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A35219 England's monarchs, or, A compendious relation of the most remarkable transactions, and observable passages, ecclesiastical, civil, and military, which have hapned [sic] during the reigns of the kings and queens of England, from the invasion of the Romans to this present adorned with poems, and the pictures of every monarch, from William the Conquerour, to His present Majesty, our gracious sovereign, King Charles the Second : together with the names of His Majesty's most Honourable Privy Council, the nobility, bishops, deans, and principal officers, civil and military, in England, in the year 1684 by R.B., author of the Admirable curiosities in England, The historical remarks in London and Westminster, The late wars in England, Scotland, and Ireland, &c. R. B., 1632?-1725? 1685 (1685) Wing C7314; ESTC R21089 148,791 242

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then returning into England raised a strong Army of 27000 fighting Men which he landed in France about Autumn The French King having an Army of 60000 Soldiers and accompanied with the Kings of Bohemia Navar and Scotland with Five Dukes Twenty six Earls and above 4000 Lords and Knights entred the Field where he found Edward prepared for Battel but by the Mediation of the Countess of Heynault King Philip's Sister and Mother to King Edward's Wife a Cessation was concluded and King Edward with his Nobles and Soldiers returned to England Yet four years after Edward again met with the Princes of Germany at Brussels who desired the Flemings to joyn with them but they refused unless Edward would entitle himself King of France and Quarter the Arms of France with those of England and lastly would as King of France release them from a Bond of Two Millions of Florens whereby they were obliged not to make War with the King of France King Edward soon yielded to all their Desires whereupon they obliged themselves by a solemn Contract in Writing under their Hands and Seals to assist him to the utmost In the mean time the French Kings Navy landed some thousands of Men at Southampton burning the Town and Villages thereabouts Upon his return the King called a Parliament who raised so great a Tax that the People turned their Prayers into Curses He likewise borrowed great Sums of his richest Subjects and of London 20000 Marks He coined abundance of Gold and Silver Money wherein he quartered the Arms of France and intitled himself King of England and France Having raised an Army of 10000 stout Soldiers he imbarqued them in 200 Ships and sailing toward Sluce he fortunately met with the French Fleet whereon were 40000 Men of divers Nations whom the King fell upon with his whole Navy and after a fierce and bloody Fight very few of the French escaped being all either sunk or taken This Loss was so very considerable that they were afraid to discover it to the French King lest it should too much discompose him and therefore they contrived his Jester should do it who often repeating in his hearing Cowardly Englishmen Faint-hearted Englishmen Dastardly Englishmen The King observing him asked him why Because said he they had not the courage to leap into the Sea as our brave Frenchmen did whereby the King began to have some knowledge of this grand disaster Edward received but small Loss so that the next day he landed at Gaunt and soon after besieged Tournay but by the importunity of the aforesaid Countess of Heynault a second Truce was concluded for one year In King Edward's absence the Scots disliking their King Edward Baliol because he would not engage against the English and calling in David Bruce they invade Northumberland destroying all before them and laying close Siege to Newcastle but at Midnight 200 resolute Men issued out and secretly entred into the Earl of Murray's Tent seising him and killing many to the great terrour of the Scots Camp whereupon David finding stout Resistance raised the Siege and marched to Durham which he took plundred and burnt slaying all the Inhabitants and then sate down before Roxborough Castle defended by the beautiful Countess of Salisbury and her Brother Sir William Mountague who being continually assaulted expected no Help but from the King and to give him notice of their Extremity the valiant Knight himself mounted on a swift Horse rid full speed through thousands of his Enemies sending word to King David as he rid along That in a short time he should again hear of him Upon which the Scots pushed on the Siege with all vigour yet could not carry it and therefore suddenly raised it and returned home King Edward arriving there that very day was much discomposed that he had missed them yet by the Mediation of several Honourable Personages a Truce was concluded for two years The King after the Scots were gone disarmed himself and with ten or twelve Persons of Quality entred the Castle where he was soon inflamed with the Love of the fair Countess but her Vertue resisted all Temptations so that he departed from her in Discontent The King then made a Royal Feast for all his Nobility and Forreigners that came thereto wherein were acted several Martial Sports in one of which the Lord Beaumont a Noble Knight was unfortunately slain After this the King called a Paliament at Westminster wherein he created his eldest Son Edward Prince of Wales and a Tax was raised for the Wars in France for which the King confirmed Magna Charta Charta de Foresta and several other Statutes The next year the King for encouraging Virtue and Valour instituted the Order of the Knights of the Garter at Windsor and then sent an Army into France under the Command of the Earl of Darby John the French Kings eldest Son having closely besieged the Castle of Aguil●on in Gascoin with near 100000 men King Edward with his Son eight Earls fifteen Barons and many Gentlemen of Quality with an Army of 14000 men by the advice of the Lord Harcourt a banished Nobleman of France landed in Normandy and took the strong Town of Harflew plundering divers others whereby every Common Soldier was made a Gentleman with the Spoil and his Army increasing he took the City of Caen and abundance of other Towns and Castles the English pursuing their good Fortune so far that they were on a sudden encompassed with 100000 French on the one side and a River on the other yet passing on the Sand at low Water he at last got clear with the slaughter of a very great multitude of French and marching toward Cressy the French King was there resolved to try the fortune of a Field Battel and the English after Prayers to God for sucess with great Courage prepared for fight the King had given the Vanguard to his Son Edward who for his Valour was called the Black Prince the Second Battalion was led by the Earl of Northampton and the third by the King himself The Signal of Battel being given both parties furiously ingaged wherein the Black Prince was very hard put to it and sent to his Father for succor who stood on a Windmil hard by to observe the Fight but the King refused him any aid saying Let them send no more to me whatever happens while my Son is alive but let him either conquer or dye since if it please God he escape I am resolved the honour of this day shall be only his when the Prince heard this he was forced to put out his utmost Courage and Vigor whereby he obtained a glorious Victory the greatest part of the French Army lying dead before them so that in two days wherein the Fight continued there were slain of the French 11 Princes 80 Barons 1200 Knights and above 30000 Common Soldiers the French King himself hardly escaping by flight After the Battel King Edward kissing and imbracing his Son said Fair Son God
Philip growing still more angry and pretending to fear some secret League between King Richard and the Turks to the prejudice of himself and his Followers he withdrew all the Troops belonging to the Emperour the Archduke and himself and leaving the King of England returned home Yet did not this discourage the gallant King Richard but with his own Forces and those of some other Christian Princes who submitted to his Conduct he prosecuted his Designs victoriously in all Places where he came It is related That there being a fair Opportunity for the taking of Jerusalem King Richard and the Duke of Burgundy marched in two Bodies from Acon to surprise it but when they approached near it Burgundy envying Richard's Glory signified to him That he would retire with his Soldiers because it should not be said the English had taken Jerusalem While this Message was delivering and King Richard grieving that such a glorious Enterprise should miscarry by Emulation an English Soldier came suddenly and cried out Sir Sir come hither and I will shew you Jerusalem But Richard throwing his Coat of Arms over his Face and weeping spake thus aloud Ah my Lord God I beseech thee that I may not see thy Holy City Jerusalem since I am not able to deliver it out of the Hands of thine Enemies The same Author writes That this Prince was so renowned for Valour that he was more dreaded among the Saracens than any Christian King ever was insomuch that when their Infants cried the Mothers to still them would say King Richard will come and take you which would affright them into stilness Yea when their Horses started at any time the Turks would spur them and cry What you Jades you think King Richard is here But while Richard was triumphant over his Enemies abroad his Affairs in England were very badly managed by the Bishop of Ely who being the Grandson of a Plowman and the Son of a Cow-keeper in the North after such high Advancement as Lord Chancellor and Protector of the Kingdom he grew insolent and exercised unusual Oppressions and Tyrannies over all sorts of Persons both in Church and State yea so ambitious and vain-glorious was he that when he rid abroad for his Recreation he would be attended by above a thousand Horse and would be waited on by the Sons of the Principal Nobility to whom he would marry his beggarly Kindred with little or no Fortunes But perceiving himself at length generally hated and abhorred he resolved to forsake the Kingdom and disguising himself in the Habit of a Country-man with a Piece of Cloth under his Arm he travelled toward Dover but being there discovered he was furiously assaulted by the People and dragged along upon the Sands after which being sent to London he was by the Nobility committed to the Tower where he cont nued till the King's Return but was then restored to his Liberty and Offices though he enjoyed them not long for he died soon after travelling to Rome to the great Joy of the wronged English Subject King Richard heard of these Transactions and of the great Discontent of his Brother John who out of hatred to the Bishop of Ely had seised divers Towns Forts and Castles into his Hands and onely wanted the Peoples Favour to make himself King He had advice likewise of the Inroads and Invasions of Philip the French King into Normandy in his absence These Tidings enforced him for preserving his Royalty to make a Peace with the Turks for three years even when he was in the height of Success and to return home In the way he again won the Isle of Cyprus from the Knights Templars to whom he had formerly sold it and then exchanged it with Guy of Lusignan for the City of Jerusalem he being the last Christian King thereof upon which Richard was called King of Jerusalem and so were many of his Successors long after Proceeding in his Voyage homeward he was by a violent Storm Shipwreck'd upon the Coast of Istria near Venice and travelling into the Territories of Leopold in Austria he was taken Prisoner and by him sold to the Emperour Henry the Sixth for 6000 Marks who taking good Security of Richard for paying him 100000 l. he gave him his Liberty In short time he arrived in Normandy and raising a stout Army he quickly revenged himself on the French for their Injuries against him and recovered all that had been unjustly taken from him While the King was thus employed his Brother Jo●n came to him and humbly desired his Pardon alledging That what he had done was onely occasioned by the unsufferable Pride and Insolence of the Bishop and therefore he now freely surrendred all again into his Hands The King being mollified by this ingenuous Confession said God grant that I may as easily forget your Offences as you may remember wherein you have offended and then not onely gave him his Pardon but received him into his special Grace and Favour He then returned into England and summoning a Parliament he caused himself to be crowned the second time imposing very heavy Taxes upon the People for his Ransom and seising the Treasures of several Monasteries And to increase his own Revenue he resumed into his Hands all those Honours Mannors Castles Privileges and Offices which he had formerly sold to his Subjects forcing them to be contented with the Profits they had received By which ways he got together 80000 l. toward his Ransom the rest Leopold forgave him being curst by the Pope for making Richard a Prisoner coming from the Holy War After this the King transported another Army into France where he fought very successfully against the French and in one Battel took 100 Knights on Horseback 200 great Horse 140 of them being barbed and armed with Iron In these Wars Philip Bishop of Beavoirs and Peer of the Blood-Royal fighting valiantly in a Skirmish was taken Prisoner and order'd to be committed and Irons put on his Legs as being an inveterate Enemy to King Richard This hard Usage being complained of to the Pope he writ earnestly to Richard not to detain his dear Son an Ecclesiastical Person and a Shepherd of the Lords but to send him back to his Flock The King in a pleasant Bravery sent the Head-piece Back and Breast of Iron in which he was taken to the Pope with the Question of Jacob's Sons to their Father Behold this we found him in Is this thy Sons Coat Nay says the Pope it is the Coat neither of my Son nor a Son of the Church but of some Son of Mars therefore let him procure his Liberty as well as he can for I will not concern my self therein Soon after King Richard was cut off in the midst of all his Glory for the Lord Limoges having found a vast Treasure of Gold and Silver he sent the greatest part thereof to him as Lord thereof but the King resolving to have all came to besiege the Castle of Chalms where he judged
fell upon the Scots at Shrewsbury before they could joyn their Confederates whom he routed as he did likewise Hotspur and Worcester killing thirty six with his own Hand The Earl of Worcester was taken and beheaded and several of the principal Confederates were hanged and quartered and their Heads set upon London bridge Prince Henry likewise went into Wales against Owen Glendour who was suddenly forsaken by his Army and hiding himself in the Woods being encompassed by the Princes Forces was miserably starved to death Henry Hotspur was slain in the Field but his Father the Earl of Northumberland came voluntarily and submitted himself to the King protesting himself innocent of these Treasons which though the King did not in the least credit yet he gave him good Words and suffered him to depart at pleasure because he had Berwick Castle and other strong Places in his Possession These Troubles being ended Lewis Duke of Orleance Brother to the French King sent a vain-glorious Challenge to King Henry requiring him with an hundred stout English to fight with him and the like number of French for Honours sake at a Place appointed But the King discreetly answered That his former warlike Actions sufficiently cleared him from the infamous Title of Coward That Kings ought not to be so careless of their Kingdoms or prodigal of the Blood of their Subjects whom God had committed to their Charge as to fight for any Cause unless for the Defence of the True Religion their own Rights or to secure their Realms from Foreign Enemies and revenge their Peoples Wrongs That a Sovereign Prince by the Laws of Arms and Honour was not obliged to any Challenge in the Field except against one equal to him in Dignity Yet that he would be always ready to repress any Violence or Wrong which the Duke should rashly or unadvisedly attempt against him or his People The haughty Duke having received this mild Answer grew inraged and immediately sate down with a great Army before the Town of Vergie in Guyen which he besieged three Months giving many fierce Assaults and receiving such stout Repulses that despairing of Success he was compelled to raise his Siege and return disgracefully into France The Duke of Burgundy likewise judging that King Henry durst not leave the Kingdom to make War abroad desired leave of the French King to attempt the regaining of Callice and to that end raised great Strength but the French Kings Council being informed of King Henry's vast Preparations to defeat them commanded Burgundy to desist which he imputed to the Pride of the Duke of Orleance lest he should gain more Honour than himself No sooner was Henry freed from this Danger but another presently succeeded contrived by Henry Piercy Earl of Northumberland Richard Scroop Archbishop of York Thomas Mowbray Earl-Marshal the Lords Hastings Faulconbridge Bardolf and others but the Conspiracy being privately revealed he unexpectedly marched with an Army into the North and surprised all the Lords except Northumberland and Bardolf whom he immediately beheaded Northumberland fled into France and from thence came back a while after into Scotland where he was promised Aid against the King but Prince Henry being sent thither burnt and destroyed all before him taking in the Castles of Berwick and Anwick and forcing the Scots to beg for Truce which was granted them for a few Months onely But three years after Northumberland and Bardolf animating the Scots to a new War entred Northumberland and did much mischief Whereupon King Henry raised Forces to suppress them but before his coming they were routed by Sir Ralph Rooksby Sheriff of the County and the two Lords with divers others being taken they cut off their Heads and sent them for Presents to the King After which till his Death which hapned in two years he enjoyed Peace and Quietness and then died at London of an Apoplexy having reigned Thirteen years and five months and lived Fifty six 1412. and was buried at Canterbury In his Admonition to his Son at his Death he spake thus As long as Englishmen have Wealth and Riches so long shalt thou have Obedience from them but when they are Poor they are still ready for Commotion and Rebellion HENRY the FIFTH King of England c. FRom the Lancastrian Line successively I Englands Glorious Golden Garland got I mixed Justice still with Clemency Much Blood I shed yet Blood-shed loved not Time may my Bones and Sepulchre destroy But Time can never blast my endless Fame Oblivion my great Acts can ne'er annoy Or make Forgetfulness forget my Name In France a Game at Tennis I did play With roaring Rackets thundring Guns and Drums And what I play'd for still I brought away The Spoils triumphantly transporting home Yet at the last grim Death my Life assail'd And as I liv'd I di'd lov'd and bewail'd WHilst Henry the Fifth was Prince he accompanied with several rude debauched Persons with whom he committed many extravagant Actions but after the Death of his Father being Crowned King he became a new Man banishing all those his loose Companions from his Presence and Court and electing grave discreet Counsellors and Officers in all Places for Administration of the Government and Courts of Justice He applied himself to reform all kind of Abuses and especially the Pride Covetousness and other Enormities of the Clergy enjoyning them to apply themselves to Prayer Preaching and Hospitality He executed the Laws with moderation upon his People and to prevent any Irruptions of the Scots and Welch he built divers Forts and Castles on the Frontiers Garrison'd with some thousands of stout Soldiers In his first year he ordered the Body of King Richard the Second to be removed with great Pomp and Solemnity from Langley to Westminster and buried it with Queen Ann his first Wife In his second year he called a Parliament at Leicester in which he was earnestly petitioned to suppress the Religious Houses throughout the Kingdom as being now onely the Nurseries of Idleness Gluttony Letchery and Pride the Revenues whereof were reckoned to be worth 20000 l. a year which would then maintain 15 Earls 1500 Knights and above 6000 Soldiers besides an Allowance to a great number of Alms-houses To divert this dangerous Motion the fat Abbots and Priors the idle Monks wanton Fryars and whining Nuns joyntly beseeched the Archbishop of Canterbury to be their Friend who in a Learned Oration discovered the Kings Right to the Crown of France proposing an easie Method for attaining thereto and lastly as a more prevailing Argument he offered the King as a free Gift from the Clergy an incredible Sum of Money for furthering him therein This Proposal laid all those Petitions asleep being approved of both by King Nobles and People and nothing was discoursed of but Englands recovering of France To which purpose the Duke of Exeter the Kings Uncle the Archbishop of Dublin the Lord Gray High Admiral and the Bishop of Norwich attended with 500 Horse were sent Ambassadors to the
CHARLES the FIRST King of England c. THough clog'd with miseries and woes Palm-like deprest I highher rose And as th' unmoved Rock outbraves The b isterous Winds and raging Waves So Triumpht I and shone more bright In sad afflictions darksome Night My splendid but yet toilsom Crown Regardlesly I trampled down With joy I took a Crown of Thorn Though Sharp yet easy to be born The Heavenly Crown already mine I view'd with Eyes of Faith divine I vain things slighted to inchace Glory the just reward of Grace CHarles the third Son of James the sixth King of Scots and Ann his wife daughter of Frederick the Second King of Denmark was born at Dumfermling in Scotland Nov. 19. 1600. At the Age of two years he was created D. of Albany In 1603. K. James had news by Sir Robert Cary one of the younger Sons of the L. Hunsdon that Q. Elizabeth was dead contrary to the opinion of many of his Scotch Courtiers who being wearied with the tediousness of their expectation did believe at last that it would never be acknowledged by the Lords of England that the Q. was dead as long as there was any old woman of that Nation left to wear good clothes take the name of Q. upon her for bringing which news the D. of Albany was committed to the Governance of Sir Robert Carys Lady and he himself ever after much esteemed by him This news being seconded by that of the proclaiming of K. J. for her lawful successor the K. prepared to go for England at which time a certain Laird of the High-lands though very old came to Court to take his leave of him and after his prayers for his Majesties long life and prosperity he next applied himself to D. Charles without taking any great notice of Prince Henry and when the K. told him he mistook himself in his Addresses to the Infant as not being his eldest Son and Prince of Scotland he answered That he knew well enough what he did and that it was this Child in whom his name and memory was to be perpetuated to future Ages with other speeches of the like nature which were then disregarded but after the death of Prince Henry were thought to have somewhat prophetical in them In the sixth year of his age he was taken from the charge of the Women and committed to the Tutorage of Mr. Tho. Murray under whom he advanced exceedingly in learning the weakness in his legs rendring him more bookish and studious than he had otherwise been which Prince Henry taking notice of he jestingly one time took Archbishop Abbots Square Cap and put on his brothers head telling him That if he continued a good boy and followed his book he would make him one day Archbishop of Canterbury which the Child took in such disdain that he threw his Cap on the ground and trampled it under his feet which afterward was taken as an ill presage to the Church but it was altogether groundless as to him since there never was a more gracious Patron to the Church nor a more resolute Champion for the Hierarchy than he When he was twelve years old his brother Prince Henry died and Charles succeeded in the Principality of Wales Dukedom of Cornwal all the Royalties thereof In 1622. he took Ship at Dover arrived at Bullen in France and from thence rid Post to the Court of Spain upon this occasion Frederick Prince Palatine being disspossest of his ancient patrimony by the Emperor of Germany as aforementioned the upper Palatinate being conferred upon the D. of Bavaria and the lower on the K. of Spain it was held most expedient to negotiate a marriage between Prince Charles and the Infanta of Spain for the recovery of the whole which being managed by the L. Digby he was fed with delays from one time to another whereupon K. James resolved to send the Prince in Person either to consummate or break off the treaty accordingly he went accompanied with the D. of Buckingham Mr. Endimion Porter and Mr. Francis Cottington when ●ews came of his arrival at Madrid though the English Subjects were glad for his safety yet they were afraid of his danger because he had put himself into the power of the King of Spain which no body durst acquaint the King withal but Archee the Jester who going boldly to the King as he found him in a good humour told him That he was come to change Caps with him Why said the King Marry says Archee Because thou hast sent the Prince into Spain from whence he is never like to return But says the King What wilt thou say when thou ●est him come back again Marry says Archee I will then take off the Cap which I put upon thy head for sending him ●hither and put it on the King of Spain for letting him return At which words it is reported the King was much concern'd not having before apprehended the danger of that Adventure Dr. Heylins Life K. Charles p. 25. But the Spaniard had no such design and therefore the Restitution of the Palatinate being denied the Match broke off and a Rupture was like to follow whereupon K. James proposed a Marriage with Henrietta Maria of France whom the Prince had seen when he passed incognito into Spain which afterward took effect It is reported that when she was told that the Prince of Wales had been at the Court and was gone to Spain she said That if he had went to Spain for a Wife he might have had one nearer hand and saved himself a great part of the trouble During these Preparations for a War and Marriage King James departed this life at Theobalds and Prince Charles was proclaimed K. of G. Brittain France and Ireland But having already published a little Book of the same price with this called The Wars in England Scotland and Ireland or An Account of the Reign of King Charles the First his Illegal Tryal and deplorable Martyrdom with all Passages to His present Majesties happy Restauration I shall not here repeat any part thereof but collect some few Remarkable Occurrences which have happened from the year 1660 to this time King CHARLES the Second NO Voice more soft than Thunder can express Our present Joy or our past Heaviness None can the largeness of this Joy set out Vnless at once he makes three Kingdoms sho● To God on High in Thankfulness and Prais●t Who without Blood did Crown our King wit● Bays Brought from three Conquered Nations whichh he Holds in subjection but to make them free Without a War Great Charles his Kingdoms won Thus streight when Heaven please the thing is done Now let us thankful be and sing his praise Who for our Cypress has bestowed Bays May we give God and Caesar all their due And always Peace and Loyalty pursue AFter His Majesties most Wonderful and Joyful Restauration in the year 1660 he was April 23. following Crowned with all manner of Magnificence at Westminster and
saith the famous Eusebius after our Conversation was through too much Liberty and Licentiousness degenerated and Holiness of Life neglected whilst we did envy bite and backbite each other raising intestine War and wounding one another with opprobrious Words whilst nothing but Hypocrisie was in the Face Deceit in the Heart and Guile on the Tongue whereby Vengeance and Wrath was come to the height even then it was that the heavy Hand of God began to visit us Nevertheless when God had done using these his Rods of Correction he cast them into the Fire for these two Emperours having renounced the Empire and being again become Private Men. Dioclesian poysoned himself and Maximinian hanged himself Marcus Antoninus was another of the Roman Emperours who commanded here in whose Reign the Christian Religion was first professed by Publick Authority under Lucius the first Christian King in the World At which time Elutherius then Bishop of Rome sent Faganus and Damianus to him upon whose Preaching the Heathenish Flamens and Arch-Flamens being twenty eight in number were converted to so many Bishops Sees whereof London York and Caerleon upon Vsk in Wales were made the Metropolitans The first Archbishop of London was Theanus This Marcus Aurelius raised a horrid Persecution against the Christians wherein those famous Worthies Polycarpus and Justin Martyr suffered with many other zealous Christians But in the Wars with the Germans what with the Pestilence and want of Water his Army was very sorely distressed but by the Prayers of the Christian Soldiers in his Host such plenty of Rain fell that after five days parching Drowth and Thirst the whole Army was refreshed and strengthened and at the same time his Enemies on the contrary were utterly discomfited and overthrown by Thunder and Lightning from Heaven Whereupon the Emperour abated his Persecution and named that Legion of the Christians the Thundring Legion Theodosius was the last of the Roman Emperours that had Power in Britain which was in the Year of Christ 423. For about this time the Goths who had faithfully served the Romans above twenty years being disobliged and slighted to revenge their Wrongs they chose for their Leader a violent Goth called Alaricus who shortly after proved the Scourge of Rome For the Vandals Alans and Suecians joyning with him they began a fierce War in Austria and Hungary increasing their Forces into such vast Multitudes that the World stood amazed and trembled at them For soon after two hundred thousand Goths more resorted to them who with these united Forces over-run Thracia Hungary Austria Sclavonia and Dalmatia ruining and destroying all things in so dreadful a manner that it seemed rather the Ravage of Devils than Men. The Roman Empire thus declining they drew their Forces out of Britain But a while after the Britans were extremely distressed by the continual Disturbers of their Peace the Scots and Picts therefore they sent their Ambassadors to Rome with their Garments rent and Dust upon their Heads bewailing their most miserable Condition and begging Assistance whereupon the Emperour sent a Regiment of Soldiers into Britain under Gallio who for a while secured them but was soon called back with his Legion into France to secure the Country about Paris At his departure he advised the Britans to stand upon their Guard and for the future to provide for their own Safety and not to depend upon any Succours from the Romans who had their Hands full of Troubles nearer home Thus the Romans after they had commanded in Britain about five hundred years took their last Farewel thereof During their continuance here they had levied so many Companies of stout Britans for their Wars in Armenia Egypt and other Frontier Countries that they had much dispeopled the Nation Some of these British Soldiers after they were worn out in the Wars had Armorica in France assigned them by Constantine the Great for their good Service in the Wars from whom it was called Little-Britain Unto this Country in the time of Gratian the Emperour was Vrsula the Daughter of Dinoth Regent of Cornwal sent with eleven thousand Virgins who were to have been married to their Countrymen the Britans but they all perished e're they arrived some being drowned in the Sea by Tempest and the Remainder put to the Sword by the barbarous Huns and Picts because they would not yield to their filthy Lusts THE GOVERNMENT of the SAXONS THe Southern or more Civiliz'd Britans being extremely weakned by the Romans exporting so many of their valiant Soldiers and then forsaking them and likewise by Scarcity and Famine their inveterate Foes the Scots and Picts take this unhappy Opportunity to infest them with all manner of Cruelties and Barbarities So that being no longer able to defend and secure themselves they supplicate for Aid from Germany inviting the Jutes Angles and Saxons who then inhabited Jutland Holstein and the Coasts along the River Rhene to come to their Assistance Their Proposal was readily embraced and nine thousand of them under the Command of two Brethren Hengist and Horsa entred the Land at Ebsfleet in the Isle of Thanet in Kent where they were received with great Joy and entertained with Songs according to the Custom of the Britans who allotted them that Island to inhabit and a while after Vortigern then King of the Britans allowed Hengist so much Land as he could encompass within a Bull-hide cut out into Thongs wherein he built a Castle which from thence had the Name of Thong-Castle When it was finished Hengist invited the King to see it who there fell in love with Rowena the Daughter or Niece of Hengist upon which Match Hengist grew more bold contriving to make the Island his Inheritance and thereupon sent for fresh Forces who at their arrival caused several Quarrels among the Natives dispossessing the People of their Estates every Commander reckoning that part of the Country his own where he could over-match the Britans where they commanded as absolutely as Princes whereby the Country was burdened with seven Kings at once each of them having Sovereign Command within his own Limits though still one seemed to be Supreme over all the rest This was usually called the Saxon Heptarchy or Seven Kingdoms The first and chiefest was that of Kent onely governed by Hengist and his Successors for three hundred seventy two years The next was the Kingdom of the South Saxons containing the Counties of Sussex and Surrey continuing a hundred and thirteen years 3. That of the West Saxons comprehending the Counties of Cornwal Devon Dorset Somerset Wilts Berks and Hampshire it lasted three hundred years 4. The East Saxons Kingdom which was Essex Middlesex and part of Hartfordshire 5. The Kingdom of Northumberland containing the Counties of Northumberland Westmorland Cumberland Durham York and Lancaster continuing three hundred seventy nine years 6. The Kingdom of Mercia which was compos'd of the Counties of Oxford Glocester Worcester Salop Cheshire Stafford Warwick Buckingham Bedford Huntington part of Hartfordshire
to the Earl of Leicester HENRY the THIRD King of England AMidst great Troubles and Confusions I In Youth ascended to the English Throne England was then opprest with Misery By Frenchmen who by me were overthrown For the brave English under my Command Did soon expell those their insulting Foes My Barons did my Sovereignty withstand And brought upon themselves and me great Wo●● For in each Battel none but I did lose I lost my Subjects Lives on every Side From Civil Wars no better Profit grows Friends Foes my People all that beat or died My Gain was Loss my Pleasure was my Pain These were the Triumphs of my troublous Reign AFter the Death of King John Henry his eldest Son of nine years old was Crowned King the Earl of Glocester who had married one of his A●●●s and was Learned Wise and Valiant being made Protector of him and the Kingdom who administred Justice faithfully among the People The Youth of the King and the Treachery of many of the English Nobility encouraged Philip of France and Lewis his Son to land fresh Forces in the Realm to whom the Welch likewise joyned all the Forces they could raise But the new Protector raised an Army against them and in many Encounters defeated them And Pope Honorius finding the French slighted his Thunderbolts sent out new Curses more sharp and severe than any of his Predecessors whereupon Prince Lewis seemed at present to be affrighted and to prepare for his Departure though his Father Philip still sent new Forces over But Hugh de Burgh Governour of the Ci●●u●-Ports preparing a gallant Fleet valiantly encountred them at Sea and took all their Ships This great Victory brought Lewis to treat of Peace and being absolved by Guallo the Popes Legat and receiving a considerable Sum of Money he surrendred all the Forts Towns and Castles he had taken and with all his Forces sailed back to France leaving his English Friends who had assisted him all these Wars to the rigour of the Law whereby they were cut off by miserable and cruel Deaths The Kingdom having now time to breathe a Parliament was called wherein the Laws of King Edward were revived and the Grand Charter called then Magna Charta containing several Laws for the Liberty Ease and Security of the Subject was confirmed and a Tax granted for sending an Army into France to recover Poictiers and Gascoigne under Richard the Kings Brother which had been injuriously seised by the French for some years Those Provinces were soon regained wholly back to the English which in a short time produced a Peace between both Nations But then worse Troubles succeed it at home for the King confiding onely in some leud Officers about him disregarded his Nobility and most Loyal Subjects invading their Liberties and Estates and vexing them with many grievous and unnecessary Taxes which were levied upon them by his Officers with all manner of severity At length a Parliament was called at Oxford wherein his Designs were altogether crossed and the Proceedings therein of such ill Consequence that it was stiled Insa●um Parliamentum or the Mad Parliament For when Multitudes came to complain of their Wrongs and Oppressions the Lords and Commons for redress thereof established many things which they judged necessary but highly intrenching upon the Kings Prerogative for they chose Twelve of the most Considerable Persons in the Kingdom whereof the Earl of Glocester and Simon Montfort Earl of Leicester were Chief who were called Les Douze Pieres or The Twelve Peers to whom full and absolute Power was granted by a Patent sealed by the King though unwillingly to support and maintain the Laws they had made The Parliament being ended the Commissioners began strictly to put those Statutes into Execution whereby they dismissed most of the Kings Menial Servants from their Attendance on him placing others of their Mind in their State This above all other things did most disturb the King and thereupon he grew extreme melancholy But hoping for better Success he summoned another Parliament wherein he with extreme Passion and Grief complain'd of his hard Usage by the Twelve Peers but the Lords and Commons were so far from remitting any thing that they further ratified all that had been done and the Archbishop with nine other Bishops publickly denounced a solemn Curse against all that by Advice or Assistance should oppose those Laws or the Authority of the Twelve Peers This still encreased the Kings Discontent who could take no delight in any thing he enjoyed and therefore went over to divert himself with Lewis King of France who treated him with all manner of Kindness and Magnificence About this time Hugh de Burgh Earl of Kent was accused by the Bishop of Winchester and others That he had scandalised and abused the King That he had enticed and trayterously defiled the King of Scots Daughter whom he married in hope to succeed her Brother in her Right That he stole out of the Jewel-house a Jewel of such excellent Vertue as to make those who had it Invincible which he had bestowed upon Llewellin Prince of Wales the King's Enemy These and many other Articles was he charged with who doubting the Power of his Enemies retired into Essex where he was seised by Soldiers who sent for a Smith to make Shackles for him to prevent his escape but the Smith understanding who they were for fetching a deep Sigh said Do with me what you pl ase and God have mercy on my Soul but as sure as the Lord lives I will never make Iron Shackles for him but will rather die for most cruel Death imaginable For is not this the most Loyal and Courageous Hubert who hath so often preserved England from being destroyed by Strangers and restored England to England Let God be Judge between him and you for using him so unjustly and inhumanely requiting his most excellent Deserts with the worst of Recompences However the Commander bound him and carried him Prisoner to the Tower of London from whence by the means of the Bishop of London he was a while after released The King being continually tormented with the diminishing of his Regal Authority endeavoured to procure some Remedy from abroad and to that end with great expence of Money he secretly obtained tw● Bulls from Pope Alexander the Third whereby the King and all those who had sworn to maintain the new Laws and Ordinances and to support the Authority of the Twelve Peers were freely absolved and discharged from keeping those Oaths But this being kept private the Twelve Peers ruled all and were so diligent in their Business that they left the King nothing to do so that he was King in Name onely not in Power Soon after Hugh Spencer being Lord Chief Justice and a great Favourite with the King was removed by the Twelve Peers being charged with Corruption and Arbitrary Proceedings They likewise dismissed such Sheriffs and Justices as the King had made chusing others in their Places which
THIRD King of England c. IN Peace and War I still Triumphant stood Fortune for me seemed to fix her Wheel I did revenge my Fathers Death and Blood And forced France my valiant Arm to feel I warr'd on Scotland with victorious Steel The slaughtring Sword and Fire did all devour A Kingdom so divided needs must reel Betwixt the Bruces and the Baliols Power Thus every day my Grandeur mounted higher With Black Prince Edward my victorious Son Vnto the top of Honour we aspire By glorious Victories and great Actions done But all my Triumphs Fortunes Force and Strength Old Age and Death to Nothing brought at length AT the Age of Fifteen years Edward the Third was Crowned King his deposed Father being then alive He was chiefly counselled in his younger years by Queen Isabel his Mother Edmond Earl of Kent and Sir Roger Mortimer which Knight to ingratiate himself with the Queen was a chief Instrument in the Murder of the late King In his second year the Scots proclaimed War against England whereupon King Edward with an Army of fifty four thousand Men and attended with Sir John Heynault the L. Beamont and five hundred Lords and Gentlemen marched into Scotland where he pursued his lurking Enemies who fled into Woods Mountains and Hills and thereby tired the English Army so that he returned without any memorable Action and then married Philip the Daughter of William Earl of Heynault and calling a Parliament at Northampton the two Spencers and Walter Stapleton were attainted of High Treason at which time by the advice of the Queen and Mortimer a dishonourable Peace was made with the Scots whereby that King was discharged from doing homage to Edward and the great Charter called Ragman whereby the late King of Scotland and all his Nobility under their Hands and Scals did acknowledge their Subjection to the Kings of England was delivered up and the Kings Sister Jane was married to David Son and Heir to K. R. Bruce Roger Mortimer was now made Earl of March which did much discontent the Nobility especially after they saw that by his power with the King and Familiarity with the Queen he had trecherously procured the Earl of Kent the Kings Uncle to be beheaded but by Divine Vengeance Mortimer himself was charged by the State with these Trayterous Articles 1 That he had wickedly procured the murther of the late King 2. That by false and malicious accusations he had caused the King to cut off the Head of his Vncle who was Noble Religious Valiant and a main Pillar of the Commonwealth 3. That he had too familiarly conversed with the Queen Mother to her just reproach and the Kings dishonour 4. That for a Bribe of twenty thousand pound he had procured the release of the Scots Homage Lastly That he had cheated the King of his Jewels and Treasure converting them to his own use For these horrid Treasons he was condemned and Executed in the same manner as young Spencer and Q. Isabel was committed to a strong Castle where she continued above thirty years after and then died In his fifth year Philip the French King sent to require King Edward to do Homage for the Dutchy of Guyen which he unwillingly performed his Lords being therewith offended alledging That in the Right of Queen Isabel his Mother the Crown of France belonged to him and that he therefore ought not to have acknowledged any Fealty at all The King then sent to David King of Scotland to restore the Castle of Berwick and do him Homage for the Kingdom but David stoutly answered That his Father won that Castle by Conquest and he would hold it by the Sword and That his Father never acknowledged any Subjection and if any had been due yet King Edward had released him from it The King being of a great Spirit was resolved to revenge these Affronts by conquering both Scotland and France and to that end he presently sent an Army against the Scots and over-run the better part of that Country without resistance taking Berwick and Crowning Edward Baliol King of Scotland to whom he committed the Government of Berwick Castle and two years after he again marched into Scotland and setled this new King on his Throne receiving his Homage and restored several English Lords to their Estates which by the Peace with King Bruce they were deprived of David the deposed King fled into France and after two years by the assistance of the French King landed some Forces in Scotland but King Edward soon encountred and routed them and then returned victoriously into England In his tenth year Philip the French King gave the Earldom of Artois away by Sentence from Robert Artois to Maud Countess of Burgundy and Aunt to this Robert which so incensed him that he said By me Philip was made King and by me he shall be again deposed For these Words he was proclaimed a Traytor to the Crown throughout all France so that to save his Life he fled into England where for his former Service to Queen Isabel and her Son when in France he was honourably received and entertained by King Edward who knew him to be a wise and valiant Man and therefore made him Earl of Richmond and loved him so entirely that he never undertook any Matter of Consequence without his Advice This Noble Knight continually informed the King of his Right to the Crown of France by his Mother Queen Isabel and that with such convincing Reasons and Persuasions that Edward began now in earnest to contrive the attaining thereof negotiating privately with the Earl of Heynault his Wives Father and Brother-in-Law to the French King and with Sir John of Heynault Lord Beaumont his Brother and several other Princes and States of Germany who encouraged and assisted him therein creating him Vicar-General of the Empire by which he had Power to command the Nobility and Commons of those Countries to aid him in his Enterprise Whilst these things were secretly consulting in England Philip of France little suspected he was to fight for his Crown with the English and therefore at the Importunity of Pope Benedict the Eleventh he had prepared a greater Army for the Holy Land than ever any Christian Prince did before him which were provided with all Necessaries for three years and the Government of his Kingdom he committed to his eldest Son John Duke of Normandy Being just ready to depart he had News of the Pretensions and Preparations of the English and therefore thought it more necessary to defend his Kingdom at home than to go upon such a frivolous Errand abroad In the mean time King Edward having by many Politick Devices drained his Subjects Purses insomuch that for want of Money a fat Ox was sold for a Noble a fat Sheep for Six pence six Pigeons for a Penny and a Quarter of Wheat for Two shillings he with his Queen sailed to Antwerp where he concluded the Methods of the War with the Princes of Germany and