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A44721 A German diet, or, The ballance of Europe wherein the power and vveaknes ... of all the kingdoms and states of Christendom are impartially poiz'd : at a solemn convention of som German princes in sundry elaborat orations pro & con ... / by James Howell, Esq. Howell, James, 1594?-1666. 1653 (1653) Wing H3079; ESTC R4173 250,318 212

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beaten by them and the other speaks ignorantly or partially because he was an Officer under Vespasian in France then a little after upon the beginning of Trajans Raign the Emperour Nerva being newly gone out of the World a matter of a hundred yeers after the Incarnation he scribbled a Book De mori●…u Germanorum of the manners of the Germans But Caesar himselfe saw onely the Skirts of the Countrey whence he was repelld he never entred into the bowells of the Land and what he delivers he took up in trust by confused rumors But if either of these liv'd now they wold sing another note they wold stand astonish'd that Germany should have so many florishing Provinces so many noble and opulent Cities so many pleasant Villages such fruitfull Orchards fragrant Gardens and fart Fields such Mines of Gold Silver Lead Iron with all other Mettalls such martiall people so many Universities so many Archdukes Princes Marquises Landgraves Earls Barons Knights with a world of Noble Families that can exactly draw their Pedigree thousands of yeeres pass'd I say if Caesar or Tacitus liv'd now they wold be more enlightned and cry out We Romans in many things were too credulous in beleeving what was spoken of our Enemies and in some things we injur'd them to shew our wits but our owne senses do convince us now and tell us that Germany is another thing We were Trojans once but all our glory hes buried in the dust of our Nephewes and Posterity having with sloth idlenesse and foulnesse of vice soyld all our Heroik exploits But the Germans continu still great Heroes both in respect of their own Vertues and their Progen●…tors They are still magnanimous most just Religious fortunat and so bless'd that there you cannot discover any decay at all in the age of the World If Virgi●… were reviv'd and again upon earth leaving the barren theme of praysing Augustus he wold break out into the admiration of our German Emperour and having got so rich and divine an Argument to rowse up his Muse he wold sing Ille ego qui quondam gracili modulatus avena Carmen effudi laudes magnae Urbis in Orbem Gratum opus Augustis at nunc horrentia Martis Arma Virosque cano Romae quae moenia primi Aequavere solo superatis Alpibus amplos Et de Fortuna tandem duxer●… triumphos c. In lieu of the Romanes he would extoll the Germanes who first ransack'd and ruin'd Rome But most Princely Auditors let us not examine as much what our Predecessors did but how we follow their steps and how neer our vigilance vertue and valour comes to theirs It is the practise of Providence and the rule of divine Majesty not to powr down all his benedictions at once but to reserve some of them for future ages And Homer as blinde as he was could discern this when he sings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Gods do not showre down all their blessings at once upon man-kinde But how mightily have we profitted what huge advantages have we now of our Fore-fathers T is true wee were once without God because without Christ as all Gentiles were but now by his ineffable grace and immense goodnesse we are his Domestiques we are coopled and admitted to enjoy the priviledges and rights of Children of his Chosen therefore t is fitting that every Christian heart when he falls into the contemplation of this high Prerogative shold with pious ejaculations cry out Sanctus sanctus sanctus Dominus Deus exercituum plena est omnis terra gl●…ria ejus Holy holy holy is the Lord God of Hosts all the Earth is full of his glory Now as there be som Rivers that presently as soon almost as they are derivd from their Fountains encrease and flow with such a force that they can bear Shipps of burden and drive Mills as Blavius in this Countrey and the little Loire in France hard by Orleans which within almost a flight shott from the Source swells to such a stupendous fulnesse and depth that ther 's a Bridg with diverse arches over her so the glorious light of the Gospell darted from above did irradiat all Germany as it were in a moment it dispelld all the clowds of Paganisme and with its powerfull beams it did melt the hearts of the most frozen and remotest parts with admirable celerity For presently there were such pious contentions who shold exceed one another in devotion and acts of Charity that a world of Schooles Hospitalls Temples Monasteries and Religious Houses were built and endow'd with plentifull revenues soon after And such was the height and excesse of piety among our Ancestors that they were forcd to enact Lawes to restrain the disposing of Legacies for Ecclesiasticall uses There were som Emperours and German Princes that bequeathd to the holy Church whole Provinces and Territories Bishops became equall to Kings and Prelats fellowes to Princes and Abbots to Barons both in authority and dignity in extern pomp power and riches No Nation hath bin more munificent to the Church of Rome and no Countrey endowd her own Churches with larger demains Among others I will instance in one Abbot and his greatnesse whereby you may make a conjecture of the rest and he is the Abbot of Fuldo who as Lipsius hath it supplyed the Emperour at one time with threescore thousand fighting men And for the nomber of Monachicall persons you may make a guesse what a huge nomber ther is of them when in lower Germany alone ther are seven thousand Nunns But as in a most delectable Garden ther are somtimes beyond the expectation of the Gardiner Weeds and noxious Herbs that grow up as Tares among the best Wheat so where God builds his Church Satan commonly putts up his Chappell superstition mingles with devotion and men grew greedy after innovations and changes such deformities crepd into the German Church that it might be well termd an Augaean Stable Purgatory Exorcismes Idolatry Indulgences and other things in derogation of the merits of the Messias were introduc'd The Church now required another Hercules to clense her and shee found one a true one not a fabulous one such as the Poets sing of who strangled Gyants killd the Erimanthaean Bore choakd the two Snakes sent by Iuno drive away the Stymphalian monstrous Birds slew Busiris took Cerberus by the throat killd the Nemaean Lyon suppressd the many headed Hydra But our Hercules did more for he overthrew Antichrist and with a Goose Quill did more then Hercules did with his Iron Clubb and Germany alone was worthy of such a Champion I meane Martin Luther an Augustin Monk who though a man of mean birth and meanes otherwise observing the exorbitances ●…nd excesse of Churchmen and the Marchandise that was made of Indulgences could indure it no longer but armd himself to subvert the Babylonish Empire he rusheth against the Pope spitts in his face and hath shaken his Kingdom ever since very shrewdly This happend when the Bishop of Rome
France ther 's not a word syllable or letter of the Law but they will draw you arguments of strife from them for the propagation of Pleas. Nor is Justice lesse abus'd there by the multitude of Lawes which is beyond belief which the subtile capacities and working brains of that peeple use to wrest and distort as they please making therof a nose of wax As also the revocation of Ordinances and Arrests which is so frequent among them In so much that as Baudius observes the high supreme Court of France whose authority was held so sacred doth retain little of its pristin ancient Majesty the King Edicts which they verifie being so commonly repeal'd Now as in a working tempestuous Sea ther is not a drop of water stable and quiet but one wave struggles and thrusts one another forward and backward Or as a Shipp under sayl wrestleth as she makes her way with the tumbling billowes so France may be sayed to be over-whelm'd with an Ocean of confusion And as France at home is so subject to acts of oppression and injustice so whensoever she hath taken footing in any Countrey abroad her children shew themselves what they are and who was their mother by ther insolencies and extortions They corrupt the manners of all Nations where they com with their fashions and levity They do not only corrupt the mind but they infect the body with their foul disease and leave stigmatizations behind them Had the French administred justice in Sicily or had they comported themselves with that humanity prudence rectitude and moderation they shold have done the Sicilian Vespres had never happen'd when the Natives patience so often abus'd turn'd to fury and made a solemn conjuration to free themselves of them for their tyranny violation of virgins scortation ravishments stupration and insupportable taxes wherupon by a national unanimous consent and at the sounding of a bell they dispatch'd 8000. French into the other World not sparing the pregnant wombs and embryos ther was such a mortal hatred generally conceived of the Nation Having pittifully complain'd to the Pope Nicolas the third a little before imploring him that he wold cast out of Sicily that ill spirit wherwith she was so miserably possess'd so Charles Duke of Anjou brother to St. Lewis having tyranniz'd in Sicily 17. yeers was suddenly put out of his new Kingdom and the society of mankind all at once with all his proling Countreymen And he was ejected the same way as he entred which was by bloud for when King Manfredus was defunct a young Prince Conradinus the lawful Heir descended of the Imperial stemm of the Hohenstauffens was to succeed but he was betrayed by a Fisherman and surpriz'd and together with the Austrian Duke Frederique he was barbarously butcher'd Which made an Italian Author expresse himself pathetically Veramente di sasso sarebbe coluy che non fosse Truly he shold be made of stone that wold not be mov'd at such a cruel tragaedy that so hopeful a young King descending from so many Caesars with such a valorus Duke being both but youths shold be so basely made away and that by the councel of a Pope Clement the fourth which aggravat's the businesse much Ther is another pregnant example how the State of the United Provinces having made a voluntary election of the Duke of Anjou for their Governor being induc'd therunto by the Letters of the Queen of England how unjustly perfidiously and ingratefully the said Duke did carry himself with his train of ruffling French by attempting in a proditorious way to make himself absolute and independent but the cocatrice was crush'd in the shell and his design frustrated yet for his person and domestiques he was suffer'd to depart civilly and peaceably though ingloriously in point of reputation to himself and his Countrey This was the reward the French gave the Belgians notwithstanding that among many other demonstrations of confidence affection and trust they had made him Duke of Brabant and given him the title of Governor which titles he wold not desert but wold have them to his death which happen'd a little after such are the humors such the ambition of the French which made Henry Fits Allen Earl of Arundel who first introduc'd the use of Coaches into England disswade Queen Elizabeth from matching with the said Duke of Alençon because he had had sufficient experience of the inconstancy arrogance and levity of the French and that few of them had upright and just hearts Nor do the Kings of France pay the debts or hold themselves bound to perform the promises of their immediat predecessors for they say that they come to the Crown not as much by Hereditary as Kingly right as appeers by the answer which Lewis the 12. gave the Parisians who humbly petitioning for som Armes and Canons which they had lent Charles the 8. he told them that he was not Charles his Heir much lesse his Administrator So the Swisses demanding of Francis the second a return of those large sommes which they had lent his father receiv'd this short injust answer that he was not tied to the solution of any mans debts Nor do the French wher they com bestow the Indian disease and infect the bloud of their Neighbours but in one part of France they have another disease as bad and more ugly which is the leprosie for in the South parts towards the Pyrency Hills in the Countrey of Bearn and other places ther is a despicable kind of peeple call'd the Capots and in another dialect Gahets most of them being Carpenters Coupers Tinkers or of such mean mechanique trades whose society all men do shun and abominat because they use to infect others with their leprosie therfore they are not permitted to enter into any Towns and hardly to live in the Suburbs they have distinct stations apart in Churches when any dye they can leave no lands but only their moveables to their Children scarce having the same priviledges in their own Countrey that Iewes have in Italy and Germany But to resume the threed of my discourse a little before if the Kings of France be not tied to pay the debts and legacies of their parents and predecessors what law of honesty do we think can bind the vassals of France to do so Caesar and Tacitus had felt the pulse of this Nation sufficiently when they call them Levissimum hominum genus a most light race of peeple that they have more of imagination then judgment more words then common honesty Yet Francis the first could vapour as Lipsius hath it of him Etiamsi fides toto Orbe exularet although Faith shold be banish'd from among mortals yet she shold be found among Kings who shold be tied to performance by her alone and not by fear You pleas'd to say Noble Cosen Ernest that the Kings of France never die shall they be eternal and their faith so mortal I am not ignorant that Bodin goes very far in the commendation of
and a hundred and twenty thousand granados of all sorts The Fleet stood the King in every day thirty thousand Duckets insomuch that Bernardin Mendoza the Spanish Ambassadour in France being in a private conference one day with King Henry the fourth assured him that viis modis that Fleet had stood his Master in above tenne Millions first and last from the time that she set sayl from Lisbon This Fleet look'd like a huge Forrest at Sea as she made her way Good Lord how notably did that Masculine Queen bestirre her self in viewing her Armies in visiting her Men of Warre and Ships Royall in having her Castles and Ports well fortified in riding about and in the head of the Army her self in discharging the Office of a true Pallas wearing a Hat and Feather in lieu of a Helmet Henry the fourth of France sent her seasonable notice hereof so that most of the Roman Catholiques up and down were commanded to retire to the I le of Ely a fenney place and others were secured in Bishops houses till this horrid cloud which did threaten the destruction of England should be overblown But this prodigious Fleet being come to the British seas how did the little English vessels pelt those huge Gigantick Galeons of Spain whereof those few which were left for all the rest perisht were forc'd to fetch a compass almost as far as Norway in 62. degrees and so got to Spain to bring the sad tidings what became of the rest There were Triumphs for this not onely in England but all the United Provinces over where a Medal was coyn'd bearing this Inscription on the one side Classis Hispanica The Spanish Fleet on the other side Venit ●…vit fuit She came she went she was But had the Duke of Parma come out of Flanders with his Land Army then it might have prov'd a black day to England and herein Holland did a peece of Knight-service to England for she kept him from comming forth with a squadron of Men of Warre How gallantly did the English take Cales the Key of Spain and brought home such rich plunder How did they infest the Indies and what a masse of Treasure did Drake that English Dragon bring home thence he made his Sailes of Silk and his Anchors of Silver Most noble Princes you have heard something though not the tyth that might be said of the early Piety and Devotion of the exquisite Knowledge and Learning of the Manhood and Prowesse of Great Britain but these praises that I give her is but a bucket of water cast into her Seas Now touching both King and people it is observ'd that there is such a reciprocation of love betwixt them that it is wonderfull the one swayes the other submits obeyes and contributes to the necessities and preservation of the honour and majesty of the King for which he receives protection and security Touching the Regall Authority and absolute Power and Prerogatives of the Kings of Great Britain it is as high and supreame as any Monarchs upon Earth They acknowledge no Superior but God himself they are not feudetary or homageable to any they admit no forraign jurisdiction within the bounds of their Kingdomes and herein they have the advantage of the Kings of France and Spaine yea of the Emperour himself who is in a kind of vassalage to the Pope and may be said to divide authority with him in their own Dominions No they have long time shaken off that servitude and manumitted the Crown from those immense sums which were erogated and ported from England to pay for First fruits for Indulgences for Appeales Palls and Dispensations and such merchandises of Rome How many hundred of years did England pay Tribute though it went under the name of Peter-pence to Rome think you no less than near upon a thousand from the reign of King Inas the Saxon to Henry the eighth From the Power of the Kings of Great Britain let us goe to their Justice let us descend from the Throne to the Tribunall Now such is the Divinitie of the Kings of Great Britain that they cannot doe any Injustice it is a Canon of their Common Law that the King can doe no wrong if any be done it is the Kings Minister the Judge Magistrate or Officer doth doe it and so is punishable accordingly such a high regard the English have of the honour of their King and such a speciall care the Kings of England have us'd to take for punishing of Injustice and corruption such a care as King Edgar had to free the Iland from Wolves and corrupt Officers are no better than Wolves which he did by a Tribute that he impos'd upon a Welsh Prince for his ranson which was to bring him in three hundred skinnes of Wolves every year this produced ●…o good effects that the whole race of Wolves was extirpated in a short time so that it is as rare a thing to see a Wolf now in England as a Horse in Venice Touching the care that the Kings of England us'd to have to enrich their subjects hath been us'd to be very great and to improve the common stock Edward the third that Gallorum malleus the hammer of the French he quell'd them so was the first who introduced the art of making of Cloth into England whereby the Exchequer with the publique and private wealth of the Kingdome did receive a mighty increment for Wooll is the Golden Fleece of England and the prime Staple-commodity which is the cause that by an old custome the Judges Masters of the Rolls and Secretaries of State in Parliament time doe use to sit upon Woolsacks in the House that commodum lanarum ovium non negligendum esse Parliamentum moneatur that they put the Parliament in mind that the commodity of Wool and Sheep be not neglected The Swede the Dane the Pole the German the Russe the Turk and indeed all Nations doe highly esteem the English cloth The time was that Antwerp her self did buy and vend two hundred thousand English cloths yearly as Camden hath it And great and antient are the priviledges that the English have in Belgium for since the year 1338 which is above three hundred yeares agoe when Lewis Malan Earl of Flanders gave them very ample immunities in the Town of Bruges since which time it is incredible how all kind of commerce and merchantile affaire did flourish among the Flemins for which they were first obliged to the English for the English Wooll hath been a Golden Fleece also to the Flemins as well as the English themselves because it was one of the principal causes of enlarging their Trade whereunto the Duke of Burgundy related when he established the order of the Golden Fleece Guicciardin makes a computation that the Traffique and Intercourse betwixt England and Flanders amounted to twelve millions yearly where of five was for woollen manufactures What an Heroique incomparable Princesse was Queen Elizabeth who wore the English Crown and
difficulties as the danger of those vast unknown Seas the murmuring humor of the Spaniards that went with him yet he brought his ends home to his aim and return'd with an Olive branch or rather a leaf of Gold home in his mouth Thus as providence would have Columba a Dove first to discover dry Earth after the Deluge so Columbus first discover'd this new peece of Earth to the Inhabitants of the old World In so much that this Italian may be said to have laid the first foundation of the greatnesse which Spain is mounted unto at this time But Columbus chancing to be one time unkown among some Spaniards who discoursing of this discovery and slighting it saying it might have beeen feasable by any Navigator he calls for an Egge and laying a wager that none could make that Egge to stand at an end upon a smooth table the Spaniards trying many wayes to doe it and missing Columbo took the egge and b●…uising the shell at one end made it stand upright then every one could doe it after him whereupon he told them just so when an Italian had shewed you the way 't was easie for you Spaniards to goe to the new World Yet that brave Queen Isabella and Ferdinand with their Successors did nobly reward Columbo though Genoa his own native town was ingratefull unto him for having left her a mighty Legacy at his death she did not raise any monument much lesse any brass Statue to his memoey which he so much deserved But herein Genoa carried her self towards Columbo as London in England did towards Cavalier Middleton who fell upon a brave wholsome invention of bringing a fresh River fifty miles about to runne through her streets to her infinite advantage for many uses Touching the noble virtue of Friendship she reigns no where so strongly as among the Italians who are naturally of a most humane and mansuete disposition not onely among themselves but to strangers There was a notable example thereof in Alostio Priuli a Gentleman who had contracted a strict league of love with Cardinal Pole an English man which lasted many years so that there was much notice taken at Rome of that conformity of manners reciprocation of affection and sweet sympathy which were between them This friendship continued in the same strain of strength for twenty six years all which time Priuli could not be wrought upon to enter into the Colledge of Cardinals though often invited by Iulius the third Cardinal Pole falling at last sick of a lingring disease Signior Priuli never stirred from his side all the while at last the Physitians telling him he had not long to live he sent for a Notary and made Priuli Heire of all he had but such was the generosity of the Venetian that he made not a penny benefit of it but gave it all among his English kindred being twenty moneths in perpetual agitation for the recovering of the estate Nor are there any people so naturally addicted to Charity as the Italians Cardinal Atestino was a great example hereof of whom there was a kind of Proverb in Rome That his House was an Exchequer to the rich an Hospitall to the poor his Person was the splendour of the sacred Colledge and an ornament to the Roman Court. I passe now to the Nobility of Italy which is very numerous there is no clime under Heaven where Virtue is more rewarded good qualities more pryed into and Industry higher advanced Rome is the Common-countrey of all Nations it is the rendevous of all Ingenious spirits and its impossible for any person of Merit to be there long but he is sought after and advanced This makes Italy so abound with Nobles of all Nations For the generous exercise of riding great Horses they goe beyond all and it is wonderfull to see what a docible creature they bring those fiery mettall'd animals to be they use to make them dance and keep touch with the musique by a rare art and do strange feats besides What a famous Master in this art was Sigismondo Locatello of Ferrara Grisonio was no lesse rare in point of Horsmanship Among other compleat and gallant spirits which Italy produced these latter Ages Cosmo de Medici was one of the most admired all the world over 'T was He that did first found the grandeur of the Medicean Family 't was He brought his Hetruscan Countrey to such a civility 't was He who taught Soveraigne Princes first to look to the encroaching power of their Neighbours and to keep them in aequilibrio therefore Apollo made fit choice of him to hold the Balance when all the Kingdoms and States of Europe were weighed before him at Delphos He was a man of an exquisite temper in his behaviour of a notable reach of understanding of a marvailous forecasting head a subtile cleare brain quick apprehension and profound judgement He was munificent to strangers liberal to his domestiques and extreamly charitable to the poor a mighty restaurator of Gods Houses In all these acts he was equal to Kings he exceeded ordinary Princes and went far beyond all private men Now although out of the largeness of his heart and piety of his soul he had expended a Kings Ransom in Hospitals Monasteries and Churches yet he was used to say Non potuisse se in suis accepti expensi codicibus unquam reperire Deum Debitorem When he went to look into his Leger book of Account what moneys he had received and issued he could never find God his Debter Yet this mighty man was when Auditor Cossa did audit his expenses 't was found that he had spent forty millions in publique and private Fabriques and tenne millions in private acts of munificence and charity He was such a Lover of his Country so mighty a Patriot that having lived above seventy yeares this modest but well merited Epitaph was engraven upon his tomb Cosmus Med●…ces heic situs est Decreto publico pater patriae Cosmo of Medici lyes here Father of his Country by publique Decree And now that I am in Toscany I will visit Pisa who I finde was in former times a Commonwealth of great authority by land and power by sea she did subjugate Sardinia and Carthage also bringing her king captive to the Pope by whom he was converted she also made her self mistris of Majorica Panormo and Salerno she was once at that cumble of wealth and greatness that a hundred Gentlemen of Pisa were us'd to build and maintain upon their own charge every one his Galley to scowre and secure the Ligustic sea What shall I say of the state of Genoa who among the Records of her Triumphs can glory that she took and possessed once Sardinia Cyprus Lesbos and Chio as also Pera opposite to Constantinople on the Asian shore she was also mistris of Theodosia or Caffa insomuch that her dominions extended as far as the banks of Tanais And to this day there be some Christian Rites and Italian Families in that
contented only that the Vassall kisse their hands or hem of their Garment Nor doth the Pope return reverence to any other potentate by rising up bowing his head or uncovering his head to any onely to the Emperor after he hath kiss'd his feet he is afterwards admitted to kisse his hand and then he riseth a little and giveth him a mutuall kisse of Charity with an Embracement There is a cloud of examples how diver Emperors and Kings came to Rome to do their filial duty to the Holy Father and to have their Coronations confirm'd by him Iustinian did so to Constantine Pipin to Stephen the second Charles the Great to Leo the 3. Lodovicus pins of France to Sergius the 2. the Emperor Henry the forth to Paschall the 2. Frederic the first to Adrian the 4. But that was a notable Signal reverence which Lewis of France and Henry the second of England did to Alexander the 3. Who came both together and jointly attended the Pope a good way to his lodging he being on horsback and they both a foot Now it is one of the high Tenets of the Catholiques That the Pope is the only Free independent Prince upon Earth not accountable to any for his actions but unto Christ himself whose Vicegerent he is He cannot onely command but make Kings at least confirm them The King of Spain did not hold himself perfectly established King of the West-Indies till the Holy Father pleas'd to allow of it and confirm him Now touching the Title of Emperor there is a notable letter upon record which Adrian the 4. writ to the three Ecclesiastic Electors of Germany Romanum Imperium a Graecis translatum est ad Alemannos ut Rex Teutonicorum non ante quam ab Apostolica manu coronaretur Imperator vocaretur ante consecrationem Rex post Imperator Unde igitur habet Imperium nisi a nobis ex electione principum suorum habet nomen Regis ex consecratione nostra habet nomen Imperatoris Augusti Caesaris Ergo per nos imperat c. Imperator quod habet totum a nobis habet Ecce in potestate nostra est ut dem●…s illud cui volumus propterea constituti a deo super gentes Regna ut destruamus evellamus ut aedificemus plantemus The Roman Empire saith Adrian the 4. was transferr'd from Greece to Germany therefore the King of the Teutons cannot be call'd Emperor till he be apostolically Crown'd before his consecration he is but King and Emperor afterward Whence therefore hath he the Empire but from us by the Election of his Princes he hath the name of King but he hath the Title of Emperor of Augustus and Caesar by our consecration Therefore he is Imperial by us c. that which he hath of Emperor he hath wholly from us behold it is in our power to give the Title to whom we please therefore are we constituted by God himself over Nations and Kings that we may destroy and pluck up build and plant c. Nor doth the Papall power extend to give Titles to Emperors but to make Kings It is upon record how Pope Leo made Pipin King of Italy Sergius made Stephen King of Hungary Pope Iohn made Wenceslaus King of Poland Alphonso King of Portugal was made by Eugenius the 3d. Edgar was made King of Scotland by Urban the 2d. Iohn de Brenna was made King of Ierusalem by Innocent the third Pope Pius the 5. gave Cosmo de Medici the Title of Gran-Duke of T●…scany notwithstanding the opposition of Maximilian the 2d. and Philip the 2d. of Spain I saw in the Archives of Rome the names of those Kings who are Vassalls to the Pope and they are rank'd in this order and Bodins Cataloge agrees with it Reges Neapolis Siciliae Arragoniae Sardiniae Hierolosymorum Angliae Hiberniae Hungariae all these are or should be at least feudetary and hommageable to the Bishop of Rome Nor can the Holy Father entitle Emperors and make Kings and Gran-Dukes but he can as he alledgeth depose them if they degenerate to Tyrants or Heretiques he can absolve their subjects from all ties of allegeance As among other examples Innocent the 3. did to Iohn King of England and Sixtus quintus did to Queen Elizabeth Innocent the 1. did not onely thrust Arcadius out of his Throne but out of the society of Christians Anastasius the Emperor was excommunicated by Anastasius the 2. Pope Constantine anathematiz'd the Emperor Philippicus Gregory the third delivered over to Satan Pope Leo Isaurus and took from him all Italy Gregory the 7. excommunicated the Emperor Henry the 3. and Boleslaus King of Poland The Emperor Lewis the 4. was barr'd to come to Church by Benedict the 12. Otho by Innocent the 3. Frederic the 2. by Innocent the 4. and Peter King of Castile was quite thrust out both of his Throne and the holy Church by Vrban the 5. who made Henry the bastard capable to succeed him by a bull of legitimation and indeed that Peter was a hatefull Tyrant having murtherd many of his own Subjects and his Queen or the house of Bourbon with his own hands There is another high prerogative which the Roman Bishop claimes which is to summon Generall Councells which Montanus who was president of the Councell of Trent from the Pope did avouch in open assembly upon a design of removing the Councell to Bolonia where he among other things did positively assert and pronounce Caesarem nempe non Dominum a●…t Magistrum esse sed Ecclesiae filium esse se verò Collegas qui adsint Romane sedis Legatos esse penes quos ordinandi transferendi concilii jus erat Caesar was not Lord nor Master but Sonne of the Holy Church But he and his Colleagues there present were Legats of the Roman See whose right it was to ordain and transferre General Councells Moreover the Bishop of Rome hath a great stroake in preserving the Universal peace of Christendom and keeping Earthly Potentates from clashing one with another In so much that the Pope may be compar'd to that Isthmos of land which runns twixt the Ionian and Aegaean Seas keeping their waters from jusling one with another Nor is the Bishop of Rome thus powerfull only by his spirituall Authority by vertue whereof besides Patriark●… Archbishops and a world of Bishops he hath 70. Cardinalls who are accounted equal to Princes and who as they are all of his making so are they at his devotion which number of 70. was limited by a solomn diploma or Bull of Sixtus Quintus and the election to be alwaies in December so many daies before Christmas which is a general Jubile of rejoycing for the Nativity of our Saviour And as these Cardinals are Princes Companions so have they revenues accordingly from the Common aerarium or Treasury of the Church which is an unknown thing and inexhaustible For as long as men have soules within them and believe there is a Heaven or Hell the