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A59100 Tracts written by John Selden of the Inner-Temple, Esquire ; the first entituled, Jani Anglorvm facies altera, rendred into English, with large notes thereupon, by Redman Westcot, Gent. ; the second, England's epinomis ; the third, Of the original of ecclesiastical jurisdictions of testaments ; the fourth, Of the disposition or administration of intestates goods ; the three last never before extant.; Selections. 1683 Selden, John, 1584-1654.; Littleton, Adam, 1627-1694.; White, Robert, 1645-1703.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. Jani Anglorum facies altera. English.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. England's epinomis.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. Of the original of ecclesiastical jurisdiction of testaments. 1683 (1683) Wing S2441; ESTC R14343 196,477 246

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came in his way as he was passing by holding up their Ploughshares in token that their Husbandry was running to decay for they were put to a world of trouble upon occasion of the provisions which they carried from their own quarters through several parts of the Kingdom Thereupon the King being moved with their complaints did by the resolved advice of his Lords appoint throughout the Kingdom such persons as he knew were for their prudence and discretion fit for the service These persons going about and that they might believe their own eyes taking a view of the several Lands having made an estimate of the provisions which were paid out of them they reduced it into a sum of pence But for the total sum which arose out of all the Lands in one County they ordered that the Sheriff of that County should be bound to the Exchequer Adding this withal that he should pay it at the Scale Now the manner of paying the tryal of the weight and of the metal by Chymical operation the Melter or Coyner and the surveyor of the Mint are more largely handled and explained by my self in some other work of mine 13. That he might the more firmly retain Kent to himself that being accounted as it were the Key of England 't is the famous Mr. Camden tells the Story he set a Constable over Dover-Castle and made the same person Warden of the Cinque Ports according to the old usage of the Romans Those are Hastings Dover Hith Rumney and Sandwich to which are joyned Winchelsey and Rye as Principals and other little Towns as Members 14. To put the last hand to William I add out of the Archives this Law not to be accounted among the last or least of his William by the Grace of God King of the English to all Counts or Earls Viscounts or Sheriffs and to all French born and English men who have Lands in the Bishoprick of Remigius greeting This Remigius was the first who translated the Episcopal See from Dorchester to Lincoln Be it known unto you all and the rest of my Liege Subjects who abide in England that I by the common advice of my arch-Arch-Bishops and the rest of the Bishops and Abbots and all the Princes of my Kingdom have thought fit to order the amendment of the Episcopal Laws which have been down to my time in the Kingdom of the Angles not well nor according to the Precepts of the holy Canons ordained or administred Wherefore I do command and by my Royal Authority strictly charge that no Bishop or Arch-deacon do henceforth hold Pleas in the Hundred concerning Episcopal Laws nor bring any cause which belongs to the Government of Souls i.e. to spiritual affairs to the judgment of secular men but that whosoever according to the Episcopal Laws shall for what cause or fault soever be summoned shall come to a place which the Bishop shall chuse and name for this purpose and there make answer concerning his cause and do right to God and his Bishop not according to the Hundred but according to the Canons and Episcopal Laws For in the time of the Saxon Empire there were wont to be present at those Country Meetings the Hundred Courts an Alderman and a Bishop the one for Spirituals the other for Temporals as appears by King Edgar's Laws CHAP. V. William Rufus succeeds Annats now paid to the King Why claimed by the Pope No one to go out of the Land without leave Hunting of Deer made Felony AFter the death of William his second Son WILLIAM sirnamed RVFVS succeeded in his room All Justice of Laws as Florentius of Worcester tells us was now husht in silence and Causes being put under a Vacation without hearing money alone bore sway among the great ones Ipsaque majestas auro corrupta jacebat that is And Majesty it self being brib'd with gold Lay as a prostitute expos'd to th' bold 15. The right or duty of First-Fruits or as they are commonly called the Annats which our Kings claimed from vacant Abbies and Bishopricks Polydor Virgil will have to have had its first original from Rufus Now the Popes of Rome laid claim to them anciently a sort of Tribute which upon what right it was grounded the Council of Basil will inform us and by what opinion and resolution of Divines and Lawyers confirmed Francis Duarenus in his Sacred Offices of the Church will instruct us 'T is certain that Chronologers make mention that at his death the Bishopricks of Canterbury Winchester and Salisbury and twelve Monasteries beside being without Prelates and Abbots paid in their Revenues to the Exchequer 16. He forbad by publick Edict or Proclamation sayes the same Author that any one should go out of England without his leave and Passport We read that he forbad Anselm the Arch-Bishop that he should not go to wait upon Pope Vrban but that he comprehended all Subjects whatsoever in this his Royal order I confess I have not met with any where in my reading but in Polydor. 17. He did so severely forbid hunting of Deer saith William of Malmesbury that it was Felony and a hanging matter to have taken a Stag or Buck. CHAP. VI. Henry the First why called Beauclerk His Letters of Repeal An Order for the Relief of Lands What a Hereot was Of the Marriage of the Kings Homagers Daughter c. Of an Orphans Marriage Of the Widows Dowry Of other Homagers the like Coynage-money remitted Of the disposal of Estates The Goods of those that dye Intestate now and long since in the Churches Jurisdiction as also the business of Wills Of Forfeitures Of Misdemeanors Of Forests Of the Fee de Hauberk King Edward's Law restored WIlliam who had by direful Fates been shewn to the World was followed by his Brother Henry who for his singular Learning which was to him instead of a Royal Name was called Beau-clerk He took care of the Common-wealth by amending and making good what had slipt far aside from the bounds of Justice and by softning with wholsome remedies those new unheard of and most grievous injuries which Ralph afterwards Bishop of Durham being Lord Chief Justice of the whole Kingdom plagued the people with He sends Letters of Repeal to the High Sheriffs to the intent that the Citizens and people might enjoy their liberty and free rights again See here a Copy of them as they are set down in Matthew Paris HENRY by the Grace of God King of England to Hugh of Bockland High Sheriff and to all his Liege people as well French as English in Herefordshire Greeting Know ye that I through the mercy of God and by the common advice of the Barons of the Kingdom of England have been crowned King And because the Kingdom was opprest with unjust exactions I out of regard to God and that love which I bear towards you all do make the holy Church of God free so that I will neither sell it nor will I put it to farm
the elder part of that Law regularly the Probate or Aperture of Wills was before the Praetor And afterward the obsignation insinuation and Probate of them in Rome was before the Magister Census or apud officium Censuale as it were before the Barons of our Exchequer and that continued into later time And the same Officer by the name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or generalis in Constantinople had the same authority But also afterwards as well the Questor's Seal as that of the generalis became to be used at the obsignation and his authority also in the Probate or Aperture And the Emperour Leo about the year 890. transferred all that herein belonged to the Generalis into the Questor's place yet so that some other Civil Magistrates had the like authority and what was done before these in Rome and Constantinople was in other Cities before their Chief Governours as Defensores or Praefides neither was the Church permitted to have to do with the Insinuation of Testaments but expresly forbidden by a rescript of the Emperour Justin nor is any thing that gives it either among the Novells of the Greek Empire or in the Lombarda or Capitulares which have been reputed as parts also of the Imperial Law CHAP. II. Nor by the Canon Law NEither in any General Council or other part of the received Canon Law doth any Testimony occurr that gives the Church this Intrinsecal Jurisdiction But in the fourth Council of Carthage holden in the year 398. it was ordained Vt Episcopus tuitionem testamentorum non suscipiat And this being then established by two hundred and fourteen Bishops was afterwards made a part of the Decrees or Canon Law collected by Gratian and published and authorized by Pope Eugenius the Third about 1150. and the Gloss upon that Canon interprets tuitio for Aperture or Probate So also Pope Innocent the Fourth understands it publicatio saith he fieri non debet apud Episcopum and he vouches that Law Consulta ducalia tit de Testament to prove it Speculator Hostiensis and others of the same time and generally the rest that follow them make the Civil Law only the square of the Jurisdiction of the Probates and so it is truly affirmed in our Books that the Probate belongs not to the Church by the Spiritual Law neither is any such thing given by any later Bull or Decretal from the Bishop of Rome CHAP. III. The Extrinsecal Jurisdiction by the Civil Law in whom FOr the Extrinsecal Jurisdiction that gave Recoveries of Legacies by the Imperial Civil Law where the Legacies were in pios usus the Bishop of the Diocess sometimes by himself sometimes with the Civil Magistrate provided for the execution of the Testators meaning otherwise the Jurisdiction of Legacies and what else falls under Testamentary disposition was and is the Magistrates only CHAP. IV. In whom by the Canon Law BUt by the Canon Law the general care of execution of Testaments is committed to the Bishop yet I find not any Canon to that purpose received into the Body of that Law now in authority before the time of the Decretals which have out of some Council of Mentz these words viz. Si haeredes jussa Testatoris non impleverint ab Episcopo loci illius omnis Res quae eis relicta est Canonice interdicatur cum fructibus caeteris emolumentis ut vota defuncti impleantur Out of what Council of Mentz this is taken I have not yet learned but in the same syllables it occurrs in Burchard that lived about six hundred years since with the Marginal Note of ex Concilio Moguntino What other Texts are touching the power of the Canons over performance of Testaments have reference to that course ordained by the Civil Law where any thing was given in pios usus not to a general Jurisdiction for so is the Canon Nos quidem extr tit de testam Neither is that Canon Vltima Voluntas in C. 13. q. 2. taken out of S. Gregory otherwise to be understood if you interpret it as you ought by those places of Gregory whence it is taken but the Canonists generally upon that Canon Si haeredes take it that executio testamentorum ad Episcopos spectat And so those old ones Pope Innocent the Fourth Bernard and others of the rest deliver and the latter follow them yet they commonly restrain it and that in practice in other States to Legacies given in pios usus And in the Council of Trent where twice the Bishops power over Testaments is provided for nothing is spoken of but Commutations of Legacies and of such as are given in pios usus yet from Ancient time both the Intrinsecal and Extrinsecal Jurisdiction of Testaments made of personal Chattels in England hath been and is in the Church except in places where special Custom excludes it the original whereof being not sufficiently found in either of these Laws the Civil and Canon divers parts of which according to the various admission of several Estates have been much dispersed through Christendome and some remain now exercised by imitation among us It rests that disquisition be made for it in the Monuments of the Kingdom that according as they together with the Canons afford light some conjecture may be had touching the Antiquity and ground of it CHAP. V. Of the Intrinsecal Jurisdiction in the Saxons time THe Eldest Testament that I have seen made in England is that of King Edgar's time made by one Birthric a Gentleman or Thane it seems of great worth and his Wife Elswith wherein they devise both Lands and Goods and in the end of the Will sayes her husband 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And I pray for Gods love my leefe Lord that he doe not suffer that any man our Testament do break It may perhaps thence be collected that the Protection or Execution of this Testament was within the Jurisdiction of the Lords Court as also the Probate and that especially because divers Lords of Mannors have to this day the Probate of Testaments by Custom continued against that which is otherwise regularly setled in the Church But the same Testament being for Lands as well as for Goods it may be that this Clause had reference to the Lord in regard of the Land only to the Alienation of which his Assent might be requisite or to denote him for the Testators best friend as one chosen Overseer of his Will and indeed he desires all other good people to see his Will be not broken which makes me only offer it as what another mans fancy may work on but I conceive not out of it enough to prove either way any thing touching the Jurisdiction of Testaments Nor in the Saxon times appears any thing that can sufficiently direct us to know how it was exercised here unless out of that example of Siwerth of Durham's Testament in the
by Ship into Britanny To wit at first Horsus and Hengistus came over out of Batavia or the Low Countreys with a great company of Saxons along with them after that out of Jutland the Jutes for Janus Douza proves that the Danes under that appellation seised our Shores in the very beginning of the Saxon Empire out of Angela according to Camden about Flemsburg a City of Sleswick came the Angles out of Friseland Procopius is my Author the Frizons One may without any wrong call them all Saxons unless Fabius Quaestor Aethelwerd also did his Nation injury by calling them so He flourished Six hundred and fifty years ago being the Grand-child or Nephew of King Aethelulph and in his own words discourses That there was also a people of the Saxons all along the Sea-coast from the River Rhine up to the City Donia which is now commonly called Denmark For it is not proper here to think of Denmark in the neighbouring Territories of Vtrecht and Amsterdam by reason of the narrowness of that tract Those few Observes then which Adam of Bremen hath copied out of Einhard concerning the Saxons forasmuch as our Ancient Saxons I suppose are concerned in them I here set down in this manner and order CHAP. XVIII The Saxons division of their people into four ranks No person to marry out of his own rank What proportion to be observed in Marriages according to Policy Like to like the old Rule Now Matrimony is made a matter of money 23. THe whole Nation consists of four different degrees or ranks of men to wit of Nobles of Free-men born of Free-men made so and of Servants or Slaves And Nithard speaking of his own time has divided them into Ethelings that is Nobles Frilings that is Free-men and Lazzos that is Servants or Slaves It was enacted by Laws That no rank in cases of Matrimony do pass the bounds of their own quality but that a Noble-man marry a Noble-woman a Free-man take a Free-woman a Bond-man made Free be joyned to a Bond-woman of the same condition and a Man-servant match with a Maid-servant And thus in the Laws of Henry Duke of Saxony Emperour Elect concerning Justs and Tournaments When any Noble-man had taken a Citizen or Countrey-woman to Wife he was forbid the exercise of that sport to the third Generation as Sebastian Munster relates it The Twelve Tables also forbad the marriage of the Patricii or Nobles with the Plebeians or Commons which was afterwards voided and nulled by a Law which Canuleius made when he was Tribune of the people For both Politicians and Lawyers are of opinion That in marriages we should make use of not an Arithmetical proportion which consists of equals nor of a Geometrical one which is made up of likes but of a Musical one which proceeds from unlike notes agreeing together in sound Let a Noble-man that is decayed in his estate marry a Commoner with a good fortune if he be rich and wealthy let him take one without a fortune and thus let Love which was begot betwixt Wealth and Poverty suite this unlikeness of conditions into a sweet harmony and thus this disagreeing agreement will be fit for procreation and breed For he had need have a good portion of his own and be nearer to Crassus than Irus in his fortunes who by reason of the many inconveniencies and intolerable charges of Women which bring great Dowries doth with Megadorus in Plautus court a Wife without a Portion according to that which Martial sayes to Priscus Vxorem quare locupletem ducere nolim Quaeritis Vxori nubere nolo meae Inferior Matrona suo sit Prisce Marito Non aliter fiunt foemina virque pares Which at a looser rate of Translation take thus Should I a Wife with a great fortune wed You 'l say I should be swéetly brought to bed Such fortune will my Liberty undo Who brings Estate will wear the Bréeches too Unhappy match where e're the potent Bride Hath the advantage wholly on her side Blest pairs when the Men sway the Women truckle There 's good agréement as 'twixt Thong and Buckle And according to that of the Greek Poet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Take if you 'l be rul'd by me A Wife of your own degrée But there is little of our Age fashioned to the model of this sense Height of Birth Vertue Beauty and whatsoever there was in Pandorae of Good and Fair do too too often give place to Wealth and that I may use the Comedians word to a Purse crammed with Money And as the merry Greek Poet sayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To be Noble or high-born Is no argument for Love Good Parts of Bréeding lye forlorn 'T is Money only they approve I come back now to my friend Adam CHAP. XIX The Saxons way of judging the Event of War with an Enemy Their manner of approving a proposal in Council by clattering their Arms. The Original of Hundred-Courts Their dubbing their Youth into Men. The priviledge of young Lads Nobly born The Morganheb or Wedding-dowry 24. THey take a Prisoner of that Nation with which they are to have a War by what way soever they can catch him and chose out one of their own Countrey-men and putting on each of them the Arms of their own Countrey make them two fight together and judge of the Victory according as the one or the other of them shall overcome This very thing also Tacitus himself hath to whom Einhard sends his Reader For though he treat in general of the Germans yet nevertheless without any question our Saxons brought over along with them into this Island very many of those things which are delivered to us by those who have wrote concerning the Customs of the Germans Among which take these following 25. In Councils or publick Assemblies the King or Prince i.e. a chief person according as every ones Age is according to his Nobility according to his Reputation in Arms according to his Eloquence has audience given him where they use the authority of perswading rather than the power of commanding If they dislike what he sayes they disapprove it with a Hum and a rude noise If they like the proposal they shake and rustle their Spears or Partisans together It is the most honourable kind of assent to commend the Speaker with the clattering of their Arms. From hence perhaps arose the ancient right of Wapentakes 26. There are also chosen at the same Councils or Meetings chief persons as Justices to administer Law in the several Villages and Hamlets Each of those have a hundred Associates out of the Commonalty for their Counsel and Authority This is plainly the pourtraict of our Hundreds which we still have throughout the Counties of England 27. They do nothing of publick or private affair but with their Arms on but it is not the custom for any
never obtain among us and our English Government is so well constituted that our Lords Spiritual and Temporal and our worthy Commoners will find it the interest of themselves and their posterities that they will ever have that duty and deference to our Soveraign as may secure Him and Us and discourage the designs and defeat the attempts of all such as wish ill to his honour and safety or to the publick peace Besides is it rational to imagine that the King whose absolute right by Law it is to convene the Estates when and where he thinks fit to call and dissolve Parliaments as he pleases in a word that He in whose Name all Justice is administred in whose Hands the Militia is and by whose Authority alone the Subjects can take up Arms should stand only in a Co-ordination of power with any other persons whatsoever or however assembled or associated within his Dominions This flaw I could not but take notice of in our Great Author and that only with an intention to undeceive the unwary Reader and not to reflect upon his Memory who though he kept along a great while with the Long Parliament yet never appeared in action for them that ever I heard much less used or owned that virulence and violence which many others of that ill Body of men judged necessary for their proceedings CHAP. XX. Pag. 96. lin 15. Alderman of England The word Alderman in Saxon Ealdorman hath various acceptions so as to signifie all sorts almost of Governours and Magistrates So Matth. 20.25 the Princes of the Gentiles in the Saxon translation are called Ealdormen and Holofernes I remember the General of the Assyrian Army is in an Old English Translation called the Alderman of the Army So Aethelstan whose younger Son this Ailwin was being Duke or Captain General of the East-Saxons is in this Book of Ramsey styled Alderman The most proper importance of the word bears up with the Latin Senator i. e. Parliament-man as the Laws of S. Edward make out In like manner say they heretofore among the Britons in the times of the Romans in this Kingdom of Britanny they were called Senators who afterwards in the times of the Saxons were called Aldermen not so much in respect of their Age as by reason of their Wisdom and Dignity in that some of them were but young men yet were skilled in the Law and beside that were experienced persons Now that Alderman of England as Ailwin here was had to do in affairs of Justice appears by the foresaid Book of Ramsey where it is said that Ailwin the Alderman and Aedric the Kings Provost sate Judges in a certain Court The Alderman of the County our Author makes to be the same as the Earl or Lord of the County and Spelman saith it is hard to distinguish but at length placeth him in the middle betwixt the Count and Viscount He and the Bishop kept Court together the one for Temporals the other for Spirituals The Title goes lower still to denote a Mayor or Bailiff of a Corporation a Bailiff of a Hundred c. Lin. 30. Healf-koning It was an oversight or slip of memory in our Author to say that Ailwin was so called when the Book of Ramsey tells us it was his Father Aethelstan who was of that great power and diligence that all the business of the Kingdom went through his hands and was managed as he pleased that had that Nick name given him therefore Lin. 36. The Graves Our Author makes them subordinate to the Aldermen of Counties but in the Laws of the Confessor they appear to be much what the same There we read And as they are now called Greves who are put in places of Rule over others so they were anciently among the English called Ealdermen Indeed the word Greve or Reev for it is all one is of as various use as that other of Alderman is In Saxon it is gerefa from gerefen and reafen to take or carry away to exact or gather Whence this Officer Graphio or Gravius from the Saxon is in other Latin called Exactor regius and by reason that the Sheriff gathered the Kings Fines and other Duties and returned them to the Exchequer he was called the Shire-greve or Shire-reev that is the Gatherer of the County But the truth is that Greve or Reev came at last in general to signifie any Ruler or Governour set over any place almost whatever as the same word Grave doth among the Dutch So a Shire-greve or hihgerefa the High Sheriff of a County a Port-greve the Governour of a City or Port. So the Lord Mayor of London was called formerly Tun-greve the Bailiff of a Town or Mannor Sometime Greve is taken for a Count or Earl as Alderman is CHAP. XXI Pag. 98. lin 22. For Toll and Gabell In the Latin pro theolonio gablo Now telonium from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifies the place where the Officers of the Customs receive the Kings duties but is used also for a duty paid for the maintenance of Bridges and River-Banks So Hotoman But in our Law it is taken for the Toll of a Market or Fair. And Gablum or Gabellum a Gabell from the Saxon gafol or gafel signifies any Impost upon Goods as that in France upon Salt c. also Tribute Custom any kind of Tax or Payment c. Lin. 32. Through the Streets of Coventry There is a famous Tradition among the people of that Town concerning this matter that the Lady being to ride naked only covered all over with her hair had given order for the more decent performance of her Procession that all the Inhabitants should that day keep their Shops and Doors and Windows shut But that two men tempted by their Curiosity to do what fools are wont to do had some such penalty I know not what it was inflicted upon them as Actaeon had for the like offence And they now stand in some publick place cut out of Wood or Stone to be shewn to any stranger that comes thither like the Sign of the Two Logger-heads with the same Motto belike Nous sommes trois Pag. 99. lin 7. Brought in my Court a certain Toper In the Latin attulit in curiâ meâ quandam Toper I know what the adverb Toper signifies among the ancient Latines but what the word means here I confess I am in the dark It doth certainly stand for some thing I was thinking a Taper which he brought with him into Court and sware upon it as he should have done upon the holy Gospels I cannot imagine that by quandam Toper should be intended some Woman or Girl whose Name was Toper whom he brought along with him and in defiance to the Court laying his hand upon her took his Oath as formally as if he had done it upon the holy Evangelists Reader ONe thing I forgot to acquaint thee with in the Preface that whereas the Author himself had divided each Book into several Sections which
Crown Indeed it is true and apparent that he had a special gift of delaying new Elections for prorogation of his gains And at his Death were in his hands the Temporalties of Canterbury Winchester and Salisbury and of Abbies that number quadrupled II. Publico writeth he edicto vetuit unumquemque sine commeatu suo ex Angliâ egredi That Archbishop Anselme was enjoyned under no small pain that he should not pass the Seas to visit Pope Vrban under this Prince is true and plain enough but for any such general Edict I know no better authority his being in this as in other things suspicious as yet my belief is that the constitution of non Aler ouster le Mere is of some later birth III. Venationes quas Rex primo the words are Malmesburies but read primus adeò prohibuit ut capitale esset supplicium prendisse Cervum CHAP. VI. Henry Beauclerc restored and invented Common Liberties REformation was needful by the succeeding Beauclerc of the common injustice practised throughout the Kingdom especially by a delegation of exacting authority made to one Ranulph afterwards Bishop of Durham by le Rous and was thus endeavoured Immediately after his Coronation Charters of State-amendment were by publick authority sent into every County with particular Customs expressed allowed abrogated or altered in them That which was directed to Hugh of Bockland Sheriff of Hereford reported by Matthew Paris after Church-liberty confirmed Ita quod nec eam vendam nec ad firmam ponam nec mortuo Archiepiscopo vel Episcopo vel Abbate aliquid accipiam de domino Ecclesiae vel de hominibus donec successor in eam ingrediatur thus provides for the Subject Omnes malas consuetudines quibus regnum Angliae injuste opprimebatur inde aufero Quas malas consuetudines in parte hic pono I. Si quis Baronum meorum Comitum vel aliorum qui de me tenent mortuus fuerit Haeres suus non redimet terram suam sicut facere consueverat tempore patris mei sed justâ legitimâ relevatione relevabit eam II. Homines Baronum meorum legitimâ justa relevatione relevabunt terras de dominis suis. III. Si quis Baronum vel aliorum hominum meorum filiam suam tradere voluerit sive sororem sive neptem sive cognatam mecum inde loquatur sed neque ego aliquid de suo pro hac licentia accipiam neque desendam quin eam det excepto si eam dare voluerit inimico meo IV. Si mortuo Barone vel alio homine meo filia haeres remanserit dabo illam cum consilio Baronum meorum cum terra suâ V. Si mortuo marito uxor ejus remanserit sine liberis fuerit dotem suam maritagium habebit dum corpus suum legitimè servabit eam non dabo nisi per secundum velle suum terrae liberorum Custos erit sive uxor sive alius propinquior qui justus esse debet VI. Praecipio ut homines mei similiter se contineant erga filios filias uxores hominum suorum VII Monetagium commune quod capiebatur per Civitates vel Comitatus quod non fuit tempore Ed. R. hoc ne amodò fiat omninò defendo VIII Si quis captus fuerit sive monetarius sive alius cum falsâ monetâ justitia recta inde fiat IX Si quis Baronum vel hominum meorum infirmabitur sicut ipse dabit vel dare jusserit pecuniam suam ita datam esse concedo quod si ipse praeventus vel armis vel infirmitate pecuniam suam nec dederit nec dare disposuerit uxor sua sive liberi aut parentes legitimi homines sui pro animâ ejus eam dividant sicut eis melius visum fuerit Somewhat later times admitted the disposition of Intestates Goods and Probate of Testaments to be in Episcopal Jurisdiction John Stratford in one of his Provincial Constitutions of Church-liberty and Fairefax a Common Lawyer under Richard the Third affirm that Power in Ecclesiastick Courts to have been in ancient time for the Civil Law it self in express Text refers it to the Lay Magistrate by Act of Parliament ordained X. Si quis Baronum vel hominum meorum forisfecerit non dabit vadium in misericordiâ pecuniae suae sicut faciebat tempore patris vel fratris mei they were the two precedent Williams sed secundum forisfacturae modum nec ita emendabit sicut emendasset retro tempore patris mei vel fratris XI Si perfidiae vel sceleris convictus fuerit sicut culpa sic emendet XII Forestas communi consilio Baronum meorum in manu mea ita retinus sicut pater meus eas habuit XIII Militibus qui per loricas terras suas defendunt i. e. which hold their Lands per fee de Hauberke to be ready in a Coat of Mail for Martial Service terras dominicarum carucarum suarum quietas ab omnibus Geldis omni proprio Dominio meo concedo ut sicut tam magno gravamine alleviati sunt ita equis armis benè se instruant ut apti parati sint ad servitium meum ad defensionem regni mei XIV Lagam Regis Edwardi vobis reddo cum illis emendationibus quibus pater meus eam emendavit you have them in Lambard consilio Baronum suorum Thus far out of that transcribed Charter XV. Rapinas Curialium furta stupra edicto compescuit deprehensis oculos cum testiculis evelli praecipiens William of Malmsbury is hereof Author but Florence of Worcester and Roger of Hoveden that for Theft his punishment was as now by Hanging Death but for maintenance of Malmesbury's report I remember a miracle reported out of a Manuscript in Fox his Ecclesiastical History of one Edward of King's Weston in Bedfordshire attainted in time of Henry Fitz l' Empres for stealing a pair of Hedging Gloves and a Whetstone and having by execution lost his Eyes and Genitals had through devout prayer at Tho. Becket's Shrine in Canterbury restitution I fear the Monk that wrote it might have had a Whetstone without stealing of whatsoever Members and Faculties were by that inflicted punishment taken from him XVI Contra Trapezitas quos vulgò monetarios vocant praecipuam sui diligentiam exhibuit nullum falsarium quin pugnum perderet impune abire permittens qui fuit intellectus falsitatis suae commercio fatuos irrisisse This falsifying of money by Hoveden was loss of our Eyes and Genitals Gemiticensis and the Monk which made the continuance to Florence of Worcester agreeing to Malmesbury in this that the offenders lost their right hands but further adding that which the first God of the Gentiles was compelled to endure deprivation of his external parts of humane propagation XVII Statuit ut nullus obolus the Author is Roger of Hoveden quos rotundos esse jussit aut
Regis faciant inde fieri recognitionem per XII legales homines quatem seisinam defunctus inde habuit die qua ficit vivus mortuus This is the very Mortdancester Et sicut recognitum fuerit ita haeredibus ejus restituant si quis contrà hoc fecerit inde attaintus fuerit remaneat in misericordiâ Regis XXXII Justitiae Domini Regis faciant fieri recognitionem de disseisinis factis super assisam à tempore quo D. Rex venit in Angliam proximo post pacem factam inter ipsum Regem filium suum XXXIII Justitiae capiant fidelitates D. Regis infra Claus. Pasch. ad ultimum infrà Claus. Pentecost ab omnibus videlicet Comitibus Baronibus Militibus liberè tenentibus etiam rusticis qui in regno manere voluerint qui facere ●oluerit fidelitatem tanquam inimicus D. Regis capiatur XXXIV Habent etiam Justitiae praecipere quod omnes illi qui nondum fecerunt homagium ligeantiam D. Regi quod ad diem quem eis nominabunt veniant faciant Regi Homagium ligeantiam sicut ligeo Domino XXXV Justitiae faciant omnes Justitias rectitudines spectantes ad D. Regem ad coronam suam per breve Domini Regis vel illorum qui in loco ejus erunt de feodo dimi●û milit infrà If the account of a Knights fee be by the annual value then confidently according to the quadruple proportion of the known Relief you may affirm it by xx l. Lands and so likewise by comparison with Soccage payment upon the Stat. of West 1. for aid A fair Fitz chivalier or a File marryer but by a calculation prefixed to the red Book of the Exchequer DCLXXX Acres make exactly the Summe nisi tam grandis sit querela quod non possit deduci sine D. Rege vel talis quam Justitiae ei reponent pro dubitatione suâ vel ad illos qui in loco ejus erunt intendant tamen pro posse suo ad commodum D. Regis faciendum XXXVI Faciant assisam de latronibus iniquis malefactoribus terrae quae assisa est per concilium Regis filii sui hominum suorum per quos ituri sunt Comitatus XXXVII Justitiae provideant quod castella diruta prorsus diruantur diruenda benè prosternantur Et nisi hoc fecerint D. Rex Judicium Curiae suae de eis habere voluerit sicut de contemptoribus praecepti sui XXXVIII Justitiae inquirant de Escaetis de Ecclesiis de terris de foeminis quae sunt de donatione D. Regis XXXIX Ballivi D. Regis respondeant ad Scaccarium tam de assiso redditu quam de omnibus perquisitionibus suis quas faciunt in balliviis suis exceptis illis quae pertinent ad vicecomitatum XL. Justitiae inquirant de custodiis castellorum qui quantum ubi eas debeant postea mandent D. Regi XLI Latro ex quo capitur Vicecomiti tradatur ad custodiendum si Vicecomes absens fuerit ducatur ad proximum Castellanum ipse illum custodiat donec illum liberet Vicecomiti XLII Justitiae faciant quaerere per consuetudinem terrae illos qui à regno recesserunt nisi redire voluerint infra terminum nominatum stare ad rectum in Curiâ Regis postea ut lagentur nomina ut lagorum afferantur ad Pascha ad Fest. S. Mich. ad Scaccarium exinde mittantur D. Regi While thus the King made provident Order for Lay-business Hugo à Petra Leonis the Pope's Legate in England laboured for dila●ation of Church to whom was granted by the King XLIII Quod de caetero Clericus Matthew Paris his report non trahatur ante Judicem secularem personaliter pro aliquo crimine vel transgressione nisi pro forestâ laico feudo unde Regi vel alii D. Seculari laicum debetur servitium XLIV Vt Archiepiscopatus Episcopatus vel Abbatiae non teneantur in manu Regis ultra annum nisi pro causâ evidente vel necessitate urgente XLV Vt interfectores Clericorum convicti vel confessi coram Justiciario regni praesente Episcopo puniantur XLVI Quod Clerici duellum facere non cogantur XLVII Statuit apud WOODSTOCK quod quicunque forisfecerit ei de forestâ suâ semel de venatione suâ de ipso salvi plegii capiantur si iterum forisfecerit similitèr capiantur de ipso salvi plegii si autem tertiò idem forisfecerit nulli plegii capiantur sed proprium corpus forisfactoris which concludes what of his Laws common Histories afford CHAP. IX Richard Ceur de Lion THIS Henry's Successor was the stout Richard Ceur de Lion Himself in Person attending the Eastern Wars Division by his Commission was made for maintaining the Laws and Customes of the Kingdom of the whole Government 'twixt Hugh of Pusar Bishop of Durham and William Bishop of Ely Lord Chancellor The stream of all howsoever there was an association of Hugh Bardulph and William Briwere was carried as the Prelates pleased until their ambitious insolency made a period to their too great authority After his return Justices in Eyre were sent into every County secundùm subscriptorum formam capitulorum saith Hoveden processerunt in justiciis exequendis Forma Procedendi in Placitis Coronae Regis I. INprimis eligendi sunt IV. milites de toto Comitatu qui per Sacramentum suum eligant II. legales milites de quolibet hundredo vel Wapentacco Et illi II. eligant super sacramentum suum X. milites de singulis Hundredis vel Wapentaccis● vel si milites defuerint legales liberos homines ità quòd illi XII insimul respondeant de omnibus capitulis de toto Hundredo vel Wapentacco Capitula Placitorum Coronae Regis II. DE placitis Coronae novis veteribus omnibus quae nondum sin● finita coram Justiciariis D. Regis III. Item de omnibus recognitionibus omnibus placitis quae summonita sunt coram Justiciariis per breve Regis vel capitalis Justitiae vel à capitali Curiâ Regis coram eis missa IV. Item de Escaëtis quae sunt quae fuerunt postquam Rex arripuit iter versus terram Jerusalem quae fuerunt tunc in manu Regis sunt modò in manu ejus vel non de omnibus Escaëtis Domini Regis si à manu sua sint remotae quomodò per quem in cujus manus devenerunt qualitèr qui exitus inde habuerit quos quid valuerint quid modò valeant si aliqua eschaëta sit quae ad D. R. pertineat quae in manu ejus non sit V. Item de Ecclesiis quae sunt de Donatione D. Regis VI. Item de custodiis puerorum quae ad D. Regem pertinent VII Item de malefactoribus eorum receptoribus