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A56211 The soveraigne povver of parliaments and kingdomes divided into foure partsĀ· Together with an appendix: wherein the superiority of our owne, and most other foraine parliaments, states, kingdomes, magistrates, (collectively considered,) over and above their lawfull emperours, kings, princes, is abundantly evidenced, confirmed by pregnant reasons, resolutions, precedents, histories, authorities of all sorts; the contrary objections re-felled: the treachery and disloyalty of papists to their soveraignes, with their present plots to extirpate the Protestant religion demonstrated; and all materiall objections, calumnies, of the King, his counsell, royallists, malignants, delinquents, papists, against the present Parliaments proceedings, (pretended to be exceeding derogatory to the Kings supremacy, and subjects liberty) satisfactorily answered, refuted, dissipated in all particulars. By William Prynne, utter-barrester, of Lincolnes Inne. It is on this second day of August, 1643. ordered ... that this booke ... be printed by Michael Sparke ...; Soveraigne power of parliaments and kingdomes Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1643 (1643) Wing P4087A; ESTC R203193 824,021 610

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pursuit where of they raise an army of ten thousand men whereof he was made Generall they send Ambassadours to the Pope and Councill whereof Roderic was chief and upon a full hearing of the cause before Rup●rt Cardinall of ●aint Sabria the Popes Legat at Tholouse judgement was pronounced for the liberty of Spain and it was decreed That the German Emperors should from thenceforth have no power nor jurisdiction over the Kings of Spain which was afterwards confirmed by the customes of the people the consent of other Nations the publike resolution and judgement of Lawyers as Iac●obus Valdesius in his Book de dignitate Regum Hispaniae printed 1602. Cap. 18. proves at large The Generall History of Spain records that the Councill of Florence resolved that seeing the Kings of Spain had defended and conq●ered their Realms by Arms without any ayd from the Emperours they were free and exempt from all subjection and acknowledgement to the Emperours whereof we may read the Glosse upon the Chapter Adrianus Papa distinct 63. The like priviledge have the Kings of France the State of Venice the Kings of England and some others Which clearly demonstrates the Soveraign power of Kingdoms and Nations even over their Kings and Princes and that they may justly desend themselves and Elect other Princes when they are deserted or destroyed by them Anno 1083. Sacho Ramires king of Aragon to supply the charg●s of his wars against the Moors was sometimes forced to use the revenues of his Clergy his Treasure being not able to furn●sh so great a charge but the Bishops of his Countrey who affected nothing more but to enrich their own Order and State opposed themselves against him and afflicted him in such sort as putting him in a vain fear that he was damned for this cause They made him do Penance in the Church of Roda before Saint Vincents Altar in the presence and at the pursuite of Raymund Dolmare Bishop of that place the Bishop of Jarca and others and to confesse publikely that he had grievously offended Thus those good Fathers publikely insulted over their Soveraigne Anno 1091. king Alphonso granted this priviledge among other to Toledo That the City of Toledo might never be alienated from the Crown nor given upon any Title whatsoever to man woman or child Anno 1076. Sancho King of Na●arre was slain in battell by his brother Raymond thinking to reigne after him but the Navarroyes expelled him out of their confines disdaining that he should raigne over them who had embrued his hands in his kingly brothers blood and sending to Sancho Ramires 4. king of Aragon called him to raigne over them because their slain kings sonnes were ●oo young to raigne and protect them from their enemies by which meanes the kingdomes of Arragon and Navarre were united Veracha Queen of Castile a most lascivious open Adultresse by her unchast life so farre provoked her husband Alphonso that he was divorced from her made warre against her and confined her After which she still continuing in her lewdnesse the Nobility and States of Castile and Leon revolt from her take armes against her depose her from the Crowne and elect and crown her sonne Alphonso the 8. king An. 1122. allowing her onely a pension to support her life Alphonso King of Arragon by his last Will and Testament most solemnly ratified for the expiation of his sins gave divers crown Lands Tenements Revenues and Legacies to Religious houses and persons An. 1132. but being prejudiciall to the Crown his Will after his death was held void and not put in execution he being slain by the Moores An. 1134. the States of Arragon elected one Peter Tares for their King who growing exceeding proud of his new dignity began to despise the Nobles and abrogate the Lawes and customes of the Country And the Nobles being assembled at a general Assembly of the States going to visit him he comanded his Porter to shat them out saying that Mounsieur was busie about matters of great importance but they understood afterwards that the great affairs causing him to exclude his friends were his Barbar was trimming him which so incensed the Nobles and great men that the nex● day they held their generall Assembly of the Estates without the King where they first of all decreed to depose their new king because being ●in honour he had no understanding of himselfe and because they found he would grow more proud and insolent afterwards whereupon expelling Peter the Estates assembling at Borta elected Ramier a Monke brother to king Alphonso for their King who was much derided of his Nobles for his Monkish simplicity and at last turned Monk againe But those of Navarre thinking a Monk to be better acquainted with the matters of a Monastery then how to govern a Kingdome and being jealous that the Arragonoys by chusing a King of the blood Royall of Arragon would by this meanes aspire to the chief places of honour and favour in Court it was concluded that the Estates of Navarre should assemble at Pampelone where they chose Garcia Remi●es their King of Navarre and so the Realmes of Arragon and Navarre which had been u●ited 58. yeers were seperated in these two Kings The Kingdomes of Spain being often before and since this time united and divided as the people and Realmes assented or dissented thereunto Not to mention the troubles of Castile by reason of the nonage of their king Alphonso the fourth of whose custody and tuition the assembly of the Estates disposed or how some Knights of Castile slew a Iew with whom this king was so enamoured that he forgot his new Spouse and almost lost h●s sences A●no 1179. king Alphonso assembled the Estates of Castile at Burgon to leavie a Text upon the people whereto the Nob●litie as well as the rest should contribute imposing 5. Maravidis of gold for every person but it took no effect for all the Gentlemen of Castile being discontented that he sought to inf●inge their Liberties fell to armes and being led by the Earle Don Pedro de Lara they were resolved to resist this tax and defend their Liberties with the hazzard of their lives Whereupon Alphonso changed his opinion and let them understand that from thenceforth he would maintain their immunities and that whatsoever he had then propounded was not to continue but only to supply the present necessity of affaires which he would seek to furnish by some other meanes For the great resolution which Don Pedro de Lara shewed in this action the Nobility of Castile did grant to him and his successours a solemn breakfast in testimony of his good endeavour in a businesse of so great consequence and thereby the Lords of Lara have the first voyce for the Nobility in the Court of Castile An. 1204. King Alphonso the Noble called a Parliament of the Lords Prelates and Deputies of the Townes of his Realm at Toledo to advise and assist him in his warrs against the Moores where they
concluded to crave ayd from all Christian Princes and a Crossado from the Pope against the Moores and made divers Lawes to restrain the superfluities of the Realm in feasts apparell and other things Iames the 8. King of Arragon being young at the time of his Fathers death it was thereupon after ordained in the assemblies of the Estates of Mencon and Lirida that Don Sancho Earl of Roussilon should govern the Realm during the Kings minority but they gave him limitation The Kings person they recommended to Frier William of Moncedon Mr. of the Templers After which An. 1220. this yong kings Vncles seeking to wrest the Realme from him instead of governing it by the fidelity of the Estates and their authority his interest was preserved and three Governours with a superintendent of his Provinces were appointed by them and to prevent the continuall practises of the Earles of Roussillon and Fernand the king Uncles the states and justice of Arragon declared the King of full age when he was but ten yeeres old and caused the Earle of Roussillon to quit the Regencie the authority of the justice of Arragon being then great for the defence of the publike liberty An. 1214. Asphonso the Noble king of Castile dying his sonne Henry being but 11. yeer old the Prelates Nobles and Commons assembled at Burgon having declared him king and taken the oath made Queen Eleonorahis Mother Governesse of his Person and Realms after whose death the custody of him was committed to the hands of the Lords of Lara This king afterwards playing with other yong children of Noble Hous●s at Palenca in the Bishops Palace one of them cast a tyle from the top of a Tower which falling on the covering of an house heat down another tyle which fell on the young kings head wherewith he was so grievously hurt that hee dyed the eleventh day after An. 1217 yet this his casuall death for ought I finde was neither r●puted Felony nor Treason in the child that was the cause of it After whose death Fernand the 3. was proc●aimed and made King by the States of Castile to prevent the pretentions of the French after which his Mother Queen Berenguela in the presence of the Estates renouncing all her right to the Crown resigned it up t● her sonne Fernand About this time the Moor●s in Spain rejected the Miralumims of A●rick and created them severall Kings and Kingdomes in Spain being never more united under one Crown after this division which they thought it lawfull for them to make An. 1228. the Estates of Arragon assembling at Barcelona they consenting and requiring it according to the custome of the Arragonians and Cattelans these Estates having authority to make Warre and Peace and Leagues awarre was resolved against the King of the Moores and Majorkins Anno 1231. the Realm of Navarre being very ill governed by reason their King Sancho retired to his chamber did not speak with any man but his Houshold servants and would not heare of any publike affaires thereupon the State began to think of electing a Regent to govern the Realm during his retirednesse to prevent which Sancho made an unjust accord with the king of Navarre and confederated with Iames King of Arragon by the assents of the states of the Realm to leave his Kingdome to him if he survived him yet after his death Thibault Earle of Champaigne was by the states of Navarre elected and proclaimed King And anno 1236. The Estates of Arragon and Cateloigne assembled at Moncon for the continuance of the warre with the Moores and conquest of Valentia without whom it was not lawfull for the King to undertake any matter of importance For maintenance of this warre a custome called Marebetine and an exaction of impost for cattell was by the Estates imposed on the People it was likewise decreed that all peeces of Gold and silver coyned should be of one goodnesse and weight to the observation of which Edict for coynes all were bound to sweare that were above 18. yeers of age Anno 1236. Iames King of Arragon revealing to his Confessor the Bishop of Girone that before his marriage with Queen Yolant he had passed a matrimoniall promise to Theresa of Bidame she sued him thereupon before the Pope who gave sentence against her for want of sufficient witnesse notwithstanding his Confessors testimony The King hereupon grew so angry with the Bishop for revealing his secrets that sending for him to his chamber he caused his tongue to be cut out For which out-rage committed on the Bishop though faulty the Pope in the Councell of Lions complained and in the end interdicted all the Realme of Arragon and excommunicated the king Hereupon to take off this interdiction and excommunication the king sent the Bishop of Valentia with his excuse and humiliation to the Pope wherewith he being some what pacified sent two Legates into Arragon who having assembled a Synod of Bishops at Lerida they caused the King to come thither and to confesse his fault upon his knees before these fathers with great submission and teares who gave him absolution upon condition he should cause the Monastery of Boneface to be built and endowed with an hundred and forty pounds of silver of annuall rent endow an Hospitall for the poore with foure hundred pounds silver per annum and give a Prebendary in the great Church of G●rone for the maintenance of a Masse-priest About which time the Moors in Spain erected many new Kings and Kingdoms by mutuall consent and Mahumad Aben Alamar for his valour was by the Inhabitants of Mariona elected and made first King of Granado Anno 1243. all was in combustion in Portugall by the negllgence and basenesse of their king Don Sancho Capello who was wholly given to his wives humours hated of the Portugales and himselfe disliked for her sake for many Malefactors and insolent persons were supported by her who grew daily more audacious in their excesse without feare of Iustice which was trodden under foot for their respect For these considerations and her barrennesse too all the Noblemen of the kingdome desired to have the Queen called Mencia separated and sent out of Portugall for effecting whereof they made a great instance at Rome but neither exhortation admonition nor commandment nor censure could prevaile the king so doting on her that he would not leave her Which the Portugals perceiving some of them presumed to seize on her in the City of Coimbra and conducted her into Gāllicia from whence she never more returned into Portugall Not content herewith they sought to depose the King from his Royall dignity too for his ill government and to advance his Brother Don Alphonso to the Regall Throne in his place whom the Estates assembled made Regent of Portugall leaving only the Title of King to his brother which fact of the Estates the Pope in the Councell of Lions authorized by his Apostolicke power with which the King being displeased abandoned his Realme and retired into
were elected by the people who prescribed them Lawes Oathes and had power to question to punish remoove and censure them when they offended Solon and Aristotle with other great Politicians debating this Question Whether the power of Electing and censuring the Magistrates and chiefe Officers ought to resids in the people Conclude offirmatively That it is most necessary and convenient this power should rest in the people because else the people shall become both the servants and enemies of their Princes if they have not this power and because all the people together are more considerable and better able to judge of the goodnesse and fitnesse of Magistrates for them then any few select particular men which are more apt to be seduced with by-end● then a great multitude Whence among the Lacedemonians and in most Kingdomes and Republicks in Greece the people had both the election yea and correction of their Magistrates and chiefe State Officers as they manifest In the Kingdome of Aragon in Spaine their ancient Suparbiense Forum their Iustitia Aragoniae and Rici homines who are their principall Magistrates Great Counsell of State and Privi● Counsellours to their King both in Warre and Peace having power over their Kings themselves to examine and censure all their Actions and remove them if there be cause with all their Members Knights and Burgesses of their Parliaments held formerly once a ye●re but now once every second yeare by fixed Lawes anciently were and at this day are elected by the People and not the King In the Germane Empire the Electorship Chancellourship and all great Offices of State are hereditary and successive not chosen by the Emperour and the greatest part of inferiour Magistates are elected in most Provinces and Cities by the people In Polonia the Archbishop of Gnesne is by inheritance alwayes Chancellour of the Realme In Hungary the great Palatine the chiefest Officer of that Kingdome next to the King himselfe who at home determineth and judgeth all differences between the King and Subjects according to the Lawes of that Realme est enim apud Panonios in usu Regem si quid contra Legem fecerit legibus subijci and during the interregnum hath right to summon Parliaments and generall assemblies of the Estates yea the chiefe hand and power in electing a new King and the Soveraigne command in the Warres Adeo ut sontes punire bene de re publica ●●ritis praemia discernere fundosque qui 20. vel 30. agricolarum capaces sunt juris haer●ditarij nomine conferre possit c. as Nicholaus Isthuanfus writes is elected by the States and Parliament of Hun●ary not the King And in this manner Bethrius was elected Palatine in a full ass●mbly of the States Senatus Nobili●ti●sque consensu Anno Dom. 1517. and the Vayvode put by In Venice the Senate and people chuse all the great publike Officers not the Duke In Poland where the King is elective by the Law of Sigismond Augustus all the Magistrates of every Countrey were to be chosen by the particular States of every Government and so they are now In Denmarke and Sweden and Bohemia the Kings themselves are Elective by the States and people and most of their publike Officers too When Rome and Italy were under the Gothish Kings they still elected their publike Officers as is evident by King Theodoricus Letter of approbation of their Election in these words Our consent Reverend Fathers doth accompany your j●dgement In Scotland Anno 1295. the Scots in King Iohn Bayliols Reigne considering his simplicity and unap●n●sse elected them 12. Peeres after the manner of France to wit 4. Bishops 4. Earles and 4. Lords by whose counsell the King ought to Governe the Realme and by whose ordination all the affaires of the Kingdome should be directed which was principally done in affront of King Edward the first by whom this Iohn was made King of Scotland in some sort against the Scots good liking some of them secretly murmuring against it In France it selfe where the King as some thinke and write is an absolute Monarch the greatest publike Officers anciently have sometimes been Elected by the Three Estates of Parliament Anno 1253. The States of France Elected the Earle of Leycester their Grand Seneschall and chiefe Counsellour of State to advise them and their desolate estate what to doe In the Yeare 1324. Arthur Duke of Brittaine was chosen Constable of France by the voice of all the Peers of the Great Counsell and Parliament and thereupon was admitted to that Grand Office In the Yeare 1357. the 7 th of King Iohn of France the Archbishop of Roan Chancellour of France Sir Simon de Bury chiefe Counsellour of the King and of the Parliament Sir Robert de Lorize Chamberlaine to the King Sir Nicholas Brake Master of the Kings Pallace Eguerrain Burges of Paris and Under-Treasurer of France Iohn Priest Soveraigne-Master of the Money and Master of the Accounts of the King and Iohn Chauneon Treasurer of the Kings Warres were all complained of by the Three Estates of France assembled in Parliament for misguiding the King and Realme their goods confiscated to the King themselves removed from these Offices and others elected in their places by the States In the Yeare 1408. by a Law made in the Parliament at Paris it was decreed That the Officers of the High Court of Parliament should be made by the Parliaments Election and those then vacant were so which Law was againe revived by King Lewis the 11 th in the Yeare 1465. And after him in the time of Charles the 8 th not onely the Presidents the Kings Counsellours and Advocates were made by election but even the Kings Atturney Generall the onely man of all the body of the Court that oweth not Oath but to King onely was chosen by the suffrages of the Court in the Yeare 1496. though their Letters of Provision and confirmation of their Election then were and yet are alwayes granted by the King About the Yeare 1380. the Earle of Flanders who had regall Jurisdiction exacting new Customes and Taxes from his Subjects contrary to their Liberties they thereupon expelled him with all his Family and Counsellours out of their Countrey And refused upon any termes to submit to his Governement unlesse he would remove all his evill Counsellours from him and deliver them into their hands to be punished Et recipere SOLVM VELIT CONSILIARIOS EX COMMVNIS VVLGI DECRETO and would receive such Counsellours onely as his people by common decree should assigne him which he was constrained sore against his will to condescend too ere they would restore him Since then the Councellours Magistrates Judges and Prime Officers of State in most other Kingdomes have beene thus elected by the people and Parliaments without any enchrochments upon their Kings just Regalities Why our Parliament now may not claime and enjoy the like Priviledges without any impeachment
affirmed they had justright and power to doe Hereupon the businesse being put unto geeater difficulty the Estates affirmed A Comitiis intempestive discedere Regi NEFAS ESSE That IT WAS A WICKED ACT FOR THE KING THVS VNSEASONABLY TO DEPART FROM THE PARLIAMENT NEITHER WAS SO GREAT A BREACH OF THEIR PRIVILEDGES AND RIGHTS TO BE PATIENTLY ENDVR●D Whereupon they presently raised up the Name and FORCES OF THE VNION or Association formerly made and entred into between the Nobility Cities and people mutually to aid and assist one another to preserve the Peace and Liberties of the Realm even with force of Armes IT BEING LAWFVLL for the common cause of Liberty Non Verbis solum SED ARMIS QVOQVE CONTENDERE not onely TO CONTEND with words BVT ALSO WITH ARMES Vpon this king Alphonso desirous to prevent the mischiefs then present and incumbent by advise of his Privy Counsell published certaine good Edicts at Osca for regulating his Court Counsell Iudges Officers by which he thought to have ended all this Controversie but because they were promulged onely by the Kings own Edict not by the whole Parliament as binding Lawes they still proceeded in the Vnion till at last after various events of things this King returning to the Generall Assembly and Parliament of the Estates at Saragossa in the year 1287. condescended to their desires and confirmed the two memorable priviledges of the Vnion with the Soveraign power of the Iustice of Aragon which could controll their very Kings Of which see more in the Appendix I shall close up this of the lawfulnesse of a necessary defensive warre with the speech of the Emperour Alexander Seuerus recorded by Herodian l. 5. He who first infers injuries hath no probable colour but he that repulseth those who are troublesome to him EX BONA CONSCENTIA sumit fid●c●am assumes confidence FROM A GOOD CONSCIENCE and good hope of successe is present with him from hence that he offers not injury but removes it Thus have I now at last waded thorow this weighty controversie of the lawfulnesse both in point of Law and Conscience of the Parliaments present and all other subjects necessary Defensive Warres against their Soveraigns who invade their lawes liberties Religion Government to subvert them by open force of Armes in which I have freely and impartially discharged my conscience not out of any turbulent seditious or disloyall intention to foment or perpetuate the present or raise any future destructive unnaturall warres between king Parliament and People or to countenance to encourage any tumultuous rebellious factious ambitious traiterous spirits to mutiny or rebell against their Soveraigns for private injuries or upon any false unwarrantable ends or pretences whatsoever let Gods curse and mens for ever rest upon all those who are in love with any warre especially a Civill within their own dearest Countries bowels or dare abuse my loyall sincere Lucubrations to any disloyall sinister designes to the prejudice of their Soveraignes or the States wherein they live but only out of a cordiall desire to effect such a speedy honourable safe religious sempiternall peace between king and Parliament as all true Christian English hearts both cordially pray long for and endeavour by informing his seduced Majesty his evill Cou●sellors his Popish Ma●ignant Forces that if they will still proceed unnaturally and treacherously to make war against their Native Countrey Religion Lawes Liberties and the Parliament which to doe I have elsewhere manifested to be no lesse then high Treason Rebellion against both King and Kingdome they may in point of conscience and Law too be justly opposed resisted repulsed even by force of Armes without any guilt of Treason Rebellion or feare of temporall or eternall condemnation as publike Enemies Rebels Traytors to the Realm whateve●er they have hitherto been informed of to the contrary by temporizing Lawyers or flattering illiterate Court Divines and by assuring all such noble generous publike spirits who shall willingly adventure their lives or fortunes by the Parliaments command in the present necessary defensive warre for the ends pr●mised that for this good service they shall neither in the Courts of Law nor Conscience incurre the least stain or guilt of Treason Rebellion sedition or any such like odious crime much lesse eternall condemnation the panick feare whereof frequently denounced against them by many sottish Malignants Royalists ill-instructed Lawyers and Theologasters hath frighted kept back and withdrawn multitudes from yea cooled corrupted many in this honourable publike duty service which they now owe of Right to God and their Countrey in which to be treacherous perfidious sloathfull negligent cold uncordiall or timerous as too many hitherto have been to the greater honour of those who haue been faithfull actiue Valiant and sincere especially now after so many late horrid treacheries most happily discouered and a new Couenant solemnly entred into demerits a perpetuall brand of i●famy and reproach To dye fighting for ones dearest bleeding dying Countrey hath in all ages been honoured with a Crown of Martyrdome to liue or dye fighting against it hath ever deserved the most capitall censures ignominies and heaviest execrations Let both sides therefore now seriously ponder and lay all the premises close to their soules consciences and then I doubt not through Gods blessing but a happy peace will speedily thereon ensue Nation shall not lift up sword against Nation Countrey against Countrey Englishman against Englishman Brother against brother any more as now they doe neither shall they learn such an unnaturall cursed kind of Civill Warre any more but beat their swords into Plow-shares and their speares into pruning ●ooks and greet one another with a kisse of holy peace and charity Which desired end and issue of these present bloudy warres God in his mercy hasten and accomplish to the joy of all our Soules I should now according to former engagements proceed to other remaining particulars but because this part hath already farre exceeded its intended bounds out of a desire to give full satisfaction in a point of highest present and future concernment every way I shall reserve the residue with the Appendix for another distinct part with which I shall conclude my Meditations and Collections of this subject without any further Additions if God say Amen Finis Partis tertiae Errata in some Copies PAg. 100. l. 8. to by p. 101. l. 32. Omri Zimri l. 40. ludah Israel p. 115. l. 12. that p. 127. l. 36. of their p. 128. l. 31. hence p 136. l. 8. not a Bishop a Bishop not a Lay-man p. 14. l. 17. dele as p. 15. 1. 16. brevis p. 26. l. 1. assistants p. 94. l. 22. offer to r. ask of p. 17. 1. l. 8 no man should long p. 105. l. ●2 ●ipodes p. 106. l. 2. Rulers l. 34. irresistance p. 107. l. 3. by the. p. 121. l. 16. Emperours l. 36. Emperour THE FOVRTH PART OF THE SOVERAIGNE POWER OF PARLIAMENTS and KINGDOMES Wherein the Parliaments Right
received as indubitable verities by most men yea professedly defended by sundry injudicious Lawyers and ignorant Divines though perchance reputed learned solid in their own and others opinions who never tooke the paines to dive into the true originall fundamentall creations institutions publicke Lawes Reasons Policies Iurisdictions compositions Rights Customes Histories of Kings Kingdomes Parliaments States Magistrates People the ignorance whereof hath made them confidently vent many grand absurdities and untruthes to the prejudice imbroyling and almost utter ruine of divers Kings and States which now I hope they will ingenuously acknowledge and recant with reall griefe and shame that they have so grossely cheated seduced Kings Kingdomes People and oft times stirred up civill warres to maintaine their idle lies crazy fictions as just Royall Rights and indubitable Prerogatives when as they are nothing lesse I shall not begge any mans beliefe of any Truth here newly discovered further than his own Iudgement conscience upon serious consideration shall convince him of it and himselfe discerne it fully ratified by substantial precedents and Authorities in the body and close of the Treatise Appendix Only this I shall request of every Reader to peruse over all the Parts of this Discourse with a cordiall Love of Truth and Peace and when he is convinced what is Truth then to live and dye in Pauls resolution 2 Cor. 13. 8. We can doe nothing against the Truth but for the Truth It was our Saviours owne reply to Pilate John 18. 37. For this end was I borne and for this cause came I into the world THAT I SHOULD BEARE WITNESSE UNTO THE TRUTH O then let it now be every ones end and practice too since it is the Truth and nothing else that shall make and keepe us free Free from Errors Troubles Tumults Warres Slavery Tyranny Treachery Popery dangers feares Wherefore love the Truth and Peace and then through Gods mercy we shall speedily regaine retaine them both Farewell THE Fourth Part of the Soveraign POWER of PARLIAMENTS and KINGDOMES The Parliaments Interest in the Militia Forts Navy Officers of the Kingdom IN the preceding Parts of this Discourse I have with as much perspicuity and sincerity as I could waded through those deepe and weighty differences of greatest importance which have lately to our great unhappinesse I know not by what evill spirits solicitation unexpectedly risen up by insensible degrees betweene the Kings Majestie and the present Parliament whose primitive sweet agreement made us not so happy as their subsequent Divisions in place affection opinion have rendred the whole three Kingdomes miserable in point of Royall Prerogatives onely which I have dispatched I should now proceed to other Controversies betweene them principally concerning the Subjects Liberties But before I passe to those particulars I shall present you with some few Records of speciall note casually omitted in their proper place through over-much haste and want of time which will very much cleare the Parliaments just right and ancient Jurisdiction In ordering the Militia of the Realme by Sea and Land in disposing the Ships the Forts of the Realme for the publicke safety in times of danger in concluding matters of Warre and Peace in placing and displacing the great Officers the Privy Counsellors of the Kingdome yea regulating the Kings owne houshold and meniall servants oft times when there was occasion which may serve as a supplement to the second part It it the determination of Henricus Rauzovius a Noble Dane a great Statesman and Souldier in his Commentarius Bellicus Dedicated to Christierne the fourth King of Denmarke Anno 1565. lib. 1. c. 3. That all Kings and Princes in most Republickes rightly and lawfully constituted are obliged by their paction entred into before their Inauguration Not to begin or move any Warre without the consent of all the Estates and Nobles Thus in my hearing Philip King of Spaine when he demanded and tooke an Oath from his Subjects in the Netherlands promised by a mutuall Oath to the Estates That he would make no warre in those parts without their privi●y The same also most Noble King is received and observed not only in your Kingdomes and 〈◊〉 but likewise is in use almost in all Europe Therefore Frederick your Father of most famous memory knowing himselfe to be bound hereunto by compact before he would be involved in the Swedish Warre communicating the whole businesse faithfully to his people as well to the Senators of the Realme as to the Nobles of the Dukedomes maturely advised with them about the manner of waging it Wherefore lest the Warre which is undertaken bee accused as unjust by the States because it was undertaken without their advice contrary to custome and agreements all ought to be assumed into the Counsell and care of Warre For thus it will come to passe besides that things very well thought on and deliberated by many have for the most part better successes then those things which are rashly begun by some one that the Subjects who not unwillingly bring their estates and lives into danger will lesse feare the losse of both will fight more valiantly and will put forth all their strength in prosecuting and ending the combate of warre even for this reason that themselves have beene the advisers of the warre Upon this reason not onely the Kings of the Iewes Arragon France Nav●re and others as I have manifested in the Appendix but even of this our Realme have usually undertaken all their warres and ordered all their Military affaires both by Sea and Land by the advice and direction of their Parliaments as the Grand Councell of Warre both for King and Kingdome This I have plentifully manifested in the premises by sundry examples and shall here onely briefly ratifie with some few new Precedents In the first Parliament of 13 Ed. 3. after Proclamation made Num. 2. That none should come armed with weapons to the Parliament Num. 3. The causes of summoning the Parliament were shewed to the Lords and Commons to have their counsell and advice therein what was best to be done and expressed to be three First that every one great and small should consider in what manner the peace might most surely be preserved within the Realme Secondly how the Marches of Scotland and the Northerne parts might be best defended and kept against the enemies of Scotland Thirdly how the Sea should be guarded against the enemies that they should doe no dammage nor enter the Realme for to destroy it After thus Num. 4. The Bishops and Letters from the King then in France relate to the Houses the Estate of the Kings Army warres and proceedings in France and the great debts the King stood ingaged in for the maintenance of his Army for discharge whereof and the Kings further reliefe in the easiest way to support his warres the Lords condescended to grant the ninth sheafe of all their corne and the ninth fleece and Lambe of all their flockes to the
Kingdom Subjects both by Sea and Land and putting them out of His regall Protection His raising of an A●my of English Irish Scottish French and Germane Papists to maintain and settle the Protestant Religion among us which they have plotted totally to extirpat as appears by their proceedings in Ireland England and the late plot discovered among the Archbishops Papers and the like are warranted which questions I doubt would put them to a non-plus and silence them for eternitie yet to satisfie their importunitie and stop their clamorous mouthes I shall furnish them in brief with some Presidents in point in all States and Kingdoms of note informer in latter times and in our own Realm too In all the civill warres between Kings and Subjects in the Romane and Germane Empires France Spain Aragon Castile Hungary Bohemia Poland Denmark Scotland and other Kingdoms mentioned in the Appendix They shall finde that the generall Assemblies of these States Lords Commons without their Emperors or Kings assents did both raise Forces impose Taxes yea and seise on the Imperiall and Royall Revenues of the Crown to support their wars against their Tyrannicall oppressing Princes In Flaunders heretofore and the Low-Countries of Late yeers th●y have constantly done the like as their Excises long since imposed and yet on foot by common consent without the King of the Spains good liking to preserve their Liberties Religion Estates from the Spanish Tyranny witnesse which every one willingly at the very first imposition and ever since hath readily submitted to being for the publike preservation The like hath been done in former ages and within these five yeers in the Realm of Scotland the same is now practised even without a Parliament by the Popish Rebels both in Ireland and England who have laid Taxes upon all Ireland and all the Romanists in England for the maintenance of this present Rebellion and yet neither King nor his Counsell nor Royallists nor Malignants for ought I can read or hear have ever so much as once written or spoken one syllable against it when as many large Declarations Proclamations Inhibitions in His Majestie●s Name and at least fortie severall Pamphlets have been published by Malignants against this Assessement of the Parliament and the Levying or paying thereof strictly prohibited under pain of high Treason such a grand difference is there now put by the Royall Court-partie to the amazement of all intelligent men between the Irish Rebels now the Kings best Subjects as it seems who may do what they please without censure or restraint and the English now un-Parliamented Parliament though perpetuated by an Act of Parliament who may do nothing for their own or the Kingdoms safety but it must be high Treason at the least O temporâ ô mores Quis talia fando temp●ret a lachrymis Adde to this That the Lords Iustices and Councell in Ireland the twenty nine of Iune 1643 have without authoriti● of Parliament or King for their present necessary defence against the Popish Rebels there imposed an Excise upon most commodities in that Realm here lately Printed which no man can deem Illegall in this case of absolute necessitie But to come close home unto our selves who is there that knows ought in historie and policie but must needs acknowledg● That the Brittains and Saxons warres of this Realm against their oppressing Kings Archigallo Emerian Vortig●rne Sigebert Osred Ethelred B●ornard Leow●lfe Edwine whom th●y deposed for their Tyranny and mis-Government That our Barons long-lasting bloody warres against King Iohn Henry the third Edward the second Richard the second and others fore-mentioned were maintained by publike Assessements and Contributions made by common consent even without a Parliament and with the Revenues and Rents of the very Crown which they seised on as well as the Castles and Forts This being a true rule in Law Qui sintit commodum sentir● debet onus All the Kingdom had the benefit of regaining preserving establishing their Fundamentall Charters Laws Liberties by those warres therefore they deemed it just that all should bear a share in the charge and burthen by voluntary Assessements without King or Parliament During the absence of King Edward the third in France The Lords and Commons in Parliament for the defence of the Realm by Sea and Land against forraign Enemi●s granted an ayde of the ninth Sheaf Lamb and Fleece besides many thousand Sacks of W●oll and the ninth part of other mens Estates in Towns and Corporations and disposed both of the Money and Militia of the Realm for its defence as you heard before The like did they during the Minorities of King Henry the third King Richard the second and King Henry the sixth as the premises evidence without those Kings personall assents Anno Dom. 1259. Richard King of Romans coming with a great Navy and Army of Germans and forraigners to ayd his Brother King Henry the third against the Barons thereupon the Barons sent out a ●leet to encounter them by Sea and prepared a strong Army of Horse and Foot by Land that if they prevailed against them at Sea which they fear●d not yet they might valiantly and constantly entertain and repulse them on the shore and dry Land which the King of Romans being informed off disbanded his forces and came over privat●ly with three Knights onely attending him This was done without the Kings assent and yet at publike charge When King Richard the first was taken prisoner by the Emperour in his return from the holy Land by Authority of the Kings Mother and the Kings Iustices alone without a Parliament it was decreed that the fourth part of all that yeers Rents and of all the moveables as well of the Clergy as of the Laity and all the Woo●●des of the Abbots of the Order of the Cistersians and of Semphringham and all the Gold and Silv●r Chalices and Treasure of all Churches should be paid in toward the freeing and ransome of the King which was done accordingly If such a taxe might be imposed by the Queen Mother and Justices onely without a Parliament for ransoming the King alone from imprisonment may not a taxe of the twentieth part onely of mens estates be much more justly imposed on the Subjects by an Ordinance of both Houses in Parliament without the King for the defence and perservation both of the Parliament and Kingdom to when hostily invaded by the King In few words the King and his Councell yea his very Commanders without his speciall Commission or advice have in many Countries imposed large monethly weekly Contributions and Assessements on the People beyond their abilities and estates yea upon the very Speaker and Members of the Commons and Lords House notwithstanding their Priviledges of Parliament which they say they will maintain to the utter impoverishing and ruining of the Country yea they have burned sacked plundered many whole Towns Cities Counties and spoiled thousands of all they have contrary to their very
and refusing to assist at this pretended Parliament concluded a nullitie of all that should be decreed to prejudice the former Edict of Pacification protesting that they were resolved to maintaine themselves in the Rights Liberties and freedomes which the Edict had granted them That the troublers of the publike quiet and sworne enemies of France should finde them in a just defence and they should answer before God and men for all the miseries that should ensue thereby Yea the Prince of Conde answered more sharply That he did not acknowledge them assembled at Bloys for the Estates of the Realme but a Conventicle of persons corrupted by the sworn enemies of the Crowne who have solicited the abolition of the Edict to the ruine and subversion of the Realme That if they had beene lawfully called he would have assisted for the sincere affection he beares to the Kings service and the quiet of his Countrey that he will never give his consent to the counsels of the Authors of so many confusions which he foresees c. Hereupon a sixt civill Warre begins betweene these Catholike Leaguers and the Protestants whose good successe caused the King An. 1580. to make a new peace with the Protestants and grant them their former immunities The Leaguers discontented herewith begin to cast forth Libels against the King disgrace him in companies as a Sardanapalus and idle Chilpericke 〈◊〉 to be shaved and thrust into a Cloyster They cause the Preachers publikely in all places to terme him a Tyrant an Oppressor of his people by Taxes and a favourer of Heretikes And under a pretence of suppressing Heretikes reforming publike oppressions and settling the succession of the Crowne in case the King should die without Heire they contrary to the Kings command who disavows them and forbids all leavyes of warre raise a great Army and so enforce the king to publish a Declaration in his owne justification and to procure his peace with them to revoke all Edicts made in favour of the Protestants and make open warre against them Hereupon the King of Navarre next Heire apparent to the Crowne for preservation of his owne interest and the Protestants complains against the kings proceedings layes open the mischievous Plots of the Leaguers and then with the Prince of Conde and other Nobles Gentlemen Provinces Townes and Commonalties of both Religions He protests by a lawfull and necessary defence to maintaine the fundamentall lawes of families and the Estates and libertie of the King and Queene his Mother The Leaguers hereupon procure Pope Sextus the fift to excomunicate the king of Navar and Prince of Conde to degrade them and their Successors from all dignities from their pretentions to the Crowne of France and to expose their Countries and persons in prey to the first that should seize on them The Court of Parliament declares this Bull of the Pope to be void rash insolent strange farre from the modestie of former Popes pernicious to all Christendome and derogating from the Crowne of France The Princes likewise protest against and appeale from it as abusive and scandalous to the next free and lawfull Councell The Leaguers pursue their begun warres against the King of Navarre and Protestant party who protest to use all lawfull meanes to resist the violence of their enemies and cast all the miseries that shall ensue upon the Authors thereof Fresh warres are hereby prosecuted against the Protestants by the Leaguers German Forces come in to ayde the Protestants after macombates the King desires peace but the Leaguers will have none and assembling at Nancy they endeavour to force the King to make his Will and allow the Regency unto them to which end they conclude That the King should be urged to joyne his Forces effectually with the League To displace such from their Offices as should be named To bring in the in the Inquisition of Spaine and publish the Councell of Trent but with a moderation of such things as derogate from the priviledges of the French Church To consent to the restauration of the goods sold by the Clergy for the charges of the warre To give them Townes to be named and fortified as the time and necessitie required To forfeit the Huguenots bodies and goods and to entertaine an Army upon the frontiers of Lorraine against the Germanes After which the Duke of Guise approaching to Paris enters it against the Kings command who was jealous of him mutinies the Citizens against the King who thereby is forced to retire from thence for feare of being surprized by the Duke who plotted to seize his Person After which the Duke by the Queene Mothers mediation is reconciled to the King who for feare of his power by an Edict of re-union admits no religion but the Popish promiseth never to make Peace nor Truce with the Heretikes nor any Edict in their favour bindes his subjects to sweare never to yeeld obedience after him to any Prince that shall be an Heretike or a favourer of Heresie degrades from all publike charges either in peace or war those of the Reformed Religion promiseth all favour to the Catholikes declares them guilty of High Treason who shall refuse to signe to this new union and shall afterwards depart from it But signing this forced Edict he wept To establish which Edict and work their further ends the Leaguers cause the King to summon a Parliament of the 3. Estates at Bloyes procuring those of their faction to be chosen of this Assembly where establishing the former extorted Edict they thereby exclude the King of Navarre an Herelike as they deemed him from the Crowne of France to which he was next Heire An Heretike cannot reigne in France it is an incompatible thing with the Coronation and Oath which he ought to take hurtfull to the honour of God and prejudiciall to the good of the Realme Then they declare the King an enemy to and oppressor of his people a Tyrant over his Realme that so the people should presently resolve to confine him unto a Monastery and install the Duke in his throne And at last the King being certainly informed of the Dukes traiterous designes to surpize him and usurpe his Throne caused the Duke and Cardinall of Burbon the chiefe Heads of the League to be suddenly slaine and others of them to be imprisoned Hereuppon the Parisiens mutinie and take up Armes afresh The Colledge of Sorbone concluded by a publike Act of the seventh of Ianuary 1589. That the people of France are freed from the Oath of obedience and fealty which they owed to Henry of Valoys and that lawfully and with a good conscience they may arme against him receive his Revenues and imploy it to make warre against him After which the Assembly of the Estates dissolving the Parisiens imprison the Court of Parliament at Paris till they condescended to their pleasures and confirmed a generall Councell of the union consisting of fourty choice men of the three Estates to dispose of the publike affaires and
the Kings of Aragon intreated in those times by their subjects who entred into a Vnion between themselves resolving That for the common cause of liberty Non verbis solum SED ARMIS CONTENDERE LICERET that it was lawfull for them to contend not onely with words BVT WITH ARMS TO and determined in this assembly of the States A Comitijs intempestive discedere REGI NEFAS ESSE That it was unlawfull yea a grand offence for the king to depart unseasonably from his Parliament before it was determined Our present case Iames the second of Aragon being in Sicily at the death of King Alph●nso Don Pedro his brother assembled the Estates at Saragossa to consult left the State in his absence would receive some prejudice where James arriving having first 〈◊〉 and promised the observation of the Rights and Priviledges of the Countrie was received and crowned king About the year 1320 Iames by advice of his Estates held at Tarragone made a perpetuall Vnion of the Realms of Arragon and Valencia and the Principal●ty of Catelone the which from that time should not for any occasion he disunited In which assembly Don Iames eldest son to the Crown being ready to mary Leonora of Castile suddenly by a strange affection quitting both his wife and succession to the Realm of Arragon told his Father That he had made a ●ow neither to marry nor to reign so as notwithstanding all perswasions of the King and Noblemen he quit his Birth-right to his Brother Don Alphonso after the example of Esau discharged the Estates of the Oath they had made unto him and presently put on the habite of the Knights of Ierusalem Whereupon his second brother was by the Estates of Arragon acknowledged and sworn heir of these Kingdoms after the decease of his father At this time the Authority of the Iustice of Aragon was so great That it might both censure the King and the Estates and appoint them a place and admit them that did assist or reject them Ferdinand the fourth king of Castile being but a childe when his father Sancho died was in ward to his mother Queen Marry his Protectresse he had two competitors to the Crown Alphonso de la Cede and Don Iohn who making a strong confederacy were both crowned Kings against right by severall parts of his Realm which they shared between them The States assembled at Zamora granted great sums of money to Ferdinand to maintain the wars with his enemies and procure a dispensation of Legitimation and marriage from the Pope who would do nothing without great fees After which he summoning an assembly of the Estates at M●dina they refused to meet without the expresse command of the Queen Mother who commanded them to assemble and promised to be present After this divers accords were made twixt him and his competitors and at last calling an assembly of the Estates to assist him in his warres against the Moors he soon after condemned two Knights called Peter and Iohn of Caravajal without any great proofs for a murther and caused them to be cast down headlong from the top of the Rock of Martos who professing their innocency at the execution they adjourned the king to appear at the Tribunall Seat of Almighty God within thirty dayes after to answer for their unjust deaths who thereupon fell sick and died leaving his son Alphonso the 12 very young for whose Regency therebeing great competition the inhabitants of Avila and their Bishop resolved not to give the possession and government of the Kings person to any one that was not appointed by the assembly of the Estates Whereupon the Estates assembling at Palence committed the government of his person to Q. Mary his Grandmother and Queen Constance his mother who dying another Assembly of the Estates was called at Burgos Anno 1314. who decreed that the Government of the King and Regencie of the Realme should be reduced all into one body betwixt Q Marry Don Pedro and Don Iohn and if any one of them should dye it should remain to the two other that did survive and to one if two dyed After this Anno 1315. these Tutors and Governours of the Realme of Castile were required by the Estates in an Assembly at Carrion to give caution for their government and to give an account what they had done Who often jarring and crossing one another divers Assemblies of Estates were oft called to accord them Anno 1320. The Estates assembling appointed new Governours of the King and Realme who discharging their trust very lewdely and oppressing the People Anno 1326. they were discharged of their Administration at a Parliament held at Vailledolet in which the king did sweare to observe the fundamentall Lawes of the Realme and to administer justice maintaining every one in his Estates goods and honour Which done the Deputies of the Estates swore him Fealty This King afterwards proving very cruell and tyrannicall his Nobles and Subjects of times successively took up defensive armes against him his Tyranny augmenting their obstinacy and procuring him still new troubles Whereupon at last discerning his errours he became more mild and often assembled the Estates in Parliament who gave him large Subsidies to maintain his warres against the Moores The Province of Alava had a custome to chuse a Lord under the Soveraignty of Castile who did govern and enjoy the revenues appointed by the Lords of the Countrey for the election of whom they were accustomed to assemble in the Field of Arriaga those of this Election being called Brethren and the Assembly of the Brotherhood Notwithstanding in the yeer 1332. the Brotherhood and Estates of this Province sent to K. Alphonso divers Articles which they beseeched him to confirme promising for their part that this should be their last Assembly and that the name and effect of their Brotherhood should remain for ever extinct and the Province be for ever united to the Crown of Castile if he would confirme those Articles to them being 17. in number which he did The chiefe were these That the King nor his Successors should not alien any place of his Demesnes That the Gentlemen and their goods should be free and exempt from all Subsidies as they had been heretofore That they and others of the Countrey should be governed according to the customes and rights of Soportilla And that divers Townes and Villages therein specified should be free from all Tributes and Impositions About the yeer 1309. Mahumet King of Granado becomming casually blind was soon after deposed by his own Brother and the great men of his Realme who were discontented and disliked to be governed by a blind King who could not lead them to the warres in p●rson Which Kingdome went by Election commonly as is evident by his three next successours and Mahumet the sixth King of Granado Anno 1307. Lewes Hutin was crowned King of Navarre at Pampelone where he sware to observe the Lawes and Rights of the Realme After which Anno 1315. Philip