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A59090 The priviledges of the baronage of England, when they sit in Parliament collected (and of late revised) by John Selden of the Inner Temple Esquire, out of Parliament rolles ... & and other good authorities ... : the recitalls of the French records in the 4th. chap., also newly translated into English ... Selden, John, 1584-1654. 1642 (1642) Wing S2434; ESTC R10915 70,579 178

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Ports of England Ibidem N. 21. ITem William Lord Latimer was impeached and accused by the vote of the said Earles of deceits extorsions g●ievances and other mischiefs by him and others of his faction and Covin during the time he stayed as well under our Lord the King in Brittaine when he was in Office with the King as otherwise in England the time that he was Chamberlaine and of the privie Councell o● the same our Lord the King First of all concerning that when the said L. Lat. had bin long Captain of Becherell and Officer of the late King Edward in Brittaine if before or during the peace or truce it was committed And thereupon it was proclaimed and published under the King through Brittaine that no English man nor other Forreigner shall take Wines Victualls nor other things of any persons Towns Castles nor of others except they pay presently for them nor shall they take or ransome any Person Town Fortresse or other place upon paine of what they may forfeit notwithstanding all which the said Lord Latimer and his Lievtenants and Officers caused to be taken by wrong and violence of diverse Gentlemen of the Countrey much wines and victuals to a great value without paying any thing and likewise ransomed many by oaths and in taking and receiving ransoms unto the summe of 4 millions and 3 thousand pounds whereof our Lord the King enjoyed nothing to the great dammage and villany of the King and oppression of his people and the said parts and against the Proclamation and defence aforesaid as in a letter made and sealed with the seales of many Lords of Brittaine cal●ed Ragman and sent into England to our Lord the King aforesaid more at large appeared but the said Ragman could not be found in any sort nor any man knew how to say in truth what become of it and yet he at another time was accused thereof that he had taken at Becherell and Plimoyson from thence unduly 153 l. w. of gold whereof the King had never any part nor any restitution made thereof and the parties from whom those summes were taken preferred a Bill in Parliament in forme as followeth It is to is to bee remembered that the proofes of parties that were ransomed at Becherell and Plymoison during the time of Truce have paid so much to Master John port-Constable of Bech●rell for the Lord Latimer and to William his sonne and to Hugh Middleton Receiver of the said Town or to the Lord Latimer departed out of Brittaine The yearly summe 40 Franks And likewise the said Constables William and Hugh have received of the ransomes of such as were wont to bee ransomed during the Warre more moneys than would have well payd all the Souldiers of the said Town The summe 50 Franks And likewise the said Countrey of Brittaine have paied to the said Constables William and Hugh for the death of divers Gentlemen liege men of our Lord the King that were killed upon the land of Britt●ine The summe 30 Franks And likewise the said Constable and William his son gathered upon the Countrey of Brittaine to send Monsieur Gakes from Plimouth dates to England The summe 12 Franks And likewise the said William for that he lost 20 Marks in the Isle of Garnesey in a Ship put a fane and ransome upon the said Becherell The summe 1000 Franks And likewise Robert Ravenstons boy had stollen stollen a h●lf salt-seller of silver and therefore the Land of Brittaine was ransomed The summe 2 Franks And likewise the said Constables William and Hugh Receivers of the said Town had received divers times for victuals sold as salt wine beefe and other commodities to the summe of 1000 Franks to the great losse of your poore liege-men and to the Town of Becherell For by these extortions which they had borne and sustained by the horrible necessity of the poore people and likewise of the Gentlemen was the said Town lost Wherefore they beseech our Lord the King and his Councell to cause the said Constables William and Hugh to come and answer the aforesaid receits so that our Lord the King may be served of that which belongeth to him and that your poore liege-men that were in the defence of the said Town may be paid their wages for the time that they were in the said Town if so it be your pleasure And likewise the said Lord Latimer was impeached by the Commons of divers loanes made to the use of the King without cause necessary to the great losse and and grievous dammage of the King and more especially of a loane that was made of late to the use of the King by the counsell of the Lord Latimer Richard Lions and others of his covin of 20 thousand markes where our Lord the King was obliged to his Creditors in the said Case to pay again 30 thousand marks and that was done by covin of the said Lord Latimer and others that were privy with the said Creditors to have part of the said Gaine and to be parties to the said deed or without answering the said loanes for it was furnished in speciall that the said money was the Kings own taken out of his Chamber or Treasury and also the proper money of the said Lord Latimer and Richard Lions who appeared as if oppressed by the said loane and also for that by like Covin between him and the said Rich. Lions for their singular profit gaine he had procured and counselled our L. the King to grant many Licences by Patents and Writs to cause a great quantity of Wools skins and Leather and other things to be carried to parts beyond the Sea other then to Callis against the Ordinances and defences made before time in that behalfe to the destruction of the staple of Callis and of the moneyage there to the great dammage of the King and of the Realme of England and hurt of the Town of Callis and likewise that by such covin done betweene him and the said Richard Lions for their singular profit he had caus●d to be put upon the wools skins leather and other marchandises of the Staple divers new Impositions That is to say of every sack of wooll passing other where than to Callis by such Licence 11 s. more against the Statutes and Ordinances thereof made and also for that by his singular profit and ill government betweene our Lord the King and his Realme they have had and suffered many other grievances losses dammages and villanies without number as the losse of the Towne of S. Saviour in Normandy of the said place of Becherell and of other Fortresses which might have been well saved and kept if the King had been well counselled And also concerning certaine Spies and other felons taken and imprisoned by the King and after delivered by the Lord Latimer of his own proper authority without the knowledge or pleasure of the King taking upon him and incroaching notoriously in doing these things upon the Royall power
informed of the manner of this Iudgement the execution thereof shall be respited untill our Lord the King shall be informed thereof where it is commanded to the aforesaid Constable safely to keepe the said Iohn untill he hath other commandement from our Lord the King And it is to be remembred that Geffery Martyn Clerke of the Crowne was named in this record and delivered the same there in writing in this present roll by his own proper hand Ex. Rot. Parliamen 42. E. 3. M. 2. N. 22 23. c. WIlliam Latimer of the County of Dorset preferred a Petition in this Parliament in manner as followeth To our Lord the King and his Cou●cell sheweth William Latimer of the County of Dorset That whereas ou● Lord the King otherwhiles in the pestilence granted to the Bishop of Salisbury the Wardship of the Mannor of Dentish and Devillish in the said County being in his hands by the minority of Robert son and heire of Robert Latimer Knight together with the marriage of the said Robert the son being then of the Age of sixe yeeres for a certaine summe of money to him payed which Estate the said William Latimer hath held untill Master Iohn Lee then Steward by procurement of Thomas Delaber sent one Richard Inworth Serjeant at Armes in Dorset to the said William Latimer to bring him to London in safeguard as prisoner with the Intent aforesaid that is to say the Monday next before the Feast of the Nativity of Saint Iohn the Baptist in the yeare of our Lord the King that now is the nine and thirtieth and the said serjeant also performed the same and the said Master Iohn Lee did charge and command the said William in the Kings name that he should not goe out of Town upon paine of a hundred marks untill he had surrendered the body of the said heire contrary to the patent of the King to the said Mr. Iohn Lee and outed the said William of his Charter and moreover made a deed of release whereupon the said Master Iohn Lee comma●●●● to hold all the Lands and Tenements aforesaid untill the Feast of St. Michael then next ensuing for a certain summe of money and then the said Master Iohn Lee leased to the said William the Wardship of the said mannor of Devillish rendring forty pounds per annum whereof he was seised as prochein amy of the Infant viz. Pulchrain Helto Whitechurch Oxford Staket let the same to the said William and to divers other persons at his will by such duresse imprisonment and arresting the said William to the great mischiefe grievous dammages and losses to the great wrong of his simple estate wherof hee prayeth remedy To the points of which Petition the said Iohn Lee answereth and saith that because that the Mannors Lands and T●nements of Inheritance there comprised in the said Petition were wickedly extended by the Escheator and leased out of the Kings hand at too small a value to the great dammage and deceit of the King he caused the same Mannors Lands and Tenements to be resumed into the Kings hands the Wardship of which Mannors and the marriage of which said heire the King had committed to him And likewise the said Iohn Lee was put to answer before the Lords of the affaires in such time as hee was Steward of the Kings houshold for that he had attaiched divers Gentlemen by their Bodies some by Serjeants of Armes and some by other wayes as William Latimer and others and caused them to come before himselfe as before the Counsell of the King in places where pleased him out of any of the Kings accustomed places to answer to divers things whereof the recognizances ought to appertaine to the Courts of the King Item It was debated concerning his authority of Stewardship that he within the verge had attaiched divers Gentlemen of the verge as Iohn Goddard and others to answer in the Marshallsea of things done out of the verge and caused some men to be apprehended and sent to the Tower of London of his owne Authority without Commandement of the King or his Councell It was likewise debated that Hugh Lavenham had appealed certaine Gentlemen of Felony and that before the Kings Iustices at Newgate and divers Gentlemen arraigned at his suit whereof some put themselves upon the Country and some defended themselves by their bodies and stayed in prison as the Law demanded and that an Appeallee of murder was let goe at large by Commandement of the said John Lee against the Law and command of the Iustices and that hee tooke the said Hugh by his owne Authority and let him goe at large and some that were not appeallees in roll of the Crowne at the suggestion of the said Hugh were taken and imprisoned as if they had beene appeallees It was also affirmed that whereas the said Iohn Lee was sworne to the King and his Councell he did bargaine with Master Nicholas Lovaine concerning the Wardship of the Mannor of Reinham in Kent being then in the hand of the said Nicholas by the under age of the sonne and heire of Iohn Stanton as appeared by certaine evidences as well by letters Patents under the Kings Great Seale as others which the said Iohn had in his keeping that very plainely the said Mannor was holden of our Lord the King in chiefe as of his Castle of Dover and Fort that the Wardship thereof appertained to the King to the great dammage and deceit of the King against his Oath Of which points and articles hee cannot duely and suffici●ntly excuse himselfe by the Law and therefore was the said Iohn commanded to the Tower of London and there to stay as a prisoner till he had made fine and ransome to the King according to his will And it was commanded to Master Allen Buxall Constable of the Tower that he take safe keeping of him and so departed the Prelates Dukes Earles and Barons and afterwards by the commandement of the King the said Iohn was caused to come guarded from the Tower to Westminster before the Great Councell and at other times examined upon the points of the Petition the ●ad Willi●m Latimer answered and said Tha● our Lord the King had committed the wardship of the Mannors Lan●s and Tenements of the said heire untill the Age of the said heire together with the marriage of the said heire and as intirely hee would render it into the Kings hands And then before the said Councell it was agreed and assented by them That the said Mannors Lands and Tenements and the body of the heire aforesaid ought to be released in the Kings hand and delivered to the said William Latimer to hold as hee held of the said Bishop untill the full Age of the said heire doing to the King in manner as it was before the said Iohn surrendered the same and that the Letters Patents of the King made to the said Bishop of the same ward and marriage and the Letters of the said
Bishop of the same Ward and marriage made to the said William and surrendered to the said Iohn by the said William by durity and menaces bee fully restored to the said William and that the Enrolment of the release to the said Iohn by the said William of the same Ward and marriage also by durity and threatning made as by the said William in the Exchequer be cancelled voyde and holden for nought for ever saving all times to the King his right in time to come Ex. Rot. Parl. 50. E. 3. mem. 2. num 17. FIrst the said Richard Lions Merchant of London was impeached and accus●d by the said Commons of many deceits extortions and other evill deeds commited by him against our Lord the King and his people as well in the time that he had beene belonging to the House and Councell of the King as otherwise during the time that he was Farmor of the Subsedies and Customes of the King And more especially for that the said Richard by Covin had betweene him and some of the privie Councell of our Lord the King for their singular profit and advantage had procured and gotten many Patents and Writs of Licence to be made to carry great faith and credit whereby Skins wools and other merchandises were transported other where then to the Stap●e of Callis against the Ordinances an● defences made in that behalfe concerning the same before time in Parliament And for that he had imposed and procured to bee put upon Wools Skins Leather and other Merchandises certaine new Impositions without assent of Parliament and those Impositions and Taxes without permission of the King or of the High Treasurer of the Realme having not medlage therewith and it was said how hee uncertainly tooke ten shillings in one parcell and twelve pence in another parcell of every sack c. which mounted to a very great summe throughout all the time that hee had beene receiver or Treasurer and likewise of another new imposition of foure pence by him made and put upon every pound of money upon the Lumbards and other Merchants for a discharge by his owne proper Authority and without warrant and assent in Parliament or otherwise and the same imposition of foure pence the pound contrary to piety collected and kept as to the use of our Lord the King whereof hee payed nothing And also of divers loanes made to the use of the King without cause necessary and more especially of one loane which he newly had at London of twenty thousand markes where our Lord the King was bound to pay 30000. markes and that by the Counsell of the said Richard and others in the Kings Court who have covenanted with the receivers to have part of the gaine and to be parties secretly to the said loane the said Richard taketh the said money and afterwards gaineth by way of vsury of the King his Lord of whose Councell hee was before a great quantity of money in great dammage and deceit to the King and also many other extortions thro●ghout the Realme and so demeaned himselfe against his Councell Treasurer and receiver concerning the new impositions as otherwise taking upon him in all the said matters the Royall Power which was horrible to rehearse And also for that our Lord the King had beene debtor of Record to divers Gentlemen of many great summes of money so had the said Richard by the assent of other privie complices in the Kings Court of the said Covin caused many such accounts to be bargained and compounded sometimes for the tenth penny and sometimes for the twentieth or a hundreth penny and hath procured the King to pay the debts intire and so by such his subtilties and for his singular profits as well our Lord the King as the said debts are wickedly abused and more especially the Prior of Saint John of Ierusalem in England to whom the King was debtor of a certaine summe and the said Richard hath had twenty foure Marks thereof for Broakage to cause the said Prior to have payment of the remnant and another time of the Lord Steward to whom the King was also a debtor and the said Richard hath had of him by the same manner another great summe of money and so of many others in great deceit slander and villany to the King and his Court Whereunto the said Richard present in Parliament saith that as to all the said Loane made to the King of the twenty markes aforesaid hee is altogether without other fault and further saith that he at no time had profit or gaine nor tooke any thing at all of the Loane aforesaid nor of the said money nor in other things and that he was ready to prove by all wayes reasonable when they would demand of him and as to the said Impositions of ten shillings and twelve pence the sack of wooll c. 4. pence the pound of money he could not cleerely excuse himselfe that he had not so levied and collected and thereof taken money his part that is to say 12. pence of every sack of Wooll c. but that was hee said at the commandement of our Lord the King at the prayer and assent of the Merchants who demanded such Licence and as to the remnants of these Impositions he had wholy delivered them to the receiver of the Kings chamber and accountable is the receiver in the Parliament And the said Richard first of all collected the same having a Warrant by which authority he hath before shewed in Parliament under the Seale of the King himselfe and his Councell so to doe and thereupon were witnesses produced in Parliament that our Lord the King had expressed a day for the same And some Lords there present in Parliament were that knew not how or in what manner he was become in such office under the King and what is more that the King knew him not for his Officer and that amongst other Articles the said Richard made no answer wherefore the said Richard was awarded to prison during the Kings pleasure and distrained to fine and ransome according to the quantity of his trespasse and that he loose his freedome of the City of London and bee no more in Office under the King nor approach to the Kings Court or Councell and thereupon another time the said Richard was sent before the Lords of Parliament where it was said to him that it seemed to the Lords that his offences were so great and horrible that hee had not sufficient wherewith to make satisfaction and forthwith the said Richard submitted himselfe into the favour of the King his body his Lands Tenements goods and Chattells and willed and granted that his body goods and Chattells should bee at the Kings will to give and as to the Extortions done by the said Richard or his Deputies from the time that hee was Farmer of the subsedies or Customes as beforesaid it is ordained in Parliament that good Inquiry bee made by sufficient Gentlemen in all the