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A43208 Englands chronicle, or, The lives & reigns of the kings and queens from the time of Julius Cæsar to the present reign of K. William and Q. Mary containing the remarkable transactions and revolutions in peace and war, both at home and abroad, as they relate to this kingdom, with the wars, policies, religion and customs, success and misfortunes as well of the ancient Britains, as Roman, Saxon, Danish, and Norman conquerors, with copper cuts and whatever else is conduceable to the illustration of history / by J. Heath. Heath, James, 1629-1664. 1689 (1689) Wing H1325; ESTC R29472 167,333 265

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Devonshire on the 5 of November 1688. and the Army to the number of 13 or 14000 Landed seized upon Exceter and divers other places whilst the King was prepairing to oppose it causing his Forces and Artillary to march for Salisbury whether he went in person But finding the falling off of part of his Army and afterwards the Nobility and the surprize of sundry strong Towns in the North and other places he returned to White-Hall and upon news of the defeat of a Party set to Guard Reading and Twyford Bridge the King on the 11 of December left White-Hall having the day before sent the Queen away c. but within a day or two he was discovered at Feversham and a Message sent to him from the Lords sitting in Council to return which accordingly he did but afterwards going to reside at Rochester he privately withdrew himself and taking Ship passed into France where the Queen was arrieved some time before Thus fortunes Hand does turn about the Wheele And makes the great as well as feeble Reele Memorable Transactions under the Auspicious Reign of King WILLIAM and Queen MARY c. THE Kingdom left without a Head and th 〈◊〉 Publick Affairs receiving prejudice in man 〈◊〉 particulars after several Addresses and Congratulations on the 25th of December the Lords Spiritual and Temporal assembled at Westminster and humbly besought his present Majesty to take upon him the Administration of of Publick Affairs both Civil and Military and to dispose of the publick Treasury c. till the meeting of the Convention appointed to meet the 22 of January making i● their further Request that he would cause his Circular Letters to be Issued out to the Lords And for the Election of Representatives to repair and ●it at Westminster and the next day a great number of Gentlemen who had been Members of Parliament in the Reign of King Charles the Second met at the Commons House who drew up an Address to the ●●●ine purpose as the Lords which was presented and very Gratiously received and on the 30 of December a Declaration was Issued out Authorizing Justices of the Peace Sheriffs and other Officers who were in their Offices the 1st of December except Papists to Act in their several Places and Stations And divers Priests and other disaffected persons were seized in sundry Counties and committed to several Prisons and the Circular Letters sent abroad the Papists were commanded to depart the Citys of London and Westminster And many eminent Citizens of London upon notice that the Treasury was Exhausted lent towards the defraying the Charges of the Publick Affairs of the Kingdom about 300000 l which was paid in at Guild-Hall for the use of the Exchequer Nor was the Scots slow in making their Address for Protection which many of the Lords and Commnns did and were kindly received with a promise at their Request of Issuing out Letters for the meeting of a Convention of the Estates on the 14th day of March at Edenburg which gave a general Satisfaction to Scotland On the 22d of January 1688. According to appointment the Convention met at Westminster where the Lord Marquess of Hallifax held the place as Speaker in the House of Lords Henry Powell Esq did the like in that of the Commons And after some Debates and Considerations for the Settlement of Affairs they made an Address of Thanks for the Royal Care and Conduct and at their Intreaty a further continuation of the Administration was Accepted and the days were Appointed for a Publick Thanksgiving for the great Deliverance of these Kingdoms But in Ireland things went not on so prosperously for the Earl of Tyrconnel greatly oppressed the Protestants suffered the Papists to plunder their Houses every where disarming them and putting them out of places of Trust however in several parts of that Kingdom the Protestants under the leading of Noblemen and others gave them notable overthrows But the Popish party relying upon the Succours they expected from France gave not over their Ravages and Outrages However great preparations were made in England to reduce that Kingdom to Obedience and some Stores of Ammunition and Provisions sent from Scotland and care was taken to stop such as were going over and a prohibition was laid on French Goods and Manufactures c. And now the desire of the people being to see their present Majestys on the Throne a great number of worthy persons in the Citys of London and Westminster Petitioned setting forth it was their humble desire it might be speedily done and soon after Her present Majesty upon the earnest Invitation of the Estates Embarqued for England attended by a Squadron of English and Dutch Men of War and arrived safely at White-Hall on the 12th of February 1688. to the inexpressible Joy of the people and was saluted all the way Her Yatch passed by the Forts and Ships in the Road as also by the Tower Guns the Standard being displayed and at Court she received the Complements of all the Nobility present nor did the Lords and Commons delay to prepare for the Proclaiming King WILLIAM and Queen MARY by declaring the Throne Vacant and praying them to accept the Regal Dignities Abrogating the former Oaths of Allegience and Supremacy and Incerting these viz. I A. B. Do sincerely Promise and Swear that I will be Faithfull and bear True Allegience to their Majestys King WILLIAM and Queen MARY So help me God I A. B. Do Swear that I do from my heart Abhor Detest and Abjure as Impious and Heretical this Damnable Doctrine and Position that Princes Excommunicate or deprived by the Pope or any Authority of the See of Rome may be Deposed or Murthered by their Subjects or any other whatsoever and so I declare that no foreign Prince Person Prelate State or Potentate hath or ought to have any Jurisdiction Power Superiority Preeminence or Authority Ecclesiastical or Spiritual within this Realm So help me God Matters prepared in readiness for so great and solemn an Occasion the Lords and Commons on the 13th of February having acquainted them with what they had done and obtained their Consent About Eleven of the Clock they went to White-Hall Gate where the Officers and Serjeants at Arms Trumpets and other persons being present Sir Thomas St. George Knight Garter Principal King at Arms receiving the Proclamation and the Officers at Arms by the Lords being ordered immediately to Proclaim it York Herauld Proclaimed it at White-Hall Gate after the Trumpets had thrice sounded Garter reading it by periods in the presence of the Lords and Commons and a great concourse of people and the satisfaction conceived was manifested by loud shouts and general Acclamations of Joy and in good order they proceeded to Temple-Bar where having informed the occasion of their coming they had the Gates opened and all except the Bailiff of Westminster and his men entred and were received by the Lord Mayor Aldermen Recorder Sheriffs c. When having made a Second Proclamation
that without any constraint or imposition of Penalty they flocked thithe● from all parts whereupon the place was constrained to yield and Odo again Banish'd but whilst these thing passed Duke Robert was not idle for having gathere● what Forces he could he Landed at Southampton but finding himself unable to resist the Army that was marching against him and not joyned by the expected supply he repassed the Seas without doing any thing o● note except the ingageing VVilliam to pay him 3000 Mark a year and after his Decease to resign it to him or his Heirs and now Lanfrank the Arch-bishop dying the King supplied himself with Treasure by keeping the See of Canterbury and many other Ecclesiastica● Promotions vacant for the space of four Years some o● which he likewise sold and was wont to say That Christ's Bread is a sweet Dainty and most delicious fo● Kings Howbeit when two Monks were contending who should give most to be made Abbot of a certain Abby in the King's Disposal he espied a third Monk standing in a corner and causing him to advance he demanded VVhat he would give to be made Abbot Not on● Farthing replyed the Monk for I have renounced th● VVorld and Riches that I may the more carefully serv● God Then replyed the King thou art worthy to b● made Abbot and the Abbey shall be thine The Scots by this time having Invaded England under the leading of Molcolm their King King VVilliam marched his Army Northward to oppose him but before it came to the trial of Battle a Peace was concluded and the 12 Villages in the Northern Marche● which the Scots had held during the Reign of VVilliam the Conqueror restored them for a Tribute of twelve Marks a year And this year the King to strengthen him against the Scots rebuilt Carlisle in Cumberland which had been demolished by the Danes about two ●undred years before And in Anno 1093 made An●elm a Norman Abbot Archbishop of Canterbury but ●ong the Peace lasted not between the two Kingdoms for Malcolm coming to Glocester to treat about further ●ccord and not being received or entertain'd according to his liking he returned in a rage and raising a great Army in his own Country fell into the English Frontires with Fire and Sword destroying all before him as far as Alnewick and no sooner were these stirs quieted but Robert Mobray and William of Anchon conspired with divers others to depose King William and set up Stephen de Albermarle a Sisters Son but were prevented and defeated The Welsh making many Incursions and Inroades into the Kings Territories he marched a powerful Army into the heart of Wales and there did such notable Exploits that the Welsh finding themselves unable to make head against his Forces submitted themselves so that from the year 1093 VVales has been subject to the Crown of England The King upon new provocations Invaded his Brother Roberts Terretories in Normandy taking divers Castles and strong holds inforcing him thereby to a Peace after which uniting their Forces against their younger Brother Henry who had practised the surprising their Territories he was besieged by them in the Castles of St. Michaels Mount in Normandy during which Siege King VVilliam's life was in great hazard for being too forward in charging such as sallied he was overthrown by a Knight and had his Horse slain but being known the Knight took him up and presented him with another Horse when the King springing into the Saddle and coming up with a fierce countenance demanded who it was that ha● overthrown him but the undaunted Knight instead of excusing it boldly told him it was he Then sai● the King looking mildly upon him by St. Lukes fac● for that was his usual Oath thou shalt be my Knight and inroled in my Check with a Fee answerable to th● worth But in conclusion Henry being constrained fo● want of Water and other necessaries to submit the Brethren were reconciled and Robert preparing for the Holy Wars mortgaged his Dukedom of Normandy to King VVilliam for 6660 pounds to rais● which petty sum at that time he caused great Taxes as they were termed to be laid upon the People and forced the Religious Houses to contribute towards it And in the absence of Robert the French besieging Main in Normandy the King upon notice of it as h● sat at Dinner in his Palace of VVestminster swore H● would never turn his back till he arrived there and so causing the Wall to be broke through for his passage he hasted to Sea commanding his Army to follow him but the Winds being contrary and the Sea● rough and boisterous the Mariners doubted to set sail and the Pilot besought the King to continue in the Port till the Weather was more favourable but he impatient of delay and disdaining to fear replied Hast thou ever heard that a King has been drowned therefore hoist up the Sails I charge thee and be gone So that safely and unexpectedly arriving in Normandy the French were so terrified that they raised the Siege This King denied that the Pope had any Authority over any Bishop of his Realm and also the Powe● of binding and loosing yet in acknowledgement to the See of Rome he paid Peter pence granted by his Father he derided Invocation of Saints and curbed the avarice and aspiring Ambition of the Clergy In his Reign a great Earthquake happened and the Steeple of the Abby of VVinchester was burnt with ●…ghtning which likewise rent the roof of the ●…by casting down the Image of the Virgin Mary ●…d her Crucifix breaking one of her Legs and not ●…ng after so great a Wind happened at London that it ●…ew down sixty some say six hundred Houses taking of the roof of Bow Church and carrying it a great ●…ight in the Air And so great a Famine and Mor●…ity ensued that the quick were scarcely able to bu●… the dead Two blasing Stars appeared and many ●…ars as if they shot fiery Darts at each other ●…nd in the last year of his Reign the Sea over●…wed her Banks carrying away a great number ●… People Cattle and Houses drowning most of the ●…ands which had been Earl Goodwins which is not ●…covered to this day but retain the Earls Name as ●…own by that of Goodwins Sands At Finchamstead ●…ear Abbington in Barkshire a Well of bloodly co●…oured Water sprung up for fifteen days and then ●…eased King VVilliam by this time having setled his Af●…irs betook him to Recreations and especially ●…unting in the New Forrest his Father had made by ●…he unpeopling and delapidation of a great many ●…owns and Vilages when so it happened that Sir VValter Tyrre a French Knight shooting at a Stag he Arrow glanced against a Tree and flying aslaunt ●…ruck the King into the breast of which he imme●…ately died August 1. Anno 1100. and his Body being ●…id in a Cart the best Herse those times afforded a ●…reat King it broke bemired in a dirty way yet be●…g put into
the next day a Truce was concluded yet Simon de Monfort Earl of Leicester who headed the Baron's Army carrying the King about with him as his Prisoner got into his hands all the strong Holds These Proceedings in England putting a stop to the Pope's Revenue he sent Cardinal Ottobon his Legate to Excommunicate the Barons but they for a while despised it yet soon after falling out amongst themselves many of them came over to Prince Edw. who had taken the Field with an Army so that he enclosed the Earl of Leicester's Camp at Evesham and obliged him to battel where the Earl lost the day with his Life and had his Head Hands and Feet chopped off as a mark of Infamy By this Overthrow the King was rescued and set at liberty when to heal the long Divisions a Parliament was called at Winchester by whose Approbation the King seized the Charters of London and other Cities and Towns that had proved disloyal and the Legate proceeded to excommunicate the Bishops of Winchester London Worcester and Chichester for taking part with the King's Enemies And now Prince Edward with a great Train took a Journey to the Holy Land and the King more firmly to settle the Nation called a Parliament at Marlborough where the Statutes called by the name of the place were enacted but having been at Norwich to quiet a tumult and punish such as had burnt the Priory Church upon his return he fell sick at the Abby of St. Edmund in Suffolk and after a short Languishment dyed Anno 1272. from whence he was conveyed to Westminster and there buried in the Abbey This Henry King of England Lord of Ireland Duke of Guyenne and Aquitain was eldest Son to King John his Wife was Eleanor Daughter of Raymond Earl of Provence by whom he had Issue Edward Edmund Richard who dyed young also John William and Henry Margaret married to Alexander the Third King of Scotland Beatrix married to John the First Duke of Bretaigne and Katharine who dyed young He began his Reign the 19th of October 1216. and reigned 56 Years and 28 Days being the 65th Year of his Age he was the 27th sole Monarch of England He was very charitably given and founded many Churches and Religious Houses In his time four Suns appeared from the Rising to the Setting after which followed a great Famine and eighteen Jews were hanged for crucifying a Child and others severely punished for circumcising another that had been christened Thus dyed Third Henry when on England's Stage H 'ad sway'd the Sceptre near a long liv'd Age The longest Reign the Nation e'er beheld Yet Life wound off by time the Cedar's fell'd The Reign and Actions of Edward the First King of England c. KIng Edward at the death of his Father Henry was warring in the Holy Land where he did Wonders in his own Person insomuch that the Sarazens dreading his Prowess the Governour of Damascus under a feigned Friendship sent a Villain to assassinate him who seeming as if he was about to deliver him a Letter stabbed him in three places in the Arm with a poisoned Dagger and had repeated the Wounds but that the Prince struck him down with his Foot whereupon his Guards came in and cut the Wretch in pieces as he lay on the floor yet these wounds by the Chirurgions were accounted mortal unless some one would hazard his own Life by sucking out the Poison but when every one shrunk back Eleanor his Wife who would by no means be persuaded from accompanying him in that tedious Journey chearfully undertook it and effected the Cure without any Injury done to her self for which generous Undertaking he raised Crosses and Monuments to her Memory in England The News of his Father's death no sooner reached him but setling the Affairs of the War he returned to England where together with his Queen he was crowned by Robert Kilwarby Archbishop of Canterbury at whose Coronation 500 Horses were let loose in a large Forest to be possessed by those that first caught them and upon notice the Welsh were in Arms he marched against them overthrew and slew Lewelin their Prince in a great Battel whose Head crowned with Ivy was set upon the Tower and utterly subduing those Mountainiers he made his Son Edward born amongst them at Caernarvon Prince of the Country And going for France he sate as a Peer of that Kingdom in consideration of the Lands and Territories he held there and upon his return banished the Jews to the number of 15000 for bringing in base Money and exacting Extortion Alexander the Third King of Scotland who had married King Edward's Sister being dead and the Lords Bruce and Baliol for want of other Heirs standing in competition for the Kingdom Edward by his Authority became Umpire and adjudged it to the latter promising to support his Right by Arms for which he was to become his Homager but that Prince being in the Throne to please his People who feared the English Greatness might be prejudicial to them hearkened to Proposals with France and suffered his People to enter the North parts of of England with Fire and Sword Edward drove them back with great slaughter entering Scotland and making such terrible Destruction that the Cities and Towns for the most part surrendred the Scotch Nobles sued for Peace and in the Parliament held at Berwick they acknowledged him their King swearing to be true Subjects to him for ever after sealing a solemn Instrument to that purpose whereupon King Edward leaving John de Warren Earl of Surry and Sussex as his Viceroy in that Kingdom sent John Baliol the late King Prisoner to the Tower of London and brought away with him the Crown Sceptre and Cloth of State burning their Records abrogating their Laws altering the Form of their Divine Service and transplanting their learned Men to Oxford He brought likewise the Marble Chair wherein the Kings of Scotland were wont to be crowned from the Abbey of Schone and sent it to Westminster upon which is written this prophetical Distich Ni fallat Fatum Scoti quocunque locatum Invenient Lapidem regnare tenetur ibidem Where'er this Stone the Scot shall placed find There shall he reign for there his Rule 's assign'd This was verified in King James the first upon the uniting the Kingdoms but more of that in his Reign King Edward going into France to recover such places as the French had taken in the latter end of his Father's Reign and refused to restore especially in Gascoign the Scots rebelled and under the leading of one William Wallis fell upon the English at an advantage near Striveling Bridge and put them to the rout killing amongst others Hugh de Cressingham the Treasurer and having flead him divided his Skin in parcels amongst them as a Trophie of their Revenge and committed many other outrages which hastened the King's Return at which time he summoned a Parliament at York giving the Scots a day to appear but they
he surrendred himself and was committed to the Tower and soon after he with the Earl of Southampton were convicted of High-Treason in endeavouring to Leavy War against the Queen c. and the Earl of Essex on the 20th of February 1600 lost his Head on the Green within the Tower not only lamented of the people whose Darling he was but of the Queen her self who at the perswasion of his Enemies had in the heat of her passion signed the Warrant for his Death divers others were Executed on this occasion as it were to bare so great a Man company nor did the Queen enjoy her self after the fall of this Favourite but hastened her own Death by grief dying on the 24th of March 1602 and was buried in Henry the Seventh's Chapell at Westminster when she had Reigned 44 Years 4 Months and 7 Days and in the 69th Year of her Age. This Elizabeth was Queen of England France and Ireland Daughter to Henry the Eighth by his Wife Ann Bulloin in her Reign happened Earthquakes Blazing Stars and a Mortal Plague of which 40000 dyed in and about London She was the 43th sole Monarch of England c. Thus set the Glory of her Sex in Dust Whose endless Memory Fame keeps in trust When Eating Time shall Marble Tombs deface Her Name shall live belov'd in every place The Life Reign and Actions of James the First King of Great Britain c. THe name of the Tudors expiring in Queen Elizabeth gave way to that of the Stuarts James the Sixth of Scotland great Grand-child to James the Fourth and Margaret his Wife Eldest Daughter to Henry the Seventh succeeding to the Crown by reason of the failure of Issue by the Male Line who upon notice of the Death of Queen Elizabeth being invited by the Nobles set forward from his Kingdom of Scotland and entering England was received on the Frontires with great joy and conducted to London being met some distance by the Mayor and Aldermen and five hundred Horse who conducted him to the Charter-House prepared for his Reception but because the Plague raged the Coronation was deferred and the Popish Party who had earnestly expected the death of the Queen in hopes a Papist might succeed finding themselves disappointed laboured to prevent his establishment in the Throne and several were detected who had received Orders from the Pope to seize his Person and bring him to their own terms however on the 21st of July 1603. The King together with the Queen his Royal Consort were crowned at Westminster by Dr. Whitgift Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the Conspirators being tryed at Winchester many were found guilty yet only Watson and Clark two Priests together with George Brook suffered death the King pardoning the rest mostly at the place of Execution and then in a dispute between the Bishops of the Church of England and the Puritan Ministers who pretended to a farther Reformation this wise Prince gave it for the first and by learned reasons so confuted the latter that they were utterly non-plussed and after that he caused the Holy Scripture to be new Translated from the Original and Anno 1604 he made peace with Spain and proceeded to a Uniting the Kingdoms of England and Scotland and took upon him the Stile of King of Great Britain banishing the Jesuites and Seminary Priests who began a fresh to disturb the Government which made them as their last Shift or rather cruel revenge contrived that hellish Plot called the Gunpowder-Plot wherein they bound themselves by Oaths and Sacraments for the more secretly carrying it on but nothing escapes the Eyes of the Almighty who when they were in the highest expectation of success turned their Wisedom into Foolishness for by a Letter directed to the Lord Monteagle whom one of the Conspirators was desirous to spare the Nest they had so long been making was found and in it thirty six Barrels of Powder intended to blow up the King Lords and Commons in Parliament this was discover'd under great heaps of Billets but the very Morning they were to assemble in Parliament and Guy Faux at the Vault Door under the Parliament-House Cloaked Booted and Spurr'd with a Dark-Lanthorn and Matches ready to lay the Train upon which the Conspirators were pursued and in the dispute John and Christopher Wright Thomas Piercy and Robert Catesby were slain and Anno 1605 on the 27th of January Sir Edward Digby Thomas Winter Robert Winter Ambrose Rookwood Thomas Bates Robert Keys and Guido Faux were found guilty and Executed as Traitors at the West-end of St. Pauls and in the Palace-Yard In memory of this signal Deliverance the fifth of November the Day on which it was discovered by Authority of Parliament was enacted a perpetual day of Thanksgiving Henry Garnet and divers others concerned in this Plot were Executed at sundry Times and Places Garnet confessing it though a Jesuite and warning the Roman Catholicks not to practice any Treason against their Prince for God would certainly discover and defeat it And soon after there happened Insurrections in the Shires of Liecester Warwick and Northampton about throwing open Inclosures Headed at last by John Reynolds but were dispersed and quieted without much Trouble and the King to honour the City entered himself a Brother of the Cloath-workers Company and by his Example many Nobles were made free of that and divers others the New Exchange was finished Anno 1609 and furnished with Wares being called by the King Britain's Burse The Priests and Jesuites were commanded to depart the Kingdom The Body of Mary Queen of Scots Mother to King James was Anno 1612 removed from Peterborough to the Royal Chappel at Westminster and there splendidly Interred and the Kingdom remained in great Tranquility But to abate the Joy Prince Henry the King 's eldest Son dyed November the 6th of a Feaver though not without some suspicion of Poyson to the great Grief of the Kingdom whose Darling he was And Frederick the Electour Palatine of the Rhine coming into England was married to the Lady Elizabeth the King 's eldest Daughter in the Royal Chappel at White-Hall on the 14th of February following but soon after at the Instance of the Bohemians taking upon him the Rule of that Kingdom he was routed by the Emperour's Forces who seized likewise the Palatinate and the King gave the Citizens of London the Province of Vlster in Ireland and instituted the Order of Baronets limiting them within the number of 200 and to cease with the failure of Issue and Anno 1614 the New River was brought to London to the great refreshment of the City which was much stinted for want of Water being only supplied by a few Conduits in the neighbouring Fields and this year a Divorce being sued out between Robert Devereux and his Countess on her Pretence of his Insufficiency she married Robert Carre Earl of Somerset and the King 's great Favourite for inveighing against which Marriage they procured Sir Thomas Overbury first