii pauci egregii and Multitude with Amplitude is never the true Standard of Eminency as the judicious Reader by perusing and comparing our County Catalogues will quickly perceive A Case of Concernment propounded and submitted to the Equity of the Reader It is this Many Families time out of mind have been certainly fixed in eminent Seats in their respective Counties where the Ashes of their Ancestors sleep in quiet and their Names are known with honour Now possibly it may happen that the chief Mother of that Family travelling in her Travel by the way side or by some other Casualty as visit of a friend c. May there be delivered of the Heir of her Family The Question is whether this Child shall be reputed the Native of that place where his Mother accidentally touched or where his Father and the Father of his Fathers have landed for many Generations On the one side it seemeth unreasonable to any man according to his Historical conscience that such a casual case should carry away the Sole credit of his Nativity This allowed tota Anglia Londinizabit a Moiety almost of the Eminent Persons in this Modern age will be found born in that City as the Inn-general of the Gentry and Nobility of this Nation Whether many come to prosecute Law-Suits to see and to be seen and on a hundred other occasions among which I will not name saving of house-keeping in the Countrey One Instance of many I find
Fathers as if some Peculiar Blessing attended them whilst they continue therein Thus of the Prelatical Clergy we have Francis Godwin a Bishop the Son of a bishop and Doctor John King Son to his Reverend Father the Bishop of London And of other Clergy men we have three Generations of the wards in Suffolk As many of the Shutes in York shire no lesse painful then pious and able in their Professions Let me add that there were at one time 3 Fellows of Kings Colledge Sons of eminent Divines and afterwards Doctors of Divinity 1 Samuel Collings 2 Thomas Goad 3 William Sclater And I believe there were not severally in their Generations men more signal in their different Eminencies It is easie for any to guess out of what Quiver this Envenomed Arrow was first shot against the Children of Clergy men namely from the Church of Rome Who in their Jurisdiction forbid the Banes of all Clergymen against the Law of Nature Scripture and the practice of the Primitive Church And in other places unsubjected to their power bespatter the posterity of the Clergy with their scandalous Tongues Yet be it known unto them the Sons of English Priests or Presbyters may be as good as the Nephews of Roman Cardinals However because Antidotes may be made of poysons it is possible that Good may be extracted out of this false Report Namely if it maketh Clergy-men more careful to go before their Children with good Examples to lead them with good Instructions to drive and draw them if need so requireth with Moderate Correction seasonably used putting up both Drye and Wet Prayers to God for his Blessing on their children As also if it maketh the children of Clergy-men to be more careful by their circumspect lives to be no shame to the Memory and Profession of their Fathers CHAP. XXI General Rules for the AUTHOR and READERS Ease I Have ranked all persons under their respective Titles according to their Seniorities of the ages they lived in Good the method of the Sons of Jacob sitting down at the Table of their unknown brother Joseph the first according to his Birthright and the Youngest according to his Youth If therefore on this account a mean man take place of a mighty Lord the later as being dead I am sure will not and the Living Reader should not be offended thereat Of the Dates of Time annexed to the Persons and their Actions The Sun that Glorious Creature doth serve Mankind for a double use to lighten their Eyes with his Beams and Minds with his Motion The later is performed by him as appointed for Signs and for Seasons as he is the great Regulator of Time joynted into Years and Months carved into Weeks and Dayes minced into Hours and Minutes At what a sad loss are such who living in Lone Houses in a Gloomy Winter Day when the Sun doth not at all appear have neither the benefit of Watches Silent Clocks nor of Clocks Speaking Watches being ready oft-times to mistake Noon for Night and Night for Noon Worse Errors are committed by those who being wholy ignorant in Chronology set the Grand-children before their Grandfathers and have more HysteronProterons than of all other Figures in their Writings The Maxime He who distinguisheth well instructeth well is most true in the observing of the Distinction of time It will pose the best Clerk to read yea to spel that Deed wherein Sentences Clauses Words and Letters are without Points or Stops all continued together The like Confusion ariseth when persons and their actions are not distanced by Years nor pointed with the periods of Generations I have endevoured in my following work to Time Eminent Persons by one of these Notations First that of their Morning or Nativity the second that of their Noon or Flourishing the last that of their Night or Death The first is very uncertain many Illustrious Men being of obscure Extraction The second more conspicuous when Mens Lustre attracts many Eyes to take Notice of them Many see the Oake when grown especially if a standard of Remark whilst few if any remember the Acorn when it was set The last is not the least Direction as which is generally observed It cometh to pass somtimes that their Deaths acquaint us with their births viz. when attended on their Tomb with Intelligence of their age so that by going backward so many years from their Coffins we infallibly light on their Cradles Some Persons in our Works are notified by all of these Indications most with two and all with one of them When we find a Contest amongst Chronologers so that with the mutinous Ephesians some cry one thing and some another being as much dispersed in their Opinions as the Amorites in their Persons when defeated by Saul so that two of them were not left together in such a case I have pitched on that Date under correction of better judgements which seemed to me of greatest Probability An Apology for Qualificatives used and Blanks left in this History I approve the plain Country By-word as containing much Innocent Simplicity therein Almost and very nigh Have saved many a Lie So have the Latines their prope fere juxta circiter plus minus used in matters of fact by the most authentick Historians Yea we may observe that the Spirit of Truth it self where Numbers and Measures are concerned in Times Places and Persons useth the aforesaid Modificatives save in such cases where some mystery contained in the number requireth a particular specification thereof In times In places In persons Dan. 5. 33. Darius being about threescore and two years old Luk. 24. 13. From Jerusalem about sixty furlongs Exod. 12. 37. About six hundred thousand men on foot Luke 3. 23. Jesus began to be about thirty years of age Joh. 6. 19. Had rowed about five and twenty furlongs Act. 2. 41. Added to the church about 3 thousand 〈◊〉 None therefore can justly find fault with me if on the like occasion I have secured my self with the same Qualificatives Indeed such Historians who grind their Intelligence to the powder of fraction pretending to cleave the pin do sometimes misse the But. Thus one reporteth how in the Persecution under Dioclesian there were neither under nor over but just nine hundred ninety nine Martyrs Yea generally those that Trade in such Retail-ware and deal in such small parcells may by the ignorant be commended for their Care but condemned by the judicious for their ridiculous curiosity But such who will forgive the use of our foresaid Qualificatives as but limping and lamenesse will perchance not pardon the many blanks which occur in this Book accounting them no better then our Flat fallingto the ground in default of our Industry where they found their best preferment especially if Convents or Dignities of signal note as Henry of Huntington not born but Arch-Deacon there William of Malmsbury and Matthew of Westminster no Natives of those Towns but Monks of the Monasteries therein However
prophecy or this prophetical menace to be not above six score yeares old and of Popish extraction since the Reformation It whispereth more then it dare speak out and points at more then it dares whisper and fain would intimate to credulous persons as if the blessed Virgin offended with the English for abolishing her Adoration watcheth an opportunity of Revenge on this Nation And when her day being the five and twentieth of March and first of the Gregorian year chanceth to fall on the day of Christs Resurrection then being as it were fortified by her Sons assistance some signal judgment is intended to our State and Church-men especially Such Coincidence hath hap'ned just fifteen times since the Conquest as Elias Ashmole Esquire my worthy friend and Learned Mathematician hath exactly computed it and we will examine by our Chronicles whether on such yeares any signal fatalities befell England A. D. Anno Reg. D. L. G. N. Signal Disasters 1095 W. Rufus 8. G 13 K. Rufus made a fruitless invasion of Wales 1106 H. first 6. G 5 K. Hen. subdueth Normandy and D. Robert his Brother 1117 H. first 17. G 16 He forbiddeth the Popes Legate to enter England 1190 R. first 2. G 13 K. Richard conquereth Cyprus in his way to Palestine 1201 K. John 2. G 5 The French invade Normandy 1212 K. John 13. G 16 K. John resigneth his Kingdom to the Pope 1285 Ed. first 13. G 13 Nothing remarkable but Peace and Plenty 1296 Ed. first 24. AG 5 War begun with Scotland which ended in Victory 1380 R. second 4. AG 13 The Scots do much harm to us at Peryth Fair. 1459 H. sixth 38. G 16 Lancastrians worsted by the Yorkists in fight 1543 H. eighth 34. G 5 K. Henry entred Scotland and burnt Edenburgh Hitherto this Proverb hath had but intermitting truth at the most seeing no constancy in sad casualties But the sting will some say is in the taile thereof and I behold this Proverb born in this following year 1554 Q. Mary 2. G 16 Q. Mary setteth up Popery and Martyreth Protestants 1627 Charles 3. G 13 The unprosperous Voyage to the Isle of Rees 1638 Charles 14. G 5 The first cloud of trouble in Scotland 1649   G 16 The first complete year of the English Common-wealth or Tyranny rather which since blessed be God is returned to a Monarchy The concurrence of these two dayes doth not return till the year 1722. and let the next generation look to the effects thereof I have done my part in shewing remitting to the Reader the censuring of these occurrences Sure I am so sinfull a Nation deserves that every year should be fatal unto it But it matters not though our Lady falls in our Lords lap whilst our Lord sits at his Fathers right hand if to him we make our addresses by serious repentance When HEMPE is Spun England is Done Though this Proverb hath a different Stamp yet I look on it as Coined by the same Mint Master with the former and even of the same Age. It is faced with a Literal but would be Lined with a Mysticall sense When Hemp is Spun that is when all that necessary Commodity is imployed that there is no more left for Sailes and Cordage England whose strength consists in Shipping would be reduced to a Doleful Condition But know under HEMPE are Couched the Initial Letters of Henry the 8. Edward the 6. Mary Philip and Elizabeth as if with the Life of the last the Happiness of England should expire which time hath confuted Yet to keep this Proverb in Countenance it may pretend to some Truth because then England with the Addition of Scotland lost its name in Great Brittain by Royal Proclamation When the Black Fleet of NORVVAY is come and gone ENGLAND Build Houses of Lime and Stone For after Wars you shall have none There is a Larger Edition hereof though this be large enough for us and more then we can well understand Some make it fulfilled in the eighty eight when the Spanish-Fleet was beaten the Sur-name of whose King as a Learned Author doth observe was NORVVAY Others conceive it called the Black Fleet of Norway because it was never black not dismall to others but wofull to its own Apprehension till beaten by the English and forced into those Coasts according to the English Historian They betook themselves to Flight leaving Scotland on the West and bending towards Norway ill advised But that necessity urged and God had Infatuated their Councells to put their shaken and battered bottoms into those Black and Dangerous Seas I observe this the rather because I believe Mr. Speed in this his Writing was so far from having a Reflexion on that I Question whether ever I had heard of this Prophecy It is true that afterwards England built houses of Lime and Stone and our most handsome and Artificiall Buildings though formerly far greater and stronger bear their date from the defeating of the Spanish Fleet. As for the Remainder After Wars you shall have none We find it false as to our Civil Wars by our woful Experience And whether it be true or false as to Forreign Invasions hereafter we care not at all as beholding this prediction either made by the wild fancy of one foolish man and then why should this many wise men attend thereunto or else by him who alwaies either speaks what is false or what is true with an intent to deceive So that we will not be ellated with good or dejected with bad success of his fore-telling England is the ringing Island Thus it is commonly call'd by Foreigners as having greater moe and more tuneable Bells than any one County in Christendom Italy it self not excepted though Nola be there and Bells so called thence because first founded therein Yea it seems our Land is much affected with the love of them and loth to have them carryed hence into forreign parts whereof take this eminent instance When Arthur Bulkley the covetous Bishop of Bangor in the Reign of King Henry the eighth had sacrilegiously sold the five fair Bels of his Cathedral to be transported beyond the Seas and went down himself to see them shipp'd they suddenly sunk down with the Vessell in the Haven and the Bishop fell instantly blind and so continued to the day of his death Nought else have I to observe of our English Bells save that in the memory of man they were never known so long free from the sad sound of Funerals of general infection God make us sensible of and thankfull for the same When the sand feeds the clay England cryes Well a-day But when the clay feeds the sand it is merry with England As Nottingham-shire is divided into two parts the sand and the clay all England falls under the same Dicotomie yet so as the sand hardly amounteth to the Fifth part thereof Now a wet year which drowneth and chilleth the clay makes the sandy ground most fruitfull with corn and
Esq. Holms Vert a Ch. between 3 Lions-heads Erazed O●… Billited G. 14 Rog. Burgoyne * Sutton   15 Oliv. Luke Kr. ut prius * G a Chev. Or between 3 Talbots on Chief embattled Arg. as many martlets S. 16 Edw. Conquest K●… ut prius   17 Ge. Keynsham Es.     18 Fran. Stanton Es. Birchmor   19 Will. Bryers Esq. Woodbery   20 Will. Hawkins Es. Tilbrook   21 Fran. Clerke Kt.     22 Math. Denton Es. Barton   CAR. I. REX     Anno     1 Ioh. Wingate esq Harlingtō S. a Bend Erm. Cotized Or betw 6 martlets Arg. 2 Edw. Gostwick kt ut prius   3 Ioh. Moore esq     4 Anth. Chester ba.   P●…r pale Ar. S. a Chev. betw 3 ●…ams-heads ervsed armed Or within a horderingrailed roundly all counterchanged 5 Mich. Grigg esq     6 Will. Cater esq * Kempston   7 Edm. Anderson ut prius   8 Ia. Beverley esq † Clapwell * Erm. an a Pile G. a Lion Pass Gard. Or. 9 Oufl Winch esq Everton   10 Hum. Monoux es Wootton † E●…mine a Rose Gules 11 Rich. Gery esq Bushmede   12 Hen. Chester esq ut prius   13 Will. Boteler esq ut prius   14 Will. Plomer esq ut prius   15 Rich. Child esq Puddingtō G. a Chev. engrailed Erm. twixt 3 Doves Arg. 16 Ioh. Burgogne es ut prius   17 Tho. Alflon Kt. b. Wodhill Azure ten Stars Or. 18     19     20 Nich. Denton esq     21     22 Math. Taylor esq Eaton   The Farewell Being to take my farewell of this County I am minded of the mistake what Writer is free from them in Mr. Stow telling us of tide-boats till-boats and barges which come from Bedford-shire down the Thames to London which surely must row over many miles of drie-land in their passage thereunto But if there be a possibility of such a conveyance by art and industry to be effected may his words prove true by way of prediction seeing certainly such a conveniency must needs be advantagious to this County BUCKINGHAM-SHIRE BUCKINGHAM-SHIRE it is a long narrow County the miles therein proportioned accordingly stretching forty four miles from North to South whilst the breadth is content with fourteen at the most A fruitfull Country especially in the vale of Alesbury where one lately intire Pasture called Beryfield now part of the Inheritance of Sir Robert Lee Baronet in the Mannor of Quarendon is let yearly for eight hundred pounds the tenant not complaining of his Bargaine This County takes its name from Buckingham the chief town therein as that from Beeches called in the Saxon tongue Buccen growing plentifully thereabouts as in other places in this County and therefore placed first amongst its Naturall Commodities Beech. This was esteemed sacred amongst the Romans Manius Curi●…s juravit se ex praeda nihil attigisse praeter guttum faginum quo sacrificaret Protested that he touched nothing of the Prey besides a Beech-cup wherewith he should sacrifice It is also Medicinall though we would wish none sore Lips or Eyes to try the truth of Plinys report whether Beech-leaves cure the one or the ashes of Beech-mast heal the other Our ordinary u●…e thereof besides making of many Utensils is for building of Houses One asked when Beach would make the best Timber meaning what season of the year was best to cut it down for that purpose It was answered that Beech would make the best Timber when no Oake was to be had a time I assure you which daily approcheth in our Land Hence it was that such care was taken in the reign of King Henry the eighth when woods were in a far better condition then now adays for the preserving of the Standells of Beech. As also it was provided in the first of Queen Elizabeth that no Timber-trees of Oak Beech and Ash where Beech deservedly is made second being one foot square at the Stub and growing within fourteen miles of the Sea or any Navigable River should be converted to coal or fewell as the debasing of that which if Nature did not first intend Necessity must employ for better service Sheep The best and biggest bodied in England are the Vale of Ailsbury in this County where it is nothing to give ten pound or more for a Breed-ram So that should a Forrainer hear of the price thereof he would guess that Ram rather to be some Roman Engine of battery than the creature commonly so called I know not whether his observation with the reason thereof be worth the inserting who first took notice that our cattle for food are English when feeding in the field but French when fed on in a family English 1. Sheep 2. Ox. 3. Calfe 4. Hog 5. Pigg French 1. Mutton 2. Beef 3. Veal 4. Bacon 5. Pork Whereof he assigned this reason that after the Norman-conquest the French so tyrannized over the English-tenants that they forced them to keep and feed their cattle but the Monsieurs eat all their good meat after it was slaughtered Forrainers much admire at our English sheep because they doe not as those beyond the seas follow their shephards like to a pack of dogs but wander wide abroad and the Popish priests tell their simple flocks that this disobedience of our sheep happeneth unto us because Risum teneatis amici we have left the great Shephard the Pope whereas they did so long before our separation from Rome because freed from the fear of wolves infesting them in forraine parts they feed safely in the fields needing neither guide to direct nor guard to defend them Tame Pheasants They first took their name from Phasis a River in Asia and long their flight thence into England A Fowl fair in the Feathers a Cock especially Males by nature though Female by art the finest of both Sexes and dainty in the flesh Aboundance of these are kept about Wicombe the care being more then the cost seeing their generall repast is on Pismires Whether these tame be as good as wild-pheasants I leave to Pallate-men to decide The Manufactures It is true of this County that it liveth more by its Lands then by its Hands Such the fruitfulness venting the native Commodities thereof at great rates thank the vicinity of London the best Chapman that no handy-crafts of note save what common to other countries are used therein Except any will instance in Bonelace much thereof being made about Owldney in this County though more I believe in Devonshire where we shall meet more properly therewith Proverbs Buckingham-shire Bread and Beef The former is as fine the latter as fat in this as in any other County If therefore the inhabitants thereof come with hearty grace and hungry appetites no doubt both strength and health will follow on their repast Here if you beat a Bush it's odds youl 'd start a Thief No doubt there was just
occasion for this Proverb at the Originall thereof which then contained Satyricall truth proportioned to the place before it was Reformed whereof thus our great Antiquary It was altogether unpassable in times past by reason of Trees untill that Leofstane Abbot of St. Albans did cut them down because they yeilded a place of refuge for thieves But this Proverb is now Antiquated as to the truth thereof Buckingham-shire affording as many maiden Assizes as any County of equall populousness Yea hear how she pleadeth for her self that such High-way-men were never her Natives but fled thither for their Shelter out of Neighbouring Counties Saints St. EDBURG daughter unto Redwald King of the East-Angles embraced a Monasticall life at Alesbury in this Coun●…y where her Body was deposited and removed afterwards to Edburgton now Edburton in Suffolk her Native Country It seems her person would make one County proud which made two happy Alesbury observing her Memory on the day of whilst Edburton was renowned for her Miracles By the way it seems wonderfull that in Scripture we onely meet with one PosthumeMiracle viz. the Grave-f●…llow of Elisha raised with the touch of his Bones whilst most of Popish miracles are reported born after the Saints death meerly to mold mens minds to the Adoration of their Reliques St. RUMALD was the same with St. Rumbald commonly called by Country people St. Grumbald and St. Rumwald as others spell him but distinct from another St. Rumwald of Irish ext●…action a Bishop and Martyr whose Passion is Celebrated at M●…chlyn in Braband This Criticisme Reader I request thee to take on my credit for thy own ease and not to buy the truth of so difficult a tris●…e with the trouble I paid for it Entring now on the Legend of his life I writ neither what I believe nor what I expect should be believed but what I find written by others Some make him Son of a British King which is sufficiently confuted by his own Saxon name More probable their tale who relate him Son to a King of Northumberland by a Christian daughter of Penda King of Mercia Being born at Kings Sutton in this County as soon as he came out of his Mothers womb he cryed three times I am a Christian. Then making a plain Consession of his faith He desired to be baptized chose his Godfathers and his own name Rumwald He also by his fingers directed the standers by to fetch him a great hollow-stone for a font which sundry of his fathers servants essayed in vain as much above their strength Till the two Priests his●… designed Godfathers did goe and fetch it easily at his appointment Being Baptized He for three days discoursed of all the Common places of Popery and having confirmed their truth he bequeathed his body to remain at Sutton one year at Brackly two and at Buckingham ever after This done he expired Reader I partly guess by my own temper how thine is affected with the reading hereof whose soul is much divided betwixt severall actions at once 1. To frown at the impudency of the first inventors of such improbable untruths 2. To smile at the simplicity of the believers of such improbable untruths 3. To sigh at that well-intended devotion abused with such improbable untruths 4. To thank God that we live in times of better and brighter knowledge Now although St. Rumwald was born in this County he was most honoured at Boxley in Kent and thereon a story depends There was in the Church of Boxley a short Statue of St. Rumwald as of a boy-saint smal hollow and light so that a child of seven years of age might easily lift it The moving hereof was made the Criterion of womens chastity Such who paid the Priest well might easily remove it whilst others might tugg at it to no purpose For this was the contrivance of the cheat that it was fastned with a Pin of wood by an invisible stander behind Now when such offered to take it who had been bountifull to the Priest before they bare it away with ease which was impossible for their hands to remove who had been Close-fisted in their Confessions Thus saith my Author it moved more laughter then Devotion and many chast virgins and wives went away with blushing faces leaving without cause the suspicion of their wantonness in the eyes of the Beholders whilst others came off with more credit because with more coyn though with less chastity The certain time of his life is unknown but may be guessed about the year 680. Martyrs JOHN SCRIVENER was Martyred at Amersham Anno Dom. 1521. on whom an extraordinary piece of cruelty was used his own children being forced to set the first fire upon him for which the law Deut. 13. 6. was most erroneously pretended as will appear by the perusing thereof If thy brother the son of thy mother or thy son or thy daughter or the wife of thy bosome or thy friend which is as thy own soul entice thee secretly saying let us go and serve other gods Thou shalt not consent unto him nor hearken unto him But thou shalt surely kill him thine hand shall be first upon him to put him to death See we here how in the case of Idolatry one is to spare none related unto them either as Equalls or Inferiors But this Law injoines not children to accuse or execute their own parents as Scrivener his children were compelled to do A barbarous cruelty especially seeing the Civil law among the heathen Romans did provide that filius non torquetur in caput parentis A son shall not be examined on the rack to accuse his father in such cases wherein his life is concerned Others besides Scrivener were martyred and more Confessors 〈◊〉 in this small County Anno 1521. then in all England elsewhere for twenty years together P●…elates RICHARD de WENDOVER a place well known in this Shire was Rector of Bromley in Kent where the Bishop of Rochester hath a Palace and that See being vacant he was lawfully chosen the Bishop thereof But Edmond Arch-bishop of Canterbury afterwards Sainted refused to give him consecration because he was rude and unlearned Hereupon Wendover appealed to the Pope whom he found his better friend because Edmond a bitter inveigher against Papal extorsions was a Foe unto him and so was consecrated Now none will gr●…dge him his Place amongst our Worthies seeing what he lack'd in learning he had in holiness and such his signal sanctity that after his death he was by speciall Mandate of King Henry the third buried in the Church of Westminster as another Jehojadah for his publick goodness Anno 1250. JOHN BUCKINGHAM for so his Name is truly written aliàs Bokingham and Bukingham took his Name and Nativity no doubt from Buckingham in this County a-la-mode of that Age. He was bred at the University of Oxford and although since by some causelesly slandered for want of Learning was a
they had a great encouragement to be impartiall not fearing a blow on their teeth though coming near to the heels of truth which in some sort were tied up from doing them any hurt This Roger began his Chronicle at the Conquest and continued it to the year 1235. being the 19. year of King Henry the third Indeed Mathew Paris doth quarter too heavily on the pains of Wendover who onely continuing his Chronicle for some years and inserting some small alterations is intituled to the whole work As a few drops of blood because of the deep hiew thereof discoloureth a whole bason of water into rednesse so the few and short Interpolations of Paris as the more noted Author give a denomination to the whole History though a fabrick built three stories high whereof our Roger laid the foundation finished the ground-room and second loft to which by Mr. Paris was added the garret as since the roof by W. Rishanger This Wendover died about the year of our Lord 1236. JOHN AMERSHAM was born in that small Corporation in this County bred a Monck in St. Albans where he contracted not onely Intimacy but in some sort Identity of Affection with John Wheathamsted Abbot thereof insomuch that what was said of two other friends was true of them Ethicks making good the Grammar thereof Duo Amici Vixit in eodem Conventu Now there was a great Faction in that Convent against their Abbot which to me seemeth no wonder for the generality of Moncks being lewd lazy and unlearned they bare an Antipathy to their Abbot who was pious painfull and a profound Schollar Nor did they onely rail on his Person whilst living but also revile his Memory when dead Our Amersham surviving his dear friend wrote a book besides other of his works intituled the Shield of Wheathamsted therein defending him from the undeserved Darts of his Enemies Obloquy He flourished Anno Dom. 1450. MATHEW STOKES was born in the Town and bred in the School of Eaton untill he was admitted in Kings-colledge in Cambridge Anno Domini 1531. He afterwards became Fellow of that house and at last Esquire Bedle and Register of the University A Register indeed both by his place and painfull performance therein for he as the Poets fain of Janus with two faces saw two worlds that before and after the Reformation In which juncture of time so great the confusion and embezeling of Records that had not Master Stokes been the more carefull I believe that though Cambridge would not be so Oblivious as Massala Corvinus who forgot his own name yet would she have forgotten the names of all her Ancient Officers To secure whose succession to Posterity Mr. Stokes with great industry and fidelity collected a Catalogue of the Chancellours Vice-Chancellours and Proctors He was a Zealous Papist even unto persecution of others which I note not to disgrace his Memory but defend my self for placing him before the Reformation though he lived many years in the reign of Q. Elizabeth Since the Reformation WALTER HADDON was born of a Knightly Family in this County bred at Eaton afterwards Fellow in Kings-colledge where he proceeded Doctor of Law and was the Kings Professor in that Faculty chosen Vice-chancellour of Cambridge 1550. soon after he was made President of Magdalen-colledge in Oxford which place he waved in the reign of Queen Mary and sheltered himself in obscurity Queen Elizabeth made him one of the Masters of her Requests and employed him in several Embassies beyond the Seas Her Majesty being demanded whether She preferred him or Buchanan for learning wittily and warily returned Buchananum omnibus antepono Haddonum nemini postpono Indeed he was a most Eloquent man and a pure Ciceronian in his stile as appeareth by his writings and especially in his book against Osorius The rest may be learned out of his Epitaph S. Memoriae GUALTERO HADDONO Equestri loco nato juris consulto Oratori Poet●… celeberrimo Graecae Latinaeque Eloquentiae sui temporis facile principi sapientia sanctitate vitae in id evecto ut Reginae Elizabethae à supplicum libellis magister esset destinareturque majoribus nisi facto immaturius cessisset Interim in omni gradus viro longe eminentissimo conjugi sui optimo meritissimoque Anna Suttona uxor ejus secunda flens maerens desiderii sui signum posuit Obiit Anno Salut hum 1572. Aetatis 56. This his fair Monument is extant in the wall at the upper end of the Chancell of Christs-church in London Where so many ancient Inscriptions have been barbarously defaced LAURENCE HUMPHRED was born in this County bred in Magdalen-colledge in Oxford a great and generall Scholar able Linguist deep Divine pious to God humble in himself charitable to others In the reign of Queen Mary he fled into Germany and there was Fellow-Commoner with Mr. Jewell whose life he wrote at large in Latine in all his sufferings Here he translated Origen de Recta Fide and Philo de 〈◊〉 tate out of Greek Returning into England in the reign of Queen Elizabeth he was made 〈◊〉 of Magdalen-colledge in Oxford and Dean of Winchester Higher preferment he 〈◊〉 ver attained because never desired it though a learned Author seems to put it on another account fortasse eo quod de adiaphoris non juxta cum Ecclesia Anglicana senserit I deny not but he might scruple some ceremonies but sure I am he was much molested in his Colledge with a party of fierce not to so furious Nonconformists from whom he much dissented in judgment He died Anno Dom. 1589. Here I must confess a mistake in my Ecclesiastical History misguided therein with many others by general tradition when I reported the gold lately found and shared amongst the President and Fellows of Magdalen-colledge in Oxford to have been the gift of this Doctor Humphred which since appeareth a legacy left by William Wainfleet their Founder Would I had been mistaken in the Matter as well as in the Person that so unworthy an act had never been performed But what said Jacob to his sons Carry back the money again peradventure it was an oversight Seasonable restitution will make reparation ROGER GOAD was born at Houton in this County and was admitted Scholar in Kings-colledge in Cambridge 1555. Leaving the Colledge he became a School-master at Guilford in Surrey But pity it is that a great candle should be burning in the Kitchin whilst light is lacking in the Hall and his publique parts pent in so private a profession He was made not to guide boys but govern men Hence by an unexpected election he was surprised into the Provostship of Kings-colledge wherein he remained fourty years He was thrice Vice-chancellonr of Cambridge a grave sage and learned man He had many contests with the young Frie in this Colledge chiefly because he loved their good better then they themselves Very little there is of his in print save what he did in
Aequalia Cambridge requires all to be equal Some interpret this of their Commons wherein all of the same Mess go share and share alike Others understand it of the expenses out of the Hall all being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in their Collations all paying alike Which Parity is the best Preservative of Company according to the Apothegme of Solon which Plutarch so commends for the wisedome thereof 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Equality breeds no Battles Otherwise it is a Murthering-●…hot where one pays all the Reckoning as recoiling on him that dischargeth it Yea such inequality is a certain symptome of an expiring society Some expound the words that Graduates of the same degree either within or without the University are to be Fellows well met one with another Dido had a piece of State in her Court peculiar to her self which may be called an Equipage indeed where she had a hundred servants in ordinary attendance all of the same age Thus the same Degree in effect levells all Scholars so that seniority of years ought not to make any distance betwixt them to hinder their familiarity I have nothing else to adde of this Proverb saving that it is used also in Oxford Cambridge-shire Camels I cannot reconcile this common saying to any considerable sense I know a Camel passeth in the Latine proverb either for gibbous and distorted or for one that undertaketh a thing awkely or ungeenly Camelus saltat or else for one of extraordinary bulk or bigness all unappliable in any peculiar manner to the people of this County as straight and dexterous as any other nor of any exorbitant proportions All that I can recover of probability is this the Fen-men dwelling in the Northern part of this County when stalking on their Stilts are little giants indeed as Master Camden hath well observed However that Mathematician who measured the height of Her●…ules by the bigness of his foot would here be much mistaken in his dimensions if proportionably collecting the bulk of their bodies from the length of their legs A Boisten horse and a Cambridge Master of Art are a couple of Creatures that will give way to no body This Proverb we find in the Letter of William Zoon written to George Bruin in his Theatre of Cities and it is objected against us by an Oxford Antiquary as if our Masters wanted manners to give place to their betters though all things considered it soundeth more to their honour then disgrace For mark what immediately went before in the same Author In plateis ambulantes decedi sibi de via non à civibus solùm sed etiam à peregrino quovis nisi dignitate excellat postulant Walking in the Streets they require not onely of the Towns-men but also of every stranger except they excell in dignity that they goe out of the way unto them Herein two things are observable in the Scholars 1. Their Manners or Civility 2. Their Manhood or Courage If the party whatever he be appear dignified above them they willingly allow him Superiority what is this but to give what is due to another If he seem beneath them then they doe uti jure suo and take what is their own to themselves What rea●…on is it he should give place to a Towns-man ut quid cedat Plenum vacuo scientia ignorantiae This mindeth me of a passage in Plutarch concerning Themistocles when a Boy going home from School he met one of the Athenian Tyrants in the City and the people cryed out unto him to goe out of the way What said Themistocles is not all the street broad enough for him but I must be put out of my path and pace to make room for him This was interpreted by such as heard him as a presage of his future magnanimity And surely it shews not want of breeding but store of spirit when a man will not be put out of his way for every swelling emptiness that meets him therein An Henry-Sophister So are they called who after four years standing in the University stay themselves from commencing Bachelors of Art to render them in some Colledges more capable of preferment Several reasons are assigned of their name That tradition is senseless and inconsistent with his Princely magnificence of such who fansie that K. Henry the eighth coming to Cambridge staid all the Sophisters a year who expected a year of grace should have been given unto them More probable it is because that King is commonly conceived of great strength and sta●…ure that these Sophistae Henriciani were elder and bigger then others The truth is this in the reign of King Henry the eighth after the destruction of Monasteries ●…earning was at a loss and the University thanks be unto God more scar'd then hurt stood at a gaze what would become of her Hereupon many Students staid themselves two three some four years as who would see how their degrees before they took them should be rewarded and maintained Martyrs WILLIAM FLOWER was born at Snow-hill in this County bred first a Monk in Ely till relinquishing his habit he became a Secular Priest and a Protestant and after many removals fixed at last at Lambeth Wonder not Reader to see a long black line prefixed before his name which he well deserved to distinguish him from such men who had an unquestionable title of Martyrdom Whereas this Flower dangerously wounded a Popish Priest with a Woodknife a mischievous weapon in Saint Margarets Westminster just at the Ministration of the Masse so that the bloud of the Priest Spirted into the Challice A fact so foul that the greatest charity would blush to whisper a syllable in the excuse thereof As for such who in his defence plead the precedent of Elia his killing of Baals Priests they lay a foundation for all impiety in a Christian Common-wealth If in the Old World Giants were the Product of those Marriages when the sons of God took to Wives the daughters of Men a Copulation not unlawfull because they were too near a kin but because they were too far off what Monsters will be generated from such mixtures when Extraordinary actions by immediate Commissions from God shall be matched unto Ordinary Persons of meer men and Heaven unjustly alledged and urged for the defence of Hell it self However it plainly appears that Flower afterwards solemnly repented of this Abominable act and was put to death for the Testimony of the truth Grudge not Reader to peruse this following Parallel as concerning the hands of the Martyrs in the reign of Queen Mary The right-hand of Thomas Tomkins was burnt off in effect so as to render it useless by Bishop Bonner some days before he was Martyr'd Arch-bishop Canmer at the Stake first thrust his right hand into the flame to be burnt in Penance for his subscription to a Recantation The right hand of William Flower before he went to the Stake was cut off by order of the Judges for his
by the waters thereof Princes I find no Prince since the Conquest who saw his first light in this County probably because our English Kings never made any long residence therein Saints St. ALKMUND son to Alred King of Northumberland slain in a Battel on the behalf of Ethelmund Vice-Roy of Worcester pretending to recover Lands against Duke Wolstan who detained them was therefore reputed Saint and Martyr It would pose a good Scholar to clear his Title to the later who lost his life in a quarrel of civil concernment On which account in all Battels betwixt Christians such as are slain on one side may lay claim to Martyr-ship However it befriendeth his Memory that his body translated to Derby was believed to do miracles being there with great veneration interred in a Church called Saint Alkmunds on the right hand as Passengers from the South go over the Bridge whither the Northern people made many Pilgrimages till discomposed by the Reformation What relation Alkmundsbury a Town in Hantingdonshire hath unto Him is to me unknown Martyrs JOAN WAST was a blind Woman in the Town of Derbey and on that account the object of any mans Alms rather than the Subject of his cruelty Besides she was seemingly a silly Soul and indeed an Innocent though no Fool. And what saith our Saviour For judgement am I come into this world that they which see not might see and that they which see might be made blind This poor Woman had a clear apprehension of Gods Truth for the testimony whereof she was condemned and burnt at the Stake by the command of Bishop Baines who as he began with the Extreams Mistress Joyce Lewis one of the best and this Joan Wast one of the basest birth in his Diocess So no doubt had not Queen Mary died he would have made his cruelty meet in persons of a middle condition Cardinals ROGER CURSON was born saith my Author ex nobili quodam Anglorum genere of Worshipful English extraction Now I find none of his sirname out of this County except some branches lately thence derived but in the same two right ancient Families one formerly at Croxton whose heir general in our age was married to the Earl of Dorset the other still flourisheth at in this County which moves me to make this Roger a Native thereof Bred he was first a Scholar in Oxford then a Doctor in Paris and lastly a Cardinal in Rome by the Title of Saint Stephen in Mount Celius When the City of Damiata in Egypt was taken under John Brenn King of Jerusalem our Cardinal Curson was there accompanying Pelagius the Popes Cardinal He wrote many Books and came over into England as the Popes Legate in the raign of King Henry the third The certain time of his death is unknown PHILIP de REPINGDON took no doubt his name and birth from Repingdon commonly contracted and called Repton in this County and I question whether any other in England of the same name He was bred and commenced first Batchelor then Doctor of Divinity in Oxford where he became a great Champion and Assertor of the Doctrine of John VVickliff which caused him much trouble and many strict examinations But alas he became like the seed on stony ground which not having root in it self endured but for a while and withered away in persecution for he solemnly recanted his opinions Novemb. 24. Anno 1383. And to give the better assurance that he was a true Anti-VVickliffite from a Professor he became a pers●…cutor and afterwards was termed Rampington by those poor people whom he so much molested Then preferment flowed in thick and threefold upon him from a Canon he became Abbot of Leicester and Anno 1400. he was made Chancellor of Oxford 1405. Bishop of Lincoln 1408. by Pope Gregory the twelfth he was created Cardinal of Saint Nerius and Achilleius though that Pope had solemnly sworn he would make no more Cardinals till the Schisme in Rome were ended The best is the Pope being Master of the Oath-Office may give himself a Pardon for his own perjury What moved this Repington willingly to resign his Bishoprick 1420. is to me unknown Prelates WILLIAM GRAY was son to the Lord Gray of Codnor in this County He suffered not his Parts to be depressed by his Nobility but to make his mind the more proportionable he endeavoured to render himself as able as he was honourable He studied first in Baliol Colledge in Oxford then at Ferrara in Italy where he for a long time heard the Lectures of Guarinus of Verona that accomplished Scholar No man was better acquainted with the method of the Court of Rome which made our King appoint him his Procurator therein It is hard to say whether Pope Nicholas the fifth or our King Henry the sixth contributed most to his free Election to the Bishoprick of Eely whilest it 〈◊〉 out of doubt his own deserts concurred most effectually thereunto He sate in that See twenty four years and wrote many Books which the envy of time hath denied to posterity Bishop Godwin by mistake maketh him Chancellor of England whereas indeed he was Lord Treasurer in the ninth of King Edward the fourth Anno 1469. Let me adde he was the last Clergy-man that ever discharged that Office until Bishop Juxton in our days was preferred thereunto He died Aug. 4. 1478. and lies buried between two Marble Pillars in his Church having bestowed much cost in the reparation of the famous Bellfrie thereof Since the Reformation GEORGE COOKE D. D. Brother to Sir John Cooke Secretary of State was born at Trusley in this County bred in Pembroke Hall in Cambridge Afterwards he was beneficed at Bigrave in Hertford-shire where a lean Village consisting of but three Houses maketh a fat Living Hence he was successively made Bishop of Bristol and Hereford A meek grave and quiet man much beloved of such who were subjected to his jurisdiction He was in the same condemnation with the rest of his Brethren for subscribing the PROTEST in Parliament in preservation of their Priviledges The times trod so heavily upon him that though he ever was a thrifty person they not onely bruised the Foot but brake the Body of his Estate so that he had felt want if not relieved by his rich relations dying about the year 1650. States-Men Sir JOHN COOKE younger Brother to Sir Francis Cooke was born at Trusley in the Hundred of Appletree in this County of ancient and Worshipful Parentage allied to the best Family in this County He was bred Fellow of Trinity Colledge in Cambridge and being chosen Rhetorick Lecturer in the University grew eminent for his Ingenious and Critical Readings in that School on that Subject He then travailed beyond the Seas for some years returning thence rich in foraign Language Observations and Experience Being first related to Sir Fulk Grivell Lord Brook he was thence preferred to be Secretary of the Navy then Master of the
out of and far from any publick Road in a corner of the County so that Bediford Bridg is truly Bediford Bridg intended solely for the convenience of that Town 2 It is very long consisting of twenty four Peares and yet one William Alford another Milo of Bediford carried on his back for a Wager four Bushel Salt-water-measure all the length thereof 3 It is very high so that a Barge of sixty Tuns may passe and repasse if taking down her Masts betwixt the Peares thereof 4 The Foundation is very firmly fixed and yet it doth or seem to shake at the slightest step of a Horse 5 The Builder of so worthy a Work is not the more the pity punctually known Yet Tradition the best Authour where no better is to be had maketh that finished by the Assistance of Sir Theobold Greenvill the Goldneyes and Oketenets Persons of great Power in those parts Peter Quivill Bishop of Exeter granting Indulgencies to all such as contributed to the forwarding thereof As for the Houses of the Gentry in this County some may a●…tract none ravish the Beholder except it be Wenbury the House of the Heales near Plimouth almost corrival with Greenwich it self for the pleasant Prospect thereof The Wonders Not to speak of a River about Lidford whose stream sinketh so deep that it is altogether invisible but supplying to the Eare that it denies to the Eye so great the noise thereof There is in the Parish of North-Taunton near an House called Bath a Pit but in the Winter a Pool not maintained by any spring but the fall of rain water in Summer commonly dry Of this Pool it hath been observed that before the death or change of any Prince or some other strange accident of great importance or any Invasion or Insurrection though in an hot and dry season it will without any rain overflow its Banks and so continue till it be past that it prognosticated Be the truth hereof reported to the Vicenage the most competent Judges thereof seeing my Authour who finished his Book 1648. reporteth that it over-flowed four times within these last thirty years Some will be offended at me if I should omit the Hanging Stone being one of the Bound Stones which parteth Comb-Martin from the next Parish It got the name from a Thief who having stoln a Sheep and tyed it about his own neck to carry it on his back rested himself for a while upon this Stone which is about a foothigh until the Sheep struggling slid over the Stone on the other side and so strangled the man Let the Lawyers dispute whether the Sheep in this case was forfeited to the Kings Almoner as a Deo-Dand It appeareth rather a Providence then a Casualty in the just execution of a Malefactor To these Wonders I will add and hazard the Readers displeasure for the same The Gubbings So now I dare call them secured by distance which one of more valour durst not do to their Face for fear their fury fall upon him Yet hitherto have I met with none who could render a reason of their Name We call the Shavings of Fish which are little worth Gubbings and sure it is they are sensible that the Word importeth shame and disgrace As for the suggestion of my worthy and learned Friend borrowed from Buxtorfius that such who did inhabitare Montes Gibberosos were called Gubbings such will smile at the Ingenuity who dissent from the truth of the Etymology I have read of an England beyond Wales but the Gubbings-Land is a Scythia within England and they pure Heathens therein It lyeth nigh Brent-Tor in the edg of Dartmore It is reported that some two hundred years since two Strumpets being with child fled hither to hide themselves to whom certain lewd Fellows resorted and this was their First Original They are a Peculiar of their own making exempt from Bishop Arch-Deacon and all Authority either Ecclesiastical or Civil They live in Cotts rather Holes than Houses like Swine having all in common multiplied without Marriage into many Hundreds Their Language is the drosse of the dregs of the Vulgar Devonian and the more learned a man is the worse he can understand them During our Civil Wars no Souldiers were quartered amongst them for fear of being quartered amongst them Their Wealth consisteth in other mens goods and they live by stealing the Sheep on the More and vain it is for any to search their Houses being a Work beneath the pains of a Sheriff and above the Power of any Constable Such their Fleetnesse they will outrun many Horses Vivaciousnesse they out live most men living in the Ignorance of Luxury the Extinguisher of Life They hold together like Burrs offend One and All will revenge his Quarrel But now I am informed that they begin to be civilized and tender their Children to Baptisme and return to be men yea Christians again I hope no Civil peopl●… amongst us will turn Barbarians now these Barbarians begin to be civilized Proverbs To Devon-shire ground It is sad when one is made a Proverb by way of derision but honourable to become proverbial by way of imitation as here Devon-shire hath set a Copy of Industry and Ingenuity to all England To Devon-shire land is to pare off the surface or top-turffe thereof then lay it together in heaps and burn it which ashes are a marvailous improvement to battle barren ground Thus they may be said to Stew the land in its own liquor to make the same ground to find compost to fatten its self An Husbandry which where ever used retains the name of the place where it was first invented it being usual to Devonshire land in Dorset-shire and in other Counties A Plimouth Cloak That is a Cane or a Staffe whereof this the occasion Many a man of good extraction comming home from far Voiages may chance to land here and being out of sorts is unable for the present time and place to recruit himself with Cloaths Here if not friendly provided they make the next Wood their Drapers shop where a Staffe cut out serves them for a covering Ho may remove Mort-Stone There is a Bay in this County called Mort-Bay but the Harbour in the entrance thereof is stopped with a huge Rock called Mort-Stone and the People merrily say that none can remove it save such who are Masters of their Wives If so wise Socrates himself with all men who are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 under Covert-feme as I may say will never attempt the removal thereof First hang and draw Then hear the cause by Lidford Law Lidford is a little and poor but antient Corporation in this County with very large priviledges where a Court of the Stanneries was formerly kept This Libellous Proverb would suggest unto us as if the Towns-men thereof generally mean persons were unable to manage their own Liberties with necessary discretion administring preposterous and preproperous Justice I charitably believe that some Tinners justly
after so many years distance and a colder suit being to encounter a Corporation of Learned Lawyers so long in the peaceable possession thereof Bishop Nevil was afterwards canonically chosen by the Monks and confirmed hy King Henry the third Arch-bishop of Canterbury being so far from rejoycing thereat that he never gave any 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or reward for their good news to the two Monks which brought him tidings nor would allow any thing toward the discharging their costly journey to Rome foreseeing perchance that the Pope would stop his Consecration For some informed his Holiness that this Ralph was a Prelate of High Birth haughty Stomach great Courtship gracious with the King and a person probable to disswade him from paying the Pension promised by his Father K. Iohn to the Court of Rome then no wonder if his Consecration was stopped theron But was it not both an honor happiness to our Nevil thus to be crost with the hands of his Holiness himself yea it seems that no Crosier save only that of Chichester would fit his hand being afterwards elected Bish. of Winchester then obstructed by the K. who formerly so highly favor'd him He built a Chappell without the east gate of Chichester dedicated to S. Michael and having merited much of his own Cathedral died at London 1244. ALEX. NEVIL third Son of Ralph Lord Nevil was born at Raby became first Canon then Arch-Bishop of York where he beautified and fortified the Castle of Cawood with many Turrets He was highly in Honour with King Richard the second as much in hatred with the party opposing him These designed to imprison him putting Prelates to death not yet in fashion in the Castle of Rochester had not our Alexander prevented them by his flight to Pope Urban to Rome who partly out of pity that he might have something for his support and more out of policy that York might be in his own disposal upon the removal of this Arch-Bishop translated him to Saint Andrews in Scotland and so dismissed him with his Benediction Wonder not that this Nevil was loth to go out of the Popes blessing into a cold Sun who could not accept this his new Arch Bishoprick in point of credit profit or safety 1. Credit For this his translation was a Post-Ferment seeing the Arch-Bishoprick of Saint Andrews was subjected in that age unto York 2. Profit The Revenues being far worse than those of York 3. Safety Scotland then bearing an Antipathy to all English and especially to the Nevils redoubted for their victorious valour in those northern parts and being in open hostility against them Indeed half a loaf is better than no bread but this his new translation was rather a stone than half a loaf not filling his Belly yet breaking his Teeth if feeding thereon This made him preferre the Pastorall Charge of a Parish Church in Lovaine before his Arch-noBishoprick where he died in the fifth year of his Exile and was buried there in the Convent of the Carmelites ROB. NEVIL sixth Son of Ralph first Earl of Westmerland by Joane his second VVife Daughter of Iohn of Gaunt bred in the University of Oxford and Provost of Beverly was preferred Bishop of Sarisbury in the sixth of King Henry the sixth 1427. During his continuance therein he was principal Founder of a Convent at Sunning in Berkshire anciently the Bishops See of that Diocess valued at the dissolution saith Bishop Godwin at 682 l. 14 s. 7 d. ob which I rather observe because the estimation thereof is omitted in my and I suspect all other Speeds Catalogue of Religious Houses From Sarisbury he was translated to Durham where he built a place called the Exchequer at the Castle gate and gave in allusion of his two Bishopricks which he successively enjoyed two Annulets innected in his Paternal Coat He died Anno Dom. 1457. GEO. NEVIL fourth Son of Rich. Nevil Earl of Salisbury was born at Midleham in this Bishoprick bred in Baliol Colledge in Oxford consecrated Bishop of Exeter when he was not as yet twenty years of age so that in the race not of age but youth he clearly beat Tho. Arundel who at twenty two was made Bishop of Ely Some say this was contrary not only to the Canon Law but Canonical Scripture S. Paul forbidding such a Neophyte or Novice admission into that Office as if because Rich. the make-King Earl of Warwick was in a manner above Law this his Brother also must be above Canons His Friends do plead that Nobility and Ability supplyed age in him seeing five years after at 25. he was made Lord Chancellor of England and discharged it to his great commendation He was afterwards made Arch-bishop of York famous for the prodigious Feast at his Installing wherein besides Flesh Fish and Fowle so many strange Dishes of Gellies And yet amongst all this service I meet not with these two But the inverted Proverb found truth in him One GluttonMeal makes many hungry ones for some years after falling into the displeasure of King Edward the fourth he was flenderly dyetted not to say famished in the Castle of Calis and being at last restored by the Intercession of his Friends died heart-broken at Blyth and was buried in the Cathedral of York 1476. Besides these there was another Nevil Brother to Alexander aforesaid chosen Bishop of Ely but death or some other intervening accident hindered his Consecration Since the Reformation ROBERT HORN was born in this Bishoprick bred in Saint Johns Colledge in Cambridge Going thence under the raign of King Edward the sixth he was advanced Dean of Durham In the Marian days he fled into Germany and fixing at Frankford became the head of the Episcopal party as in my Ecclesiastical History at large doth appear Returning into England he was made Bishop of VVinchester Feb. 16. 1560. A worthy man but constantly ground betwixt two opposite parties Papists and Sectaries Both of these in their Pamphlets sported with his name as hard in Nature and crooked in Conditions not being pleased to take notice how Horn in Scripture importeth Power Preferment and Safety both twitted his person as dwarfish and deformed to which I can say nothing none alive remembring him save that such taunts though commonly called ad Hominem are indeed ad Deum and though shot at Man does glance at Him who made us and not we our selves Besides it shews their malice runs low for might though high for spight who carp at the Case when they cannot find fault with the Jewel For my part I mind not the Mould wherein but the Metal whereof he was made and lissen to Mr. Cambden his Character of him Valido foecundo ingenio of a sprightful and fruitful wit He died in Southwark June 1. 1589. and lyeth buried in his own Cathedral near to the Pulpit And now Reader I crave leave to present thee with the Character of one who I confess falls not under my Pen
Bosome and whom he taxed for too much lenity to the Wicklevites so that we behold the Breath of Waldensis as the Bellows which Blew up the Coals for the burning of those Poor Christians in England under King Henry the sixth he was employed to provide at Paris all necessaries for his solemn Coronation and dying in his journey thether Anno 1430. was buried at Roan He was 16 years Provinciall of his Order throughout all England and wrot many books against the Wicklevites Bale citeth four all sorraign Authors which make him solemnly Sainted whilst Pitzeus more truly and modestly onely affirmeth that he died non sine sanctitatis opinione Indeed as the Pagans had their Lares and Penates Dii Minorum Gentium so possibly this Thomas though not publickly Canonized might pass for a Saint of the lesser Size in some particular places Since the Reformation THOMAS TUSS●…R was born at Riven-hall in this County of an ancient family since extinct if his own pen may be believed Wh●…lst as yet a Boy he lived in many Schools Wallingford S●…int Pauls Eaton whence he went to T●…inity hall in Cambridge when a Man in Stafford-shire Suffolk Northfolk Cambridge-shire London and where not so that this Stone of Sisiphus could gather no Moss He was successively a Musitian School master Servingman Husbandman Grasier Poet more skilfull in all then thriving in any V●…cation He traded at large in Oxen Sheep Dairies Grain of all kinds to no profit Whether he bought or sold he lost and when a Renter impoverished himself and never inriched his Landlord Yet hath he laid down excellent Rules in his Book of Husbandry and Houswifery so that the Observer thereof must be rich in his own d●…fence He spread his Bread with all sorts of Butter yet none would stick thereon Yet I hear no man to charge him with any vicious extravagancy or visible carel●…ssness imputing his ill success to some occult cause in Gods counsel Thus our English 〈◊〉 might say with the Poet Monitis sum minor ipse meis None being better at the Theory or worse at the Practise of Husbandry I match him with Thomas 〈◊〉 yard they being mark'd alike in their Poeticall parts living in the same time and 〈◊〉 alike in their Estates both low enough I assure you I cannot find the certain date of his death but collect it to be about 1580. FRANCIS QUARLES Esquire son to James Quarles Esquire was born at S●…wards in the Parish of Ru●…ford in this County where his son as I am inform'd hath an Estate in expectancy He was bred in Cambridge and going over into Ireland became Secretary to the Reverend James Usher Arch-bishop of Armagh He was a most excellent Poet and had a mind by assed to devotion Had he been contemporary with Plato that great back-friend to Poets he would not onely have allowed him to live but advanced him to an office in his Common wealth Some Poets if debarr'd pro●…ess want oness and Satyricalness that they may neither abuse God themselves nor their neighbours have their tongues cut out in effect Others onely trade in wit at the second hand being all for translations nothing for invention Our Q●…arles was free from the f●…ts of the first as if he had drank of Jordan in stead o●… Helicon and slept on mount Olivet for his Pernassus and was happy in his own invention His visible Poetry I mean his Emblems is excellent ca●…ching therein the eye and fancy at one draught so that he hath out Aleiated therein in some mens judgement His Verses on Job are done to the life so that the Reader may see his sores and through the●… the anguish of his soul. The troubles of Ireland where his loss●…s were great forced his return hither bearing his crosses with great patience so tha●… according to the advice of Saint Hierome Verba vertebat in opera and practiced the Job he had described dying about the year 1643. JOSEPH MEDE was born in this County a little east of Bishop-Startford Men in ●…cripture generally are notified by their Fathers as Johnadab the Son of Rechab Simon the Son of Jona Some few are described by their Sons as Simon of Cyren the Father of Alexander and Rufus wherein it is presumed that their Sons were most eminent and their Branches not known by the Root but the Root by the Branches Such the case here where the Parents obscure in themselves may hereafter be known for having Joseph Mede to their Son He was bred in Christs-colledge in Cambridge where he attained to great Learning by his own industry R. was Shiboleth unto him which he could not easily pronounce so that a set-speech cost him the double pains to another man being to fit words as well to his Mouth as his Matter Yet by his Industry and Observation He so conquered his Imperfection that though in private discourse he often smiled out his stammering into silence yet chusing his words he made many an excellent Sermon without any considerable Hesitation The first fruits of his Eminent Studies was a written Treatise de sanctitate Relativa which he presented to Bishop Andrews who besteded him with the Kings favour when his election into his Fellow-ship met with some opposition He afterwards became an Excellent Linguist Curious Mathematician Exact Text-man happy in makeing Scripture to expound it self by Parallel places He was charitable to poor people with his Almes and to all people with his candid censure Of one who constantly kept his Cell so he called his Chamber none Travailed oftener and farther over all Christendome For things past he was a Perfect Historian for things present a Judicious Novilant and for things to come a Prudentiall not to say Propheticall Conjecturer To his private friends he would often insist on the place of Scripture Judges 3. 30. and the land had a rest Four score years which was the longest term of Peace which he ever observed the Church of God to enjoy after which many troubles did ensue And seeing the same lease of Halcion days was expired in England since the first of Queen Elizabeth he grievously suspected some strange Concussion in Church and State which came to pass accordingly I confess his Memory hath suffered much in many mens Judgements for being so great a Fauter of the fancifull opinion of the Millenaries Yet none can deny but that much is found in the Ancient fathers tending that way Besides I dare boldy say that the furious Factors for the fift Monarchy hath driven that Nail which Master Mede did first enter farther then he ever intended it and doing it with such violence that they split the truths round about it Thus when ignorance begins to build on that Foundation which learning hath laid no wonder if there be no Uniformity in such a Mungrell Fabrick He died in the fifty third year of his age Anno Domini 1638. leaving the Main of his Estate to the Colledge about the value of 300l a large
I wish the continuance and Encrease of the breed of this kind of Canes Venatici And though the pleasure be not so much as in hunting of Hares the profit is more in destroying those Malignant Pioneers mischievous to Grasse more to Grain most to Gardens Lord Majors It is no less true the●… strange that this County so large in it self so near to London weekly changing Cloth for Money therewith is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I mean hath not contributed one to this Topick Such as suspect the truth thereof will be satisfied on their exact survey of Stow's Survey of London The Names of the Gentry in this Shire returned into the Tower by the Commissioners in the 12th Year of K. Henry the sixth anno 1445. H. Epus VVinton Cardinalis Angliae   Commissioners to take the Oath Reginaldus le Warre Miles     Johannes Lysle Knights for the Shire   Johannes Brewe de Stapule     Walter Sandes Chivaler Johannes Popham Chivaler Johannes Uvedale Willielm Warbleton Thome Tame VVilliam Fanconer Roberti Dyngle Steph. Popham Chivaler Willielm Brokays Willielm Ryngebourne Walter Veere Iohannes Hampton Iohannes Gyffard Iohannes Brinkeley Petri Condraye Iohannes Skilling Thome Ringewood senior Willielm Persh Iohannes Hacket Iohannes Haymowe Roberti Fursey Roberti Tylbourgh Willielm Astel. Iohannes Balon Iohannes Bray Iohannes Purbyke Iohannes Catevan Willielm Clive Willielm Chellys Iohannes Faukoner Iohannes Mofunt Willielm Tested Richard Rumsey Willielm Burton Roberti VVhittehede Richard Spicer Johannes atte Berwe de Charleford Johannes Lawrence Thome Rockley Thome Yardly Thome Benebury Willielm Wellis Iohannes Escote Iohannes Rotherfield Richard Parkere Iohannes Kybbyll Iohannes Barbour Symonis Almayn William Farcy Richard Punchardon Nicholas Bernard Nicholas Banestre Thome Wayte It will be worth our enquiry who this chief Commissioner Henry Bishop of Winchester was with his insolent Title of CARDINAL of ENGLAND I finde many eminent Epithets but none of the Quorum of St. Pauls Bishops meeting in his person viz. Noble Rich Valiant Politique and long-lived Noble being Son of JOHN à GAUNT by KATHARINE SWINFORD born at Beaufort in France whence he had his Name ●…rother to King Henry the Fourth Uncle to King Henry the fifth great Uncle to King Henry the Sixth Rich commonly called the Rich Cardinal In his time the King and Courtiers cast a covetous eye on Church-Endowments but were diverted from longer looking on them by the Councel of Arch-Bishop Chickly and Coin of this Bishop Beaufort The former putting the King upon the War with France the later lending him on good security twenty thousand Pounds a Sum sounding high in those dayes He was also called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Cardinal of England though we had another and his Senior at the same time of the same Order viz. Thomas Langley Bishop of Durham Valiant being the Pope's Legate in plain English the Pope's General leading his Army into Bohemia in which service he behaved himself fortius quam Episcopum decebat Worldly ●…olitick venting words on his Death-bed to this purpose That if all England some Reporters take a longer Circuit would preserve his Life he was able by his Purse to purchase or by Policy to procure it Long Life having been Bishop of Lincolne and Winchester fifty Years yet was he so far from being weaned from the world he sucked the hardest as if he would have bit off the Nipples thereof the nearer he was to his Grave Dying anno 1447. He was in his Generation by a charitable Antiperistasis fixed betwixt Bishop Wickham and Wanfleet but did not equall them in his Benefactions to the publick though he founded a fair Hospital in VVinchester a work no doubt more acceptable to God than when he anno 1417 undertook and performed a dangerous Voyage to Jerusalem It is in my apprehension very remarkeable that the 3 aforesaid Bishops of Winchester Wickham Beaufort and Wanfleet sate successively in that See six score years lacking two not to be parallel'd in any other Bishoprick To take our leave of this great Cardinall we read of K. Josiah Now the rest of the Acts of K. Iosiah and his GOODNESS c. But as for this Prelate the rest of his acts and his GREATNESS we leave to such as are desirous thereof to collect them out of our English Hystorians Sheriffs of Hantshire HEN. II. Anno 1 Anno 2 Turcinus vic Anno 3 Turcinus vic Anno 4 Anno 5 Turcinus vic Anno 6 Anno 7 Rich. fil Turcini for 9 years Anno 16 Hugo de Gundevill for 4 years Anno 20 Herudus de Stratton Hugo de Gundevill for 5 years Anno 25 Hen. de Stratton Hugo de Gundevile Anno 26 Galf. fil Aze for 8 years RICH. I. Anno 1 Galf. fil Azon Anno 2 Ogerus fil Ogeri Anno 3 Joh. de Rebez Anno 4 Will. Briewere Anno 5 Ogerus fil Ogeri Anno 6 Hugo de Bosco for 5 years JOH REG. Anno 1 Hugo de Basco Anno 2 Idem Anno 3 Will. Briewere Rad. de Bray Anno 4 Galf. fil Petri Will Stokes Anno 5 Idem Anno 6 Rog. fil Ade for 4 years Anno 10 Walt. Briewere Alan de Bockland Anno 11 Idem Anno 12 Will. Briewere Anno 13 Hugo de Nevill Galf. de Salvaozins Anno 14 Idem Anno 15 Idem Anno 16 Will. de S to Johanne Anno 17 Will. Briewere Will de S to Johanne HEN. III. Anno 1 Anno 2 Pet. Winton Epis. Will de Schorewell for 7 yearr Anno 9 Rich. Epis. Saresb. Bartholomew de Kemes Anno 10 Idem Anno 11 Rich. Epis. Saresb. Gilb. de Staplebrigg Anno 12 Idem Anno 13 Nich. de Molis Walt. de Romsey Anno 14 Nich. de Molis Hen. de Bada Anno 15 Idem Anno 16 Idem Anno 17 Pet. Winton Epis. Rog. Wascelin Anno 18 Idem Anno 19 Hen. fil Nicholai Anno 20 Hen. fil Nich. Rob. de Mara Anno 21 Galf. de Insula Anno 22 Idem Anno 23 Idem Anno 24 Emueus de Lacy Anno 25 Idem Anno 26 Idem Anno 27 Rob. Passelewe for 6 years Anno 33 Rob. Passell Anno 34 Hen. Facull for 6 years Anno 40 Hen. de Farneleg Anno 41 Ja. le Savage Anno 42 Joh. le Jac. Savage Anno 43 Idem Anno 44 Will. de Wintershull Anno 45 Regin fil Petri Joh. de Flemer Anno 46 Idem Anno 47 Regin fil Petri Hereward de Marisco Anno 48 Idem Anno 49 Joh. de Botele Anno 50 Idem Anno 51 Gerar. de Grue Anno 52 Joh. le Botele Anno 53 Idem Anno 54 Idem Anno 55 Will. de Wintershull Anno 56 Idem EDW. I. Anno 1 Will. de Wintershull Anno 2 Hen. de Shote broke Anno 3 Joh. de Havering for 4 years Anno 7 Will. de Braybofe Anno 8 Idem Anno 9 Phil. de Foynil Anno 10 Idem Anno 11 Idem Anno 12 Simon de Winton Anno 13 Idem Anno
preferred rather to be Adrian the fourth then Nicholas the third He held his place four years eight moneths and eight and twenty dayes and Anno 1158. as he was drinking was choakt with a Fly Which in the large Territory of St. Peters patrimony had no place but his Throat to get into But since a Flye stopt his Breath fear shall stop my Mouth not to make uncharitable Conclusions from such Casualties Cardinal BOSO confessed by all an English-man is not placed in this County out of any certainty but of pure Charity not knowing where elswhere with any Probability to dispose him But seeing he was Nephew to the late named Nicholas or Pope Adrian we have some shadow and pretence to make him of the same County This is sure his Unckle made him Cardinal in the Moneth of December 1155. and he was a great Change-Church in Rome being successively 1. Cardinal Deacon of Sts. Cosma Damiam 2. Cardinal Priest of St. Crosses of Jerusalem 3. Cardin. Pr. of St. Prudentiana 4. Cardin. Pr. of Pastor He was more than Instrumental in making Alexander the third Pope with the suffrages of 19. Cardinals who at last clearly carried it against his Anti-Pope Victor the fourth This Boso dyed Anno Dom. 1180. Prelates RICHARD de WARE for this is his true name as appears in his Epitaph though some pretending his honour but prejudicing the Truth thereby sirname him Warren He was made Abbot of Westminster 1260 and twenty years after Treasurer of England under King Edward the first This Richard going to Rome brought thence certain Work-men and rich Purphury And for the rest hear my Author By whom and whereof he made the rare Pavement to be seen at Westminster before the Communion Table containing the Discourse of the whole World which is at this day most Beautiful a thing of that Singularity Curiousnesse and Rarenesse that England hath not the like again See Readers what an Enemy Ignorance is to Art How often have I trampled on that Pavement so far from admiring as not observing it And since upon serious Survey it will not in my Eyes answer this Character of Curiosity However I will not add malice to my Ignorance qualities which too often are Companions to disparage what I do not understand but I take it on the trust of others more skilful for a Master-peece of Art This Richard dyed on the second of December 1283 the 12. of King Edward the first and lyeth buryed under the foresaid Pavement RALPH BALDOCK So called from the Place of his Nativity A MoungrelMarket in this County was bred in Merton Colledge in Oxford One not unlearned and who wrote an History of England which Leland at London did once behold King Edward the first much prised and preferred him Bishop of London He gave two hundred pounds whilst living and left more when dead to repair the East part of St. Pauls on the same token that upon occasion of clearing the Foundation an incredible number of Heads of Oxen were found buried in the Ground alledged as an argument by some to prove That anciently a Temple of Diana Such who object that heads of Stagges had been more proper for her the Goddesse of the Game may first satisfie us Whether any Creatures ferae Naturae as which they could not certainly compass at all seasons were usually offered for Sacrifices This Ralph dyed July the 24. 1313. Being buryed under a Marble Stone in St. Maries Chappel in his Cathedral JOHN BARNET had his Name and Nativity from a Market-Town in this County sufficiently known by the Road passing thorough it He was first by the Pope preferred 1361. to be Bishop of Worcester and afterwards was translated to Bath and Wells Say not this was a Retrograde motion and Barnet degraded in point of profit by such a Removal For though Worcester is the better Bishoprick in our age in those dayes Bath and Wells before the Revenues thereof were reformed under King Edward the sixth was the richer preferment Hence he was translated to Ely and for 6. years was Lord Treasurer of England He dyed at Bishops Hatfield June 7. 1373. and was buried there on the South-fide of the high Altar under a Monument now miserably defaced by some Sacrilegious Executioner who hath beheaded the Statue lying thereon THOMAS RUDBURNE no doubt according to the fashion of those dayes took his Name from Rudburne a Village within four miles from St. Albans He was bred in Oxford and Proctor thereof Anno 1402. and Chancellour 1420. An excellent Scholar and skilful Mathematician of a meek and mild temper though at one time a little tart against the Wic-livites which procured him much love with great persons He was Warden of Merton Colledge in Oxford and built the Tower over the Colledge Gate He wrote a Chronicle of England and was preferred Bishop of St. Davids He flourished Anno Domini 1419. though the date of his Death be unknown Reader I cannot satisfie my self that any Bishop since the Reformation was a Native of this County and therefore proceed to another Subject Statesmen Sir EDVVARD WATERHOUSE Knight was born at Helmsted-bury in this County of an ancient and worshipful Family deriving their discent lineally from Sir Gilbert VVaterhouse of Kyrton in Low Lindsey in the County of Lincoln in the time of King Henry the third As for our Sir Edward his Parents were John Waterhouse Esquire a man of much fidelity and Sageness Auditor many years to King Henry the Eighth of whom he obtained after a great entertainment for him in his house the grant of a Weekly Market for the Town of Helmsted Margaret Turner of the ancient house of Blunts-Hall in Suffolk and Cannons in Hartfordshire The King at his Departure honoured the Children of the said John Waterhouse being brought before him with his praise and encouragement gave a Benjamins portion of Dignation to this Edward foretelling by his Royal Augury That he would be the Crown of them all and a man of great Honour and Wisdome fit for the Service of Princes It pleased God afterwards to second the word of the King so that the sprouts of his hopeful youth only pointed at the growth and greatness of his honourable age For being but twelve years old he went to Oxford where for some years he glistered in the Oratorick and Poëtick Sphear until he addicted himself to conversation and observance of State affairs wherein his great proficiency commended him to the favour of three principal patrons One was Walter Devereux Earl of Essex who made him his bosome-friend and the said Earl lying on his death-bed took his leave of him with many kisses Oh my Ned said he farewell thou art the faithfullest and friendliest Gentleman that ever I knew In testimony of his true affection to the dead Father in his living Son this Gentleman is thought to have penned that most judicious and elegant Epistle recorded in Holinsheds History pag.
bestowed should be pleased to provide a fair and firm Fabrick to receive it but now is reposited Bodly within a 〈◊〉 in the matchless Library of Oxford Romish Exil'd Writers GREGORY MARTINE was born at Macfield in this County bred contemporary with Campian Fellow of Saint Johns-colledge in Oxford He was chosen by Thomas Duke of Northfolk to be Tutor to his Son Philip Earl of Arundell and well discharged his trust therein Going afterwards beyond the Seas and living some time in Doway and Rome he fixed at last in the English-colledge at Rhemes where he was Professor of Divinity As he was Papall both in his Christian and Surname so was he deeply dyed with that Religion writing many Books in the defence thereof and one most remarkable intituled A Detection of the corruptions in the English Bible Athaliah did craftily to cry out first Treason Treason when she was the greatest Traitor her self and this Martine conscious of the many and foul corruptions in his own Rhemish translation politickly complained of the Faults in our English Bible He d●…ed the 28. of October 1582. and lyeth buried in the Parish Church of St. Stephens in Rhemes THOMAS STAPLETON was born at Henfield in this County as Pitts his familiar friend doth informe us Object not that it is written on his Tomb at Saint Peters at Lovaine Thomas Stapletonus qui Cicestriae in Anglia Nobili loco Natus Chichester there not being taken restrictively for the City but extensively for the Diocess His bare Sirname is sufficient proof of his Gentile Birth Those of his own perswasion please themselves much to observe that this Thomas was born in the same year and month wherein Sir Thomas Moor was beheaded as if Divinè Providence had purposely dropped from Heaven an Acorn in place of the Oake that was ●…ell'd He was bred in New colledge in Oxford and then by the Bishop Christopherson as I take it made Cannon of Chichester which he quickly quitted in the First of Queen Elizabeth Flying beyond the Seas he first fixed at Doway and there commendably performed the Office of Catechist which he discharged to his commendation Reader pardon an Excursion caused by just Grief and Anger Many counting themselfs Protestants in England do slight and neglect that Ordinance of God by which their Religion was set up and gave Credit to it in the first Reformation I mean CATECHISING Did not nor Saviour say even to Saint Peter himself feed my Lambs feed my heep And why Lambs first 1. Because they were Lambs before they were Sheep 2. Because if they be not fed whilst Lambs they could never be Sheep 3. Because She●…p can in some sort feed themselves but Lambs such their tenderness must either be fed or famished Our Stapleton was excellent at this Lamb-feeding from which Office he was afterwards preferred Kings Professor of Divinity in Lovain and was for fourty years together Dominus ad Oppositum the Undertaker-General against all Protestants Dr. Whitacre Professor in Cambridge experimentally profest that Bellarmine was the fairer and Stapleton the shrewder adversary His preferment in mine Eye was not proportionable to his Merit being no more then Cannon and Master of a Colledge in Lovain Many more admired that Stapleton mist then that Allen got a Cardinals Cap equalling him in Strictness of Life exceeding him in Gentility of Birth and Painfulness of Writing for the Romish Cause Such consider not that Stapletons Ability was drowned with Allens Activity and one Grain of the Statesman is too heavy for a pound of the Student Practical Policy in all Ages beating Pen-pains out of distance in the Race of Preferment Stapleton died and was buried in St. Peters in Lovain Anno 1598. Benefactors to the Publick Reader let not the want of Intelligence in me be mis-interpreted want of munificence in the natives of this County finding but one most eminent and him since the Reformation RICHARD SACKVILL Eldest son of Thomas Earl of Dorcet by Cecilly his Wife had his Barony if not his Birth at Buckhurst in this County A Gentleman of Singular learning in many Sciences and Languages so that the Greek and Latine were as familiar unto him as his own native Tongue Succeeding his father in that Earldom he enjoyed his dignity not a full year as lacking seven Weeks thereof Yet is there no fear that the shortness of his Earlship will make his Name forgotten having erected a Monument which will perpetuate his Memory to all Posterity viz. A Colledge at East-greensted in this County for one and Thirty poor people to serve Almighty God therein Endowing the same with three hundred and thirty pounds a Year out of all his Land in England By Margaret sole daughter to Thomas Duke of Norfolk he left two surviving sons Richard and Edward both Persons of admirable parts successively Earls after him and dying 1608. was buried at Withiham in this County Memorable Persons JOHN PALMER HENRY PALMER THOMAS PALMER Sons unto Edward Palmer Esq. of Angmarine in this County A Town so called as I am informed from Aqua Marina or the water of the sea being within two Miles thereof and probably in former Ages neerer thereunto Their Mother was daughter to one Clement of Wales who for his effectuall assisting of King Henry the seventh from his landing at Milford-haven untill the Battle of Bosworth was brought by him into England and rewarded with good Lands in this and the next County It happened that their Mother being a full fortnight inclusively in Labour was on Whitsunday delivered of John her eldest son on the sunday following of Henry her second son and the sunday next after of Thomas her third son This is that which is commonly called Superfoetation usuall in other Creatures but rare in Women the cause whereof we leave to the disquisition of 〈◊〉 These Three were knighted 〈◊〉 their 〈◊〉 by King 〈◊〉 the eighth who never laid his sword on his Shoulders who was not a Man so that they appear as remarkable in their suc●…esse as their Nativities The truth hereof needeth no other Atrestation then the generall and uncontrolled Tradition of their no lesse worshipfull then Numerous posterity in Sussex and Kent Amongst whom I instance in Sir Roger Palmer aged 80. years lately deceased and 〈◊〉 to our late King averring to me the faith hereof on his Reputation The exact date of these Knights deaths I cannot attain LEONARD 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 in this County being much delighted in gardening mans Original vocation was the 〈◊〉 who brought over into England from beyond the seas Carps and Pippins the one well cook'd delicious the other cordial and restorative For the proof hereof we have his own word and witness and did it it seems about the Fifth year of the reign of King Henry the eighth Anno Dom. 1514. The time of his death is to me unknown WILLIAM WITHERS born at Walsham in this County being a Child of Eleven years old did Anno 1581. lye
Wales is therefore placed in this because the first County thereof Prelates GUIDO de MONA was so sir-named from his Birth-place in Anglesey Some suspect that Filius insulae may be as bad as Filius populi no place being particularized for his birth whiles others conceive this sounding to his greater dignity to be denominated from a whole Island the Village of his nativity being probably obscure long and hard to be pronounced He was afterwards Bishop of Saint Davids and Lord Treasurer of England under King Henry the fourth who highly hono●…ed him for when the Parliament moved that no Welsh-man should be a State Officer in England the King excepted the Bishops as confident of their faithful service Indeed T. Wallingham makes this Gui the Author of much trouble but is the lesse to be believed therein because of the known Antipathy betwixt Fryers and Secular 〈◊〉 the former being as faulty in their lafie speculation as the other often offending in the practical over-activity This Bishop died ●…nno 1407. ARTHUR BULKLEY Bishop of Bangor was born either in Cheshire or more probably in this County But it matters not much had he never been born who being bred Doctor of the Laws had either never read or wholly forgotten or wilfully would not remember the Chapter De sacrilegio for he spoyled the Bishoprick and sold the five Bells being so over-officious that he would go down to the Sea to see them shipped which in my mind amounted to a second selling of them We have an English Proverb of him who maketh a detrimental bargain to himself That he may put all the gains gotten thereby into his eye and see nothing the worse But Bishop Bulkley saw much more the worse by what he had gotten being himself suddenly deprived of his sight who had deprived the Tower of Bangor of the tongue thereof Thus having ended his credit before his days and his days before his life and having sate in that See fourteen years he died 1555. WILLIAM GLYN D. D. Was bo●…n at 〈◊〉 in this County bred in Queens Colledge in Cambridge whereof he was Master until in the second of Queen Mary he was preferred Bishop of Bangor An excellent Scholar and I have been assured by judicious Persons who have seriously perused the solemn Disputations printed in Master Fox betwixt the Papists and Protestants that of the former none pressed his Arguments with more strength and lesse passion than Doctor Glyn though const●…t to his own he was not cruel to opposite judgements as appeareth by the appearing of no persecution in his Diocesse and his mild Nature must be allowed at least Causa socia or the fellow-cause thereof He died in the first of Queen Elizabeth and I have been informed that Jeoffry Glyn his Brother Doctor of Laws built and endowed a Free-Schoole at Bangor Since the Reformation ROULAND MERRICK Doctor of Laws was born at Boding án in this County bred in Oxford where he became Principal of New Inne-Hall and afterwards a Dignitary in the Church of Saint Davids Here he with others in the reign of King Edward the sixth violently prosecuted Robert Farrar his Diocesan with intention as they made their boast to pull him from his Bishoprick and bring him into a premunire and prevailed so far that he was impris●…ned This Bishop Farrar was afterwards martyred in the raign of Queen Mary I find not the least appearance that his former adversaries violented any thing against him under that Queen But it is suspicious that advantage against him I say not with their will was grafted on the stock of his former accusation However it is my judgement that they ought to have been I can be so charitable to believe that Dr. Merrick was penitent for his causelesse vexing so good a person Otherwise many more besides my self will proclaim him unworthy to be who had been a Persecutor of a Bishop He was consecrated Bishop of Bangor December 21. in the second of Q●…een Elizabeth 1559. and sate six years in his See I have nothing to adde save that he was Father to Sir Gilly Merrick Knight who lost his life for engaging with the Earl of Essex 1600. LANCELOT BULKLEY was born in this County of a then right Worshipful since Honourable Family who have a fair habitation besides others near Beumaris He was bred in Brasen nose Colledg in Oxford and afterwards became first Arch-Deacon then Archbishop in Dublin He was consecrated the third of October 1619. by Christopher Archbishop of Armagh Soon after he was made by King James one of his Privy Councel in Ireland where he lived in good reputation till the day of his death which happened some ten years since Seamen MADOC Son to Owen Gwineth ap Gruffyth ap Conan and brother to David ap Owen Gwineth Prince of North Wales was born probably at Aberfraw in this County now a mean Town then the principal Palace of their royal Residence He made a Sea-voyage westward and by all probability those names of Cape de Breton in Noruinberg Pengwin in part of the northern America for a white Rock and a white headed bird according to the British were reliques of this discovery If so then let the Genoveses and Spaniards demean themselves as younger Brethren and get their Portions in Pensions in those parts paid as well as they may owning us Britons so may the Welsh and English as an united Nation style themselves for the Heirs to whom the solid inheritance of America doth belong for the first discovery thereof The truth is a good Navy with a strong Land-Army therein will make these probabilities of Madoc evident Demonstrations and without these in cases of this kind the strongest Arguments are of no validity This Sea voyage was undertaken by Madoc about the year 1170. The Sheriffs Expect not my description should conform this Principality to England in presenting the respective Sheriffs with their Arms. For as to Heraldry I confesse my self Luscum in Anglia Caecum in Walliâ Besides I question whether out Rules in Blazonry calculated for the East will serve on the West of Severne and suspect that my venial mistakes may meet with mortal anger I am also sensible of the prodigious Antiquity of Welsh Pedegrees so that what Zalmana said of the Israelites slain by him at Tabor Each of them resembleth the children of a King all the Gentry here derive themselves from a Prince at least I quit therefore the Catalogue os Sheriffs to abler Pens and proceed to The Farewell I understand there is in this Island a kind of Allumenous Earth out of which some fifty years since began to make Allum and Copperess until they to use my Authors phrase like unflesht Souldiers gave over their enterprise without further hope because at first they saw it not answer their over-hasty expectations If this Project was sirst founded on rational probability which I have cause to believe I desire the seasonable