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A17808 Annales the true and royall history of the famous empresse Elizabeth Queene of England France and Ireland &c. True faith's defendresse of diuine renowne and happy memory. Wherein all such memorable things as happened during hir blessed raigne ... are exactly described.; Annales rerum Anglicarum et Hibernicarum regnante Elizabetha. English. Book 1-3 Camden, William, 1551-1623.; Darcie, Abraham, fl. 1625.; Vaughan, Robert, engraver. 1625 (1625) STC 4497; ESTC S107372 510,711 833

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and Thomas his brother Percy Lowder Powell and Godier who all declared what they knew in hope of pardon Assoone as the Councell had produced their Confessions in the Dukes presence the Queene of Scotland and the Bishop of Rosse's Letters with the said Remembrance hee was very much deiected considering this remembrance and those Letters which through a weake credulity he supposed to bee burned he sighed and brake out into these words I Haue beene betrayed and vndone by mine owne people in fayling to distrust which is the onely sinnewe of Wisedome But he humbly besought the Councell to mediate the Queenes fauour in his behalfe promising to conceale nothing of what he knew and seriously protested that he neuer approued of any thing which was to the preiudice of the Qu. or Kingdome But on the contrary from the very bottome of his heart condemned the designe of seizing vpon the Queenes person or the Towre of London and the setting at liberty of the Queene of Scotland and that hee neuer harboured a thought so much of bringing forraigne Troupes into Great Brittaine but only to suppresse certaine of the Scots rebelling against the Queen Being this day examined vpon 50. Articles or thereabouts hee answered without dissimulation After that they penned the substance of the whole businesse in the Star-Chamber before a great Assembly of Noble-men in presence of the Lord Maior and Shiriffes of the Citie of London from thence in the Palace of London in view of all the inhabitants by G. Fleetwood Recorder of the Citie And forasmuch as by all these confessions especially by the Dukes the Bishop of Rosse was conuicted as Author of these Plots they seriously consulted what was best to bee done For as they doe ordinarily that haue such charges he conceiued that it was lawfull for him to vse any meanes for the aduancement of the affaires of his Princesse and that by the oath and inuiolable right of an Ambassadour he was not bound to acknowledge the authority of any other and relying hereupon exposed himselfe to the liberty of diuers turbulent Actions kindling of seditions and taking counsell in the night with the Earle of Southampton and afterwards inclining to the English Fugitiues in Flanders the Duke of Alua the Spaniard and the Pope about the inuasion of England They proposed hereupon vnto Lewes Dale Drury Aubrey and Iones men of sound iudgement in the Ciuill-Lawes In the first place WHether an Ambassadour mouing sedition against the Prince vnto whom he is sent may enioy the priuiledge of an Ambassadour or not and whether he be not subiect to punishment as an Enemy To which they answered that by the Common Lawe of Nations and Ciuill-Law of the Romanes such an Ambassadour was falne from all priuiledge and was subiect to punishment as an enemy WHether a Minister or Agent of a deposed Prince another being crowned in his place ought to haue the priuiledge of an Ambassadour They answered that if such a Prince be lawfully deposed his Minister cannot challenge the priuiledge of an Ambassadour forasmuch as none but absolute Princes which haue soueraigne power can constitute Ambassadours In the third place WHether a Prince being come into another Kingdome and kept in hold may haue his Agent and if this Agent ought to be accounted an Ambassadour or not They answere That a Prince may prohibit an Ambassadour to enter into his Kingdome and command him out of his Kingdome if he doth not containe himselfe within the limits prescribed to Ambassadours but in the meane time he ought to enioy the priuiledge of an Ambassadour for the authority of his Ambassie Vpon the answers of these Ciuill-Lawiers the Bishop of Rosse being called backe from the Isle of Ely and sharply reprooued the Councell denounced him not to be acknowledged an Ambassadour but to be punished as a pernicious Malefactor To which he answered THat he beeing Ambassadour to an absolute Queene vniustly deposed had according to his duty laboured for the libertie of his Princesse and for the good of both the Kingdomes that hee was come into England with ample authoritie vnder publique testimony which hee exhibited and that the sacred Rites of Ambassadours ought not by any meanes to be violated Whereupon Burghley grauely shewes him that neither the Rites of the Ambassies nor publique Letters of Credit are of validitie for Ambassadours which offend against the publique faith but are subiect to penall actions and that otherwise it should be permitted to wicked Ambassadours to attempt against the life of Princes vnpunished He on the contrary opinatiuely maintained that the authority of Ambassadours had neuer beene violated by way of Rite but onely by way of fact to vse his owne words and boldly admonisheth them not to deale with him more sharpely then the English Ambassadours had beene dealt with Throgmorton in France Randolph and Tamworth in Scotland who had apparantly excited and nourished rebellions and were acquitted vpon command to depart within a certaine time They began to presse him vpon the witnesse of some English-men he gently intreated them not to doe it because saith hee that a receiued custome doth establish it selfe for a Law An Englishman ought not to beare witnesse against a Scottishman nor a Scottishman against an Englishman After some arguings hereupon whether such custome tooke place elsewhere then vpon the Frontiers of both the Kingdomes and whether English Ambassadours had stirred Rebellion or no Rosse is carried to the Tower of London where being straitly kept within a few dayes hee briefly made answere to all the interrogatories with this caution that his answeres might not be preiudicious to any And first he excused the Queene of Scots who being prisoner and in the prime of her age seeking to escape by any meanes ELIZABETH hauing excluded all from seeing her and barred her from all hope of libertie and openly supported all her aduersaries afterwards excuseth the Duke that hee had not treated marriage with her but by the aduice of many that were of Queen ELIZABETHS Councell nor could he relinquish her although he had vnder his owne hand-writing promised to doe it forasmuch as before that promise a former promise of marriage had passed betweene them And finally excuseth himselfe that being Ambassadour and Minister could not without blame leaue the duety of his charge and be wanting to his Princesse in her afflictions and that he had propounded the seyzing of the person of Queene ELIZABETH to no other end but to try whether the Duke had a minde prepared to doe a mischieuous act and verily hee craftily extenuated the offences of the rest and would neuer discouer the names of the Nobles which offered themselues to the Dukes seruice for the seyzing of the Queenes person onely confessed that by the commandement of the Queene of Scots he consulted with the Earles of Arundel Lumley and Throgmorton and by Lumley and the Vicount of Mountague because that he was to deliuer into the hands of the English the
Inheritance should succeed to the Crowne of England And if there bee two males the elder shal succeed to the Crown of France and the yonger shal haue the hereditary Right of his Mother And if one sole male he shal come to both the Crownes and shall resyde in England euery two yeares eight moneths And if the Duke shall not attaine the Kingdome of France the children shall succeed in Appanage If he suruiue the Queene he shall haue the tuition of his children till the sonnes shall accomplish the age of eighteene yeares and the daughters fifteene But if hee die before the tuition shall be left to the Authoritie of the Parliament Hee shall not promote any stranger to any Office in England nor shall hee change any ancient Rite or Custome He shall at no time carry the Queene or her Children out of the Realme without consent of the Nobilitie If shee dye issuelesse hee shall no longer challenge any right in England nor carie or conuay any of her Iewels out of the Land he shall suffer euery one and all places of the Kingdomes to bee guarded kept by the natiue English shall not take or cause to be taken away any munition of Warre Hee shall not engage England into any foraine warres Hee shall to his power procure the Land peace with other Nations The Queene shall onely enioy the Supremacie nor shall assume any Title which may happen to fall vpon the Duke as it were holding by the custome of England The Duke by this match intendeth not to preiudice the Right of his succession to the Kingdome of France The present Contract shall bee read published and kept vnder Record in all the Courts of France and England within six moneths after the Espousals with the Authoritie of the most Christian King for the ratification of these Articles There shall bee made a Treatise Confederation and League betwixt England and France These things shal be confirmed de bona side with an Oath on the part of the King of France as well for him as for his Heires who shall deliuer Letters of the confirmation thereof with all possible expedition hee may carying assurance that the Articles in the present Treaty contained shall be kept inuiolably also A reseruation apart was added vnder the hands and seales of all the Commissioners implying thus much That ELIZABETH was not bound to the consummation of the mariage till the Duke she should haue commutually satisfied and reciprocally setled each other in certaine things betwixt themselues and concerning these points they were within six weekes by writing to certifie the King of France Before the six weekes were expired Secretarie Somer was sent into France about this businesse But the King refuseth to giue him audience vrging the instant celebration of the mariage already concluded as if there had been nothing else remaining to bee done Somer shewing vnder signe and seale that there was first a defensiue league offensiue to bee performed maintaineth the contrary To moderate the matter there was sent ouer Sir Fran Walsingham with Sir Henry Cobham Leiger Ambassador in France and Somer who deliuered this or the like speech ALthough the vulgar sort doth censure hardly of the procrastinating of this contracted mariage Queene ELIZABETH intendeth nothing more then to content her people who are instant to haue her marry that they may be secured of a succession in her children Her Maiestie being sought to by the Duke of Anjou by good right hath his loue preferred before all other Princes by reason of his vertues and resplendent race and shee protesting to beare vnto him most soueraigne loue holding off from the consummation of mariage onely vntill she could haue knowledge from her people how they stand affected thereunto holding it a point of wisdome in the meane time rather to foresee then to repent too late seeming in these respects to demurre the more by reason of the ciuill warres in France the vnfortunate Duke of Anjous vndeseruedly falling out of the Kings fauour and in England an auersion of heart in most of the best of her Subiects since the first motion of the mariage yet all this breeds nor brings no diminution of true loyall loue in her Maiesty towards the said Duke Also it was at this time out of season for the French King to vrge a present consummation knowing the Duke was newly entred into warre against the King of Spaine the which he might not suddenly abandon or relinquish without great dishonour to himselfe discommoditie to the Kingdome of France and England as also the ruine of Flanders the Spaniard there growing dayly greater and greater Moreouer in stead of continuing peace at home for which the people prayeth they must of necessitie bee brought to bloody warres the Queenes husband being so deepely engaged thereinto For these reasons from henceforth that Treaty of sudden mariage is to surcease vntill the Duke of Anjou were dis-intangled out of these warres and that interchangeable conditions of Offensiue and Defensiue Alliance bee passed betwixt the two Kingdomes of France and England And assuredly the Queene desired it aboue all things But the French would promise no other thing but to passe to couenants of mutuall defensiue and as for the offensiue would heare it no further spoken of vntill the Nuptials were celebrated Within a short space after the Duke whom the States had elected Gouernor of Flanders comes into England after he had happily raised the siege of Cambray at the charge and cost of Queene ELIZABETH who had supplyed him with great summes of money by the hands of Henry Seimor Palauicine an Italian and Bex a Frenchman The hope he relyed vpon was this that if he should not presently dispatch the mariage yet should hee so effect that by the fauour of the Queene whom the Dutch honoured as an earthly Goddesse he should bee the better welcome to the Low-Countri-men at his returne He ariued safe in England and was magnificently entertained and receiued with all royall courtesies could be expected euident testimonies of honour and loue which her Maiestie shewed apparantly insomuch that on a time on the day of the solemnization of her Coronation he being entred into amorous Discourse with her Maiestie the great loue which shee bore him drew a Ring from her finger which shee gaue him vpon certain cond●tions meant and agreed vpon betwixt them The assistants tooke that for an argument and assurance that a mariage was by reciprocall promise contracted betweene them Amongst others Aldegondy Gouernor of the City of Antwerpe dispatched messengers suddenly ouer into the Low-Countries where for great ioy at the hearing thereof both in Antwerpe and all ouer Flanders were made bonefires and their great Artillerie shot off But this bred sundry opinions among the Courtiers For as some reioyced exceedingly others were astonisht at it some quite strucke downe with sadnesse The Earle of Leicester who had laid a secret plot
from comming home to her Scotland as yet wauering and that the forces of the Spaniards might not be too farre extended in the adiacent Countries vvhich would be most commodiously seated for the transporting of warres into England for exercising of traffique as well by sea as the Riuer of Rhine And to hinder that there might not be any prouision of Nauigation caried to her enemies which besides were well prouided of strong Shipping and men of valiant spirits that if they should bee ioyned vvith the English Nauy it would be an easie thing for them to be soone Commanders of the Sea so rich and powerfull that they had long time since without any foraine aide supprest the insolencies of their proudest enemies and that they might not commit themselues to the trust and faith of the French She resolued that she was bound in Christian charitie to succour the afflicted Dutchmen being professors of the same Religion and in wisedome to prouide for the conseruation of a people which God had committed vnto her by cutting through the ruinous complots of their enemies not for any desire of glory but for the necessitie of goodnesse Whereupon shee openly tooke vpon her the defence of the Netherlands The Christian Princes admiring such a Masculine valour in a woman to haue such a magnanimous spirit as to denounce warre as it were to so potent a Monarch Insomuch that the King of Sweden speaking of her said that she had taken the Diadem from off her owne head to expose it to the doubtfull and dangerous euent of warre These were the conditions that were agreed vpon betweene Queene ELIZABETH and the Estates of Holland THe Queene would send as succours to the Vnited Prouinces 5000 foot and a thousand horse vnder a generall Commander of famous remarke and during the warre would pay the souldiers which should after the Peace were made be paid backe by the Estates that is to say in the first yeare of the Peace such summes as had beene disbursed in the first yeare of the warres and the rest in the foure yeares following In the meane time they should deliuer into her hands for assurance the towne of Flushing the Castle of Rameken in Zeland and the I le of Breil with the towne and both the Skances The Gouernors that should bee appointed should not haue any command ouer the Inhabitants but onely of their Garison which should pay the Tributes and Imposts as well as the inhabitants Those places should after the money were repayed bee deliuered backe not to the Spaniard but the Estates The Gouernors and two other English which the Queen would name should be admitted into the Councell of the Estates and the Estates should not entertaine any League without the Queenes aduice nor she the Estates not acquainted therewith Ships for their common defence in equall number and at a common expence should be set forth vnder the command of the Admirall of England The Ports of either should he freely open to either With other conditions which were printed and exposed to all mens view For the memoriall of this alliance the Zealanders triumphing with ioy caused new money to be coyned bearing vpon one side the Armes of Zealand which is a Lyon floating vpon the waues with this inscription Luctor emergo Ie comba et me sauue J fight and I saue my selfe On the other side the Armes of the townes of Zealand with this Authore Deo fauente Regina God Author the Queene fauourable The Queene by a booke set forth gaue all to vnderstand that in times past Leagues and Societies were contracted betweene the Kings of England and the Princes of the Netherlands for the mutuall faith and defence one of another She remonstrateth the barbarous cruelty of the Spaniard against the miserable Netherlanders and the mischieuous complots which they had wrought against her selfe that had with much labour sought a Peace and had done this to keepe the Dutch from reuolting Neither did shee propose any other thing to her selfe in aiding of them then that the Dutch might inioy peaceably their former liberty her subiects safety and either Nation a secure commerce and traffique And to prouide that warre should not assaile her at home and set the Spaniard to worke abroad She set forth a Nauy to the West Indies vnder the command of Sir Francis Drake and Christopher Carlile of one and twenty sayle in which besides Saylors were 2300 voluntary souldiers which surprized in the I le of Saint Iames neere to Cap-Verd the towne of Saint Iames which gaue name to the Iland where they celebrated with the thunder of the Cannon the Coronation day of Queene ELIZABETH which was vpon the fourteenth of Nouember and pillaging the town they found great store of Meale Wine and Oyle but no money at all The fourteenth day after they set sayle and many which kept their quarters guard in the open aire and slept vpon the ground were taken with grieuous sicknesse called Calentura whereof they dyed a disease very familiar in ●hat Iland and dangerous to strangers which sleepe in the open fields The first of Ianuary they ariued at Hispaniola where the souldiers being landed in a secure place by the direction of a Spaniard whom they had taken and kept to that purpose they marched in order against the towne and h●uing repulst a hundred and fifty Spanish horsemen which opposed their passage and putting to flight certaine Musketiers which were placed in Ambush they entered pell-mell into the towne with them by the two westerne gates and all the inhabitants being strucke with feare and terrour fled out at the North gate of the said City The English brought their troops into the Market-place neere to the great Temple and because they were not in number sufficient to man the towne they fortified it with rampars of earth after that they seized vpon other conuenient places So hauing the whole towne in their possession and command they remained a moneth there And seeing the inhabitants offered but a small summe of money to redeeme their towne they began first to set fire vpon the suburbs and after vpon the fairest house in the towne vntill the inhabitants had redeemed their towne with 25000 Crowns of gold which with much paine they gathered They found there no great store of pillage excepting some pieces of Artillery with Corne and Sugar for they vsed there nought but Copper money and glasse vessels with some made of earth which were brought out of the East India Amongst other things in the towne Court were found the Armes of the King of Spaine with the world vnder placed from whence a horse with his foure-feet rampant was figured leaping out with this inscription Non sufficit orbis The world doth not suffice Whereat some scoffing tooke it for an argument of the infinite auarice and ambition of the Spaniard as neuer satisfied From thence sayling vp into the Continent of America
fiue miles from Cartagena they left their ships and vnder the conduct of Carlile they in the silence of the night being ranged in order of battell marched alongst the shore whilest Drake with his armed Shallops in vaine assailed the Port of the towne which was fortified with a rampire and a chaine extended in length To Carlile a troope of horse shewed themselues but straight retired he pursued them till hee came to a narrow passage fortified with a stone wall betwixt the inward Hauen of the Port of the Ocean which was so straight that scarce a Cart could passe It was defended with Barracadoes full of stones and fiue great Cannon wherwith they often discharged vpon the front of his companies yet without effect whilest Carlile by the benefit of the darknesse being politick in auoiding dangers taking opportunitie by the ebbing of the Ocean drew his men down lower by the sands iust to the entrance which they couragiously forced notwithstanding two great Ships from the inward Hauen of the Port which caried eleuen great pieces and three hundred Musquetiers furiously thundered against their flanke This done they easily gained the Barricadoes which were placed at the entrance of euery street and chaced the Spaniards and Indians which cast poysoned darts amongst them Being thus Masters of the towne they made sixe weekes aboade there and receiued for the ransome of the towne 110000 Crownes which were paid presently downe and distributed man by man to the Mariners and Souldiers and especially to the neediest But the pillage was little for the Inhabitants being forewarned by them of Hispaniola had remoued all their most precious and richest things in to farre distant places The disease called Calentura still remaining amongst them and much diminishing their numbers they were constrained to leaue off their designe of surprising Nombre de Dios and make sayle for their returne by the Cape of the I le Cuba which is called Saint Anthony where they tooke in fresh water out of raine pits Then sayling along the coast of Florida they seized vpon two townes Saint Anthony and Saint Helena which were abandoned by the Spanish Garisons and burned them and being caried further vpon a ragged and rocky coast they found the English in the Plantation of Virginia so called in the honour of ELIZABETH the Virgin Queene which Sir Walter Raleigh whose worth and vertues purchased him the honour to be one of the Queenes chiefest fauourites by his neuer enough praised labours in the discouerie of remote Countries and promulgation of the glory of the English Nauy had placed there as Colony Drake offered to Ralph Lan President there all offices of humanity two ships with prouision and some men if they thought good to remaine there and prosecute what they had begun if not to transport them for England But whilest prouision was prepared for these ships there arose a violent storm and extraordinary furious tempest which seuered and dispersed the whole Nauy in such sort that it could not be collected together againe vntill they all ariued in England Insomuch that Lan and the rest that were with him being oppressed with penury and much diminished in their number they all with one voice requested Drake to giue them passage for their Country which he willingly agreed to These were the first that I know of that brought at their returne into England that Indian Plant called Tobacco or Nicotiana which they vsed being instructed by the Indians against crudities of the Stomack And certes since that time it is growne so frequent in vse and of such price that many nay the most part with an insatiable desire doe take of it drawing into their mouth the smoke thereof which is of a strong sent through a Pipe made of earth and venting of it againe through their nose some for wantonnesse or rather fashion sake and other for healths sake insomuch that Tobacco shops are set vp in greater number then either Alehouses or Tauernes And as one said but falsely the bodies of such Englishmen as are so much delighted with this plant did seeme to degenerate into the nature of the Sauages because they were caried away with the selfe-same thing beleeuing to obtaine and conserue their health by the selfe-same meanes as the barbarians did In this voyage perished seuen hundred men and almost all of that disease called Calentura The pillage was esteemed to be worth 60000 pounds of English money besides two hundred and forty great pieces of artillery as well Brasse as Iron which were taken from the Enemies Whilest these things thus passed in America vnder the torride Zone Iohn Dauis made search vnder the frigide Zone for a way to the East India by the vpper part of America with two ships at the expences of William Sanderson a man who by setting forth Globes hath well deserued in the studies of Geography and of other inhabitants of London He tooke his course towards the North and being fiue hundred miles from the Cape of Not in Ireland he discouered the Coasts of Greeneland whose Cliffes being white by reason of the snow which couered them might easily afarre off be discerned so round begirt with Ice as with a forewall for the space of two miles from the shore that it was inaccessible The course of this coast hee followed which bent first towards the West and then Northward to 64 degrees in Latitude from thence passing the Ice his course brought him amongst certaine greene flourishing Ilands where he found the Inhabitants of a middle stature little eyes without beards and of milder disposition then the most part of Northerne people From whence sayling to 66 Degrees in Latitude he encountred a shore which discouered it selfe by little and little towards the West with a sea of equall largenesse into which being entred forty miles and being full of hopes hee turned sayle homeward vpon the end of August The following yeare hee entred fourescore miles into these Straights where hee obserued this sea to be on all sides well stored with Ilands and in his returne found it full of fish The third time he set forth with two ships appointed for fishing and a third for the discouerie of passages in which hauing sailed to 83 degrees into this Sea and discouering it to bee forty miles in breadth hee returned During this an Edict was published in England to represse the auarice of some priuate persons that had conuerted the fertilest fields and pastures into grounds to sow Woad in for the vse of Dyers not without much losse to the Cloath-workers and Husbandmen which are commonly fed with Milke Cheese and such like meats Whereupon it was forbidden to sow that hearbe within eight miles of any of the Kings houses and foure miles of Cities market-Market-townes and of other places wheresoeuer Drapery is vsed But to the intent that English Cloathes might be sold to greater gaines it was permitted to the Earle of Warwicke
at supper in a Tauerne After they had supped he riseth from the table leauing his Cloake and Rapier behind him as if he had gone to pay the shot taking the benefit of the darke night slipt away to Westminster where hee changed his cloathes with Gage which Gage soone after put off in Charnocks Chamber and put on his being so arrayed they went to saue them in Saint Iohns Wood neare the Citie vvhere Barnwell and Dun came to them The meane while they vvere proclaimed traytors thorow the vvhole countrie They lurked in woods and by wayes after the French Ambassador had refused to lend them money and Tichbourne horses Babington cut his head-haires and because he vvas faire of complexion they besmeared his face vvith the huskes of greene Wal-nuts Hunger at the last inforced them to retyre themselues into the houses of the Bellamis neare Harrow-hill a people zealously affected to the Romane religion which hid them in barnes and put them in Rusticke apparell and relieued them with meat But being found ten dayes after they vvere conueyed from thence to London and the Citizens to expresse their great ioy rung Bels made bonefires and sung Psalmes which the Queene much commended and gaue the City thankes The other Conspirators vvere taken presently after the most of them in the Suburbs Salisbury in Cheshire his horse being shot through by those vvhich pursued him and Trauers with him after they had swom ouer the Riuer Weauer and Iones in Wales who not vnacquainted with the treason had lodged them in his house after he had heard them proclaimed Traitors and had changed Cloakes with Salisbury and his man who vvas a Priest which fled on horsebacke Many dayes were spent in the examination of these which bewrayed one another not concealing any thing of the knowne truth Now whilst these things past thus the Queene of Scots and her seruants were by Sir Aimé Poulet kept with watch and ward that she might not heare thereof although it were knowne all the Land thorow But so soone as they were all taken Sir Tho Gorge vvas sent to aduertize her briefely hereof which he did purposely shee not dreaming of any such matter but was now mounted on horsebacke to goe hunt and vnder a show of honour is conducted vp and down from one Noble mans house to another not suffering her to returne home In the meane time Sir Iohn Manners Ed. Aston Ri Bagot and Wi Waade who knew not any thing of this businesse hauing beene lately sent into this Countrey receiued Letters and Commission from the Queen to execute the same to separate Naune Curle and the rest of her seruants to be kept safe and seueral from comming to haue any communication with her or shee with them And breaking open the doores of her Closet sent away to the Court all her Desks or Coffers wherein were any Letters vnder her owne hand and Seale Then Poulet as it was commanded him seized vpon all her money that she might haue no meanes to bribe any promising to restore it to her againe The Coffers being opened before Queen ELIZABETH diuers Letters were found written to her by Strangers copies of such as she had sent to sundry notes memorials and secret Characters ●o the number of threescore more or lesse with diuers amorous Letters and Letters of complement from some great men of England ELIZABETH notwithstanding passed all ouer in silence vsing her old Motto Video Taceoque J see and say nothing But as they had knowledge of these things those who before had fauoured the Queene of Scots from thenceforth were her aduersaries After this Giffard hauing first playd his part in this Tragedie was sent into France as if he had beene banished but before he went he left with the Ambassador of France an indented Paper willing him not to deliuer the Queene of Scots her Letters nor those of the Fugitiues to any but him that should show him a Paper sutable to that the which he left secretly with Walsingham Hee returning into France within a few moneths after being committed to prison for some impuritie of life and suspected of these matters ended his dayes miserably confessing that the most of that which hee had said was true as was apparant by that which was found in his Deske The thirteenth day of September seuen of the Conspirators were arraigned vvho confessed themselues guilty and vvere condemned of High treason The second day after the other seuen was likewise called to the barre who pleading not guilty put themselues as the manner is to be tryed by God and the Countrey and vvere by their owne confessions found guilty and condemned Onely Polley though he were guilty of all saying hee had something to speake to Sir Fran Walsingham was not brought forth Vpon the 20 day of the moneth the first seuen were hanged on a Gibbet a seaffold being set vp for that purpose in S. Gyles fields where they had commonly vsed to meet They were no sooner hanged but presently cut downe their priuy members cut off their bowels ript vp and quartered they yet aliue and looking about them which was not without some note of cruelty The first was Ballard the Arch-traytor after he had asked God and the Queene forgiuenesse if euer he had offended her Then Babington who neuer seemed dismayed at Ballards execution whilest the other turning aside prayed on their knees confessed his faults ingenuously and being cut downe from the gallowes and lying vpon the blocke to be quartered cryed aloud in Latine Parce mihi Domine Iesu Sauage the Rope being crackt fell from the Gibber and being presently snatcht vp by the executioner had his members cut off and was bowelled aliue Barnwell excused his crime out of a pretext of conscience and Religion T●●hbourne most penitently confessing his offence was much pitied of the beholders so also was Tilney a man of modest demeanor of comely personage Abington of a furious and turbulent spirit threatneth that shortly there should bee no little blood-shed through England The next day the other seuen being drawne to the same place suffered the same punishment But with lesse seueritie by the Queenes commandement who hated the first dayes cruelty after she heard it ●or they hung till they were dead and then were taken downe bowelled and quartered Salisbury was the first who dyed very penitently exhorting Catholikes neuer to attempt the restoring of Religion by force of Armes Dunne who vvas next spoke to the same effect Next was Iones vvho protested hee had diuers times disswaded Salisbury from the enterprize nor did euer approue the bringing in of foraine inuasion Charnock and Trauers were earnest in prayer commending themselues to God and to the Saints Gage acknowledgeth the bountifull fauours of her Maiestie towards his father and his owne detestable ingratitude by his treachery Hierome Bellamie who had concealed Babington after hee was proclaimed Traytor confused and
forced to yeeld And indeed the States hauing truely reserued that Soueraigne degree and power which they at first had giuen him by words would not furnish him with a great and sufficient Army and hee dained not to subiect himselfe to particulars of small ranke and note who vnder the name of States striued to domineere ouer him notwithstanding that their Gouernour had the same authority that Charles the Fifth had ouer his Commanders of the Low-Countries From thence deriued open hatred on both sides the which discouered themselues yet apparantly after that he had mentioned to agree vpon with Spaine for their eares abhorr'd and their hearts detested the very name of peace as preiudiciall and obnoctious to their affaires Euen as then he perceiued his authority to diminish hee had recourse to fraudulous deceit and resolued to breede factions with the people there and to make himselfe Master of the City of Leyden with other Townes But being frustrated of his hope of the losse of some with his men to the great discontentment that this action prouoked Queene ELIZABETH sending for him he gaue ouer the gouernement and free administration of the States of the Vnited Prouinces and was derided and laughed at of many but most by those who enuied him hauing forsaken the Title of his Excellencie which neuer any English-man had taken vpon him before him Leicester vpon his departure for England distributed for a perpectuall memory of his person to such as were of his faction a Medaille or pieces of Gold which he had caused to be coyned on the one side there was his picture on the other a Flocke with some lost Sheepe a Dogge who going from them turned backe his head to looke on them as if it were for pitty with this Inscription Ie quite malgre moy J forsake to my griefe And neere it this Non point le troupeau mais les ingras Not the Flocke but the vngratefull And questionlesse hee intended to inuade the Netherland Dominions for himselfe but those Nations haue not only kept by their care and diligence the liberty which they hold by their Ancestors wholly to themselues against the Spaniards might who warre as well with their art and deceits as with their goods as likewise against the French and English by craftinesse policy yea against the Prince of Orange himselfe who acted the Foxes part but also they haue it maruellously increased by the fauour of their neighbouring friend and which is more worthy admiration is that whereas other countries are ruinated by the war these vnited Prouinces are inriched thereby The States established in his roome for Gouernour of the vnited and confederate Prouinces Prince Maurice of Nassau then about twenty yeeres of age son to the Prince of Orange by his Wife the Lady Anne de Saxe Daughter to that Heroick Elector Maurice and Queene ELIZABETH established in Leicesters stead Peregrine Bartue Lord Willoughby of Eresby Generall of the English auxiliary Forces which then were in the Low-Countries whom those of Leicesters faction much troubled for the Garrisons of Geertruiden-Berg Worcom Nerden Heusden aboue all that of Middlebourgh being at the English deuotion excited troubles vnder pretext that they had sworne loyalty and obedience to the Queene And Sir William Russell Gouernour of Flushing hauing drawne to his side the inhabitants of the Townes of Emuid and of Campe were mistrusted by the Estates to haue a determination to reduce the whole Iland of Zeland vnder the English and this suspition was increased the more by the comming of Englands Lord High Admirall out of England who though hee much laboured to pacifie these troubles the States neuerthelesse possest with feare dissembled not their mistrustings but witnessed it both openly to the World by certaine pieces of Siluer which ingeniously they caused to be coyned and stamped with the figure of two earthen Pots swimming vpon the Sea according to the ancient Apologue with this Inscription Si nous nous hurtons nous nous casserons Jf wee knocke one at another wee shall be broken And priuately by Letters which they wrote to the Queene who being most carefull of them and yet in nothing forgetfull of her selfe could prudently fore-see those infinite dangers then apparant the Spanish Fleete being then imminent commanded the Lord Willoughby to bring into submission such English as excited or stirred vp troubles to be punished by the States which hee most happily performed with the Prince Maurice of Nassau Leicester being then back and quickly finding out that the Baron of Buckhurst and others prepared themselues to accuse him to haue ill administrated the affaires of Holland and that therefore he ought to come into iudgement before the Councell Table wisely with-drew himselfe priuately to the Queen and prostrating himselfe humbly at her feet beseeched her Maiestie to testifie and speake for him coniuring her not to receiue ignominiously him whom she had sent magnificently neither to bury liuing and seeing him whom shee had raised from the dust He by these sweet and eloquent speeches calmed so her discontents that moderating the anger of her wrath shee receiued him into her fauour as before Therefore being called in question and brought before the Councell Table he whereas he should haue appeared in an humble manner according to the custome of others tooke his place among the Lords of her Maiesties Priuy-Councell and as the Clerke had begun to reade the chiefe Articles of his accusation interrupted him complayning they had done him wrong to haue restrained those publike instructions granted vnto him to priuate ones and in appealing to the Queenes iudgement auoyded and annihilated all accusations whereby his aduersaries were much indignated but they broke their anger in silence In this yeere in the moneth of February died Henry Lord Neuill Baron of Abergauenny grand-child of Edward Neuill who in King HENRY the Sixth's Reigne enioyed the title of Baron of Abergauenny by his wife who was onely Daughter Heire to R. Lord Beauchamp Earle of Wigorn and Baron of Abergauenny by whose right the Daughter and Heire of this Henry Lord Neuill challenging the title and honour of this ancient Barony had a memorable suit in Law about it with Edward Neuill the next Heire-male to the said Lordship to whom the Castell of Abergauenny was legacied by Testament and since the honour and title of the same Barony was conferred and confirmed vnto him by Act of Parliament where hee tooke place among the Peeres of that High Court as the first Baron of England There died also in the same yeere and moneth foure Noble persons both illustrious and famous the first was the Lady Anne Stanhop Duchesse of Somerset about ninetie yeeres of age wife to Edward Seymor late Duke of Somerset and Protector of England This Duchesse by meere enuy and hate she bore to the Lady Katherine Parr Queene of England and Dowager of King HENRY the Eighth excited diuers tragedies in
ANNALES The True and Royall History of the famous Empresse Elizabeth Queene of ENGLAND FRANCE and IRELAND c. True faiths defendresse of Diuine renowne and happy Memory Wherein all such memorable things as happened during hir blessed raigne with such acts and Treaties as past betwixt hir Matie and SCOTLAND FRANCE SPAINE ITALY GERMANY POLAND SWEDEN DENMARK RUSSIA and the NETHERLANDS are exactly described LONDON printed for Beniamin Fisher and are to be sould at the Talbott in Pater Noster Rowe 1625 The explication of this Bookes FRONTISPICE The Pillers deckt with Arms Palms Laurell bows Supporting the Rare PHOENIX to you shows The Nobles on whose loyall prudent brest The Phoenix-Queene ELIZA'S peace did rest Whose Wisedomes pillars did vphold her Crowne As columnes on which rested her renowne Their stable valour did support this land And all her proud insulting foes withstand For whose exploits it pleasd her Maiesty To dub some Knights of dreadlesse chiualry Whom she not only did to Knighthood rayse But of this kingdome made them props and stayes And those whose merits added to their worth Renowned Glory Honour to their birth In whose true worthy acts she most delighted She with the Order of the Garter knighted Some she restor'd in their Ancestors place Made viscount Bindon one of Noble Ra●e● Some Earles some Barons all she did restore Or did create as they had won before Other shee summon'd by her wisedome's choyce To Parliament as Peeres to have there voyce Whose prudence and whose valors vnder God Prou'd Englands peace to Spaine a heauy rod. The fired townes which on each side are plac't Do memorize how Spaine was once disgract When that braue Essex Englands Generall With Nottingham that famous Admirall Their Citie Cadiz did with force surprise ●o crowne their countrey with their victories And Cumberland whose fame no Age can blot ●ooke Por●arico with his Thundring shot That Spanish towne yet his victorious force ●lew the resisting pardn'd with remorse Those that with bended knees did him entreat He would not them nor theirs of life defeat Now vnderneath DRAKES famous ship is show● Whose bright renown swift Honors trump hath blow How he therein did circuit earth 's whole frame And in his voyage added to his fame The glory of a prize won through his paine The CACAFOGVE Royall Ship of Spaine At the two corners two great Spanish Fleets Your gazing eyes with admiration greets One is consum'd by vnquench't flames of fire The other is ore'whelm'd through NEPTVNE'S ir● Which moralizeth our good God doth bend His wrath gainst those that Albions ill inten● Which wrath did fall most mercilesse on Spaine And euer will to their disgrace remaine One thousand doth fiue hundred eighty seuen Their ambitions with infamy make euen The Port of Gilbaltars straights sure can tell How that a Spanish Fleet by DRAKE there fe● The very seas will witnesse that with foure Of royall Ships he burnt two hundred more If you enquire from whence those Royals came From Englands shore Spaines fury for to tame To end the Fleet of Eighty-eight doth show England was ayded in that ouerthrow Giuen to Spaine by God whose potent hand Preseru●d ELIZA'S glory and her land Gainst those that owe true Religion spight Both seas and earth for Albions cause will fight Not to the seas let 's bend but to that power Which must preserue vs at the dreadfull houre And as 't is meet so let vs prostrate fall Vnto our Hope our Ayde our Generall IH̄S Here reade the dayes when Britanns ground VVith blessings all was compast round PER TAL VARIAR SON QVY ✚ TO THE MOST August most Sacred and most excellent Maiesty of IAMES THE FIRST Emperour of Great Britanne king of France Ireland and Virginia defendor of the Faith The Translator of these ANNALLS wisheth to His Imperiall Maiestie blessednesse perpetuall health with all happinesse prosperitie and felicitie in both worlds THE FRENCH Epistle dedicatory to His sacred Majesty of Great Britanne EXcellent monarch heere is the first-borne of a Labour as vnhoped for as the occasion is extraordinarie which prostrates it selfe with all humilitie at the feete of your Maiestie to doe you an Homage of his Birth and in paying vnto you his first duetie craues leaue to wander the World and visit his friends In these vnhappy times which lately made France my countrey the sad obiect of pitie and the mournfull subiect of good peoples sorrowes on a day sitting vpon the shores of Babylons gulph aspecting with watty eyes the deplorable estate of Christs true Church which in the throng of these miseries was sore wounded with iniuries appearing as if she● had attained the decrepit age of a dying life which breath 's forth her last gaspe And as I expressed by my teares the dolor of her afflictions and by my sighes the desires of her deliuerance my eyes imitating in their glances the wishes of my soule sought for the place where the great god Pan vsed to feed and keepe his flockes at noone day I discouered a far off some sparkes of the Sunne of Iustice which in this happy country of Goshen shines perpetually whilest an eternal night couers Egypt with the gloomie clouds of darkenesse Thither suddenly I directed my Vowes which God prospered so happily by his prouidence that after many dangers tedious and toylsome iournies I at length arriued here where I found A PEACEABLE KING in whom is brightly discerned an harmonious vnity of all christian roial vertues the Empire of that great Empress of vertue Piety from whence all others deriue the admirable Oeconomy of Charity conducted with Prudence educated by Experience and that experience drawn from diuers examples of precedent ages proofs of this present which produceth in him all kindes of actions both iust and necessary by which he freely giueth himselfe to the Church and Common-wealth for pledge and caution of their peace and prosperity AN HAPPY NATION which vnder the fauourable Scepter of such a Prince in whom the sacred fountaine of the most exquisite graces of heauen abounding with all sorts of prosperity hath aboue others the honour to settle the Church of Christ and with her Piety and Iustice her constant followers whom the benigne aspect of heauen causeth to flourish with ioy and perfect peace whilest a cruell Warre spoiles and ransackes both neighbouring countries and remoter parts with vnheard-of torments and excessiue sorrowes God who calls himselfe the Prince of Peace stiles himselfe also the King of Warre to shew that he rules all worldly affaires with his incomprehensible eye of prouidence as well as with his inuincible hands of all-powerfulnesse But to make plaine to all mens vnderstandings how farre God is against Warres Strifes and Contentions and on the contrary how much he loues Peace and Vnitie it is said Blessed be the Peaceable because they shall be thereby knowne to be the elect of Christ and heyres of heauen Your Maiesty great Monarch on whose head God as his Lieutenant
here on earth hath placed three Crownes beares both the warlike Sword of Ma●s and the peaceable Oliue branch of Minerua as did that Pallas whom the Athenians took for their titulary goddesse because she presided in peace as well as in warre But what is the expedition of Warre to the subduing vnder his lawes by the sweetnesse of Peace the passions of men to bring them to reason and to settle them in a firme and assured rest what to vanquish by force a people to the conquering of whole nations hearts by loue to lose them in stead of gayning them The multitude wondring at the Sonne of God who calm'd the greatest tempest cryed out What is he whom both Seas and Windes do obey Euen so happy King when I saw at my landing so many exquisite effects of your rare wisedome the peace happinesse of your subiects with the tranquillitie blessednesse of your diuine soule I could not but likewise exclaime Ah! what is this IVST MASTER and prudent King whose admirable spirit workes so many wonders God gouernes from the highest place of heauen the earth and from the lowest place of it the heauens because his prouidence and almighty power being infinite fills all places yet vnlimited For though by his omni-presence hee be euery where yet he is included no where Your Maiestie who by the excellent and harmonious order of your wise dispensation doe rule with a melodious delightfull harmonie with One of your Kingdome all the Three from the farthest place of Great Brittanne all Great Brittanne presiding by your power in all places disposing by your wisedome all things neere and farre and perfecting them by your iustice you cause all the dependences of your essence to be found in all places and all things to be but one and the same thing each thing to be as all things And euen as to the humane body that excellent part of the brain which the Anatomists call the admirable lines or traces by their serpentine courses and turnings exquisitely folded and vnited together whose number is no lesse infinite than the workmanship thereof most rare doth so excellently refine the vital spirits that they are sent thither from the heart which makes them moueable and serue as instruments of Conception of Iudgement and Memory Your Maiestie doth in like maner receiue in your Spirit which is the most admirable and exquisite peece of that great imperiall body of which your Maiestie is the head the aduises and counsailes the requests and demonstrances which from the heart of your estate as the vitall spirits of it are sent to you for to passe them thorow that labyrinth of Rarity your iudgement where you refine them so with the diuers considerations of your prudency that they proue necessary instruments of peace the tranquillitie and prosperitie of all your subiects The entrance or beginning of a raigne is most commonly thornie and difficulty yea dangerous and painefull not onely full of cares but also tedious and troublesome so that it had beene better for some kings to haue neuer raigned or else to haue ended their dayes at their beginning This moued the Philosopher Solon to sing these verses to Mydas king of Phrygia at the entrance of his Cities Le puissant Dieu de tout Souuerain Maistre Ne scauroit mieux les hommes secourir Qu'entre mortels ne les laisser point naistre Ouestans nez les faire tost mourir But your Maiestie great King who by the speciall grace of God and the prudence wherewith he hath endued you farre aboue all other Princes haue found the entrance of your raign spacious delightfull and secure and being grounded vpon the protection enuironed with the blessings conducted by the prouidence of that Soueraigne dispenser of Scepters and Crownes you haue hitherto raigned to the admiration of all the world PVISSANT AND MAGNIFICENT RICH AND CONTENT HAPPY AND GLORIOVS and in all perfect and accomplisht PVISSANT AND MAGNIFICENT indeede sith that with full power and authoritie you raigne ouer so many puissant Nations which God hath subiected to your Maiestie vnder the homage and duety which you daily pay vnto him as to the onely soueraigne King of kings RICH AND CONTENT in possessing them peaceably without opposition extracting pleasure of all that can be contributed for the glory of God which you seeke for your owne contentment HAPPY AND GLORIOVS also sith that by those testimonies of loue which God giues you and the thankesgiuing which your Maiesty yeeldeth him you haue vpon all occasions free accesse to his incomprehensible Maiesty a familiar entertainment with his infinite goodnesse Heauen being alwayes open to your contemplations and whatsoeuer your Maiesty can thinke most exquisite rare on earth fauourable to your wishes is all bent for your felicitie Oh how happy is your sacred Maiestie what mortall can apprehend it how glorious and who is he that can expresse it But behold this is the chief point ouer which my considerations cannot pass without staying yet rest they neuer so little they enter as it were into a labyrinth for a while Gods graces and blessings fall most commonly into vngratefull hands who dispence thereof the more niggardly by how much they receiue them aboundantly and the most part of men erre so farre that in stead of worshipping in them the soueraigne power and prouidence of God they striue to excell him nay it lies meerly in their owne vnpowerfulnesse that they doe not ouerthrow his incomprehensible Empire and Throne of glory By meanes whereof it falls out that it ofttimes chances to them as to those subalternal Deities who for putting themselues in Iupiters bedde were by a boysterous winde suddenly metamorphosed into strange shapes But your Highnesse mighty king makes vse of it as fire of the perfume you returne those blessings to heauen againe through your praises and thanksgiuing you disperse them about you by your royall liberality for whosoeuer hath the honour to approach neere your Diuinity is enlightned with the beames of your diuine vertues And as Salomon did build and with the stones of mountaines and Cedars of Libanus erect Altars to God so you make therof instruments and materialls to prop the house of God Soueraigne authority vpon the people meetes oftentimes with violent hearts which makes him not vnlike the daily motion of the Sunne so swift that it is terrible and so terrible that it would consume away if it should last long but your Maiesty knowes well how to temper your Authoritie by your Iustice likewise your will by your prudence insomuch that this first course is moderated by the second which is yearely and runneth from West to East by the oblique Zodiaque circle by this sweet temperate and moderate course you order the seasons in your Monarchy you cause a delightsome Spring that produceth diuersity of flowers in aboundance a rich and pleasant Summer which yeelds all kinde of fruites plentifully by which you reward paines and labours
meanes she adorned her tongue with pure words and instructed her mind with the best documents and good learning not for pompe or ostentation but to recreate her life and frame her selfe to vertue that among the learned Princes of her time shee was held Miraculous But the death of EDVVARD interrupted the studies of the Liberall Arts For scarce was he expired but Dudley Duke of Northumberland who earnestly coueted the Kingdome for Iane Gray to whom he had affianced his Sonne vsed some persons to perswade her to quit the right which shee had to the Kingdome for a certaine summe of money and great possessions in Land She modestly answered that they ought first doe well to agree with Mary her elder Sister because that during her life she could pretend no right to it Anon after by the publike voice of a Cryer Iane Gray HENRY the Eighth's Neece by his second Sisters Daughter was proclaimed Queene of England the cause thereof being sought out was found to bee that in regard of a Lawe by Act of Parliament which had neuer been duely abrogated MARIE and ELIZABETH had beene declared illegitimate although that by the same Lawe the King their Father had declared that after EDVVARD the Sixth if Issue fayled that they should succeede him in order and that by the Ciuill-Law of England such Sisters could not hereditarily succeede EDVVARD because they were not Cousin Germanes but as our learned in the Law say of the halfe Blood They adde likewise that HENRY the Eighth had by his last will nominated Iane Gray Moreouer it was shewed what danger there were if MARIE and ELIZABETH should marrie stranger Princes which would re-establish the Popes authority which was reiected out of the Kingdome And to that purpose they produce Letters Patents that EDVVARD the Sixth a little before his death had perfected and many of the Peeres Bishops Iudges and others by their signes in writing had fortified neuerthelesse the good-will that the Lords and the Commons bore to the Daughters of HENRIE the Eighth within twentie dayes had driuen away this storme and MARY proclaimed Queene through all parts of England who comming toward the Citie of London with an Armie ELIZABETH not to bee wanting her Sisters cause and hers being yet disquieted went accompanied with fiue hundred Horse to meet her vpon the way In the first Assembly of the Parliament that MARY caused to bee holden what things soeuer had beene decreed against the marriage betweene Qu. Katharine and HENRY the Eighth were abrogated and it was iudged lawfull by the Diuine Law and at all times and at all places auaileable for these reasons Because it had bin contracted by the consent of both their Parents of most Illustrious Princes of most graue Personages as well of England as Spaine and with a graue and constant deliberation of the learnedest men of Christendome and consummated by the procreation of Children The same religious Seruice and administration of the Sacraments which were in vse at the decease of HENRY the Eighth are re-established notwithstanding without any mention of acknowledging the Popes authority which thing put the Queene and Cardinall Pole into great trouble and vnquietnesse who thinke that for matter of the marriage consent of Parents and the iudgement of the wise did but onely depend vpon the Dispensation of Pope Iulius the second and were very angry that the vse of the Sacraments were permitted to those who were not as yet well and duely receiued into the Church without the authoritie of the Pope But the States of the Kingdome and MARY bethought her selfe of it feared to receiue and acknowledge the Popes authority which they had already shaken off neither could they suffer that the Queene should quit the Title of Soueraigne head of the Church of England to which the most part of them Prelates Peeres and Common-people had sworne to HENRY the Eighth his heires and successors and there were many of them that had got their riches from those of the Church But tooke it greatly to heart to forsake him perswading herselfe that all the right that she had to the Kingdome of England was vpholden by no other meanes then by the power of the Pope who gaue sentence of her side after her Father had declared her illegitimate Verily many at that time had the Popes power in such hatred and a strangers yoke that within tenne dayes after that MARY was married to Phillip King of Spaine Tho. Wyat and many others of Kent brake out into rebellion perswading themselues that this marriage was made to no other end but the more rigorously to presse them downe vnder the Romane yoke by the strength of Spaine and dispatch ELIZABETH out of the way who was next heire to the Kingdome of England Charles the fifth Emperour knowing what spirits were in England and that Cardinall Pole was going with power of Legate from the Pope cast a blocke in the way not without the Queenes counsell lest he should trouble businesse not as yet established that he should not come into England till fifteene moneths were expired when the third Parliament was ended and the marriage of MARY and Philip should be celebrated by the Dispensation of Pope Iulius the third because they were allied in the third degree and that the Emperour Charles himselfe had heretofore contracted to marry her being then vnder age for time to come At last being dismissed from the Emperour he came into England by demands and obtestations propounded orders that the lawes against Heretikes might be re-established all Lawes published against the Sea of Rome since the twentieth yeere of Henrie the eighth abolished and the whole body of the Kingdome reconciled to the Church of Rome The which with great difficulty he obtained yet not before the goods taken from the Monasteries Colledges Bishops c. by Henry the eighth and Edward the sixth were confirmed vpon like Couenant to the Queene and the possessors lest the Kingdome should be disquieted Foorthwith hereupon he absolued both the Clergie and people of the crime of Schisme and Pope Iulius the third himselfe with great ioy celebrated a solemne Masse at Rome ordained Prayers published a Iubile and granted a plenarie Indulgence to all who had giuen God thankes for the revnion of the Kingdome of England Then is sent vnto him Anthony Viscount Montaigue Thomas Thurlbe Bishop of Ely and Edward Carne to giue thankes for the pardon which he had granted for the Schismes and in the name of the King the Queene and the Kingdome and that due submission and obedience should be performed to the Pope and See of Rome Iulius then being deceased Paulus 4. gaue them audience and publike conference in the Apostolike Palace and in the Hall of Kings receiued their obedience approued the pardon and absolution granted by Cardinall Pole And for the well deseruing of Mary and Philip he out of the fulnesse of his power erected for euer Ireland to be a Kingdome and adorned
Towne next after they make Trenches and raise Mounts from which they battered no lesse the Towne then the Ships The French make many Sallies out with more courage than strength and shewe many proofes of Magnanimity Amongst others vpon the fifteenth day of Aprill they tooke the Trenches nayled three of the greatest Cannons tooke and led away prisoner M. Berclé But I. Croft and C. Vaghan driue them backe as fast into the Towne and it was not done without losse of men Arthur Gray sonne to the Lord Baron Gray who had the principall command in the Campe was shot into the shoulder After that they bring the Campe neerer to the Towne because the Battery was so farre off that the Bullets for the most part fell without effect and a short time after part of the Towne and a great quantity of Corne was burned by casuall fire which was much encreased by the English who placed on that side their biggest Cānons and being in the meane time entred into the Ditch tooke the height of the Wall and the sixth of May while the English and the Scots were together of accord hauing placed the Ladders on all sides gaue three powerful alssaults to gaine the Wall but because they were too short and the waters higher then ordinary the Sluces beeing shut they were repulsed with a showre of Bullets that ouerwhelmed them from aboue and there were many slaine yet more wounded This check was imputed to Croft's fault because he had stayed in his Quarter with his Armes foulded as if he had reproued this expedition seeing others doe without putting himselfe in action to assist those who had neede thereof and I cannot tell whether hee did it out of iudgement or for affection which he bore to the French or for hatred to Gray But so it is that Norfolke and Gray accused by Letters which they writ to the Queene to haue had secret consultations with the Queene of the Scots and to haue oppos'd this designe and in hauing sequitiuely bin brought in iustice the gouernment of Barwicke was taken from him and giuen to the Lord Baron Gray But the Queene shewing him fauour conseru'd it for him and for his merit established him afterward Controwler of her Maiesties House This first Mis-hap hauing abated the courage of the English and Scots the Duke of Norfolke rais'd them as quickly vp againe by new Troops which hee brought to strengthen and since that time there were some light combates vntill that the King of France hauing aduice that his men were so blockt vp at Lieth that all the Passages by Sea and Land were shut also considering that they could not send him succour in time requisite for the great distance of places and the seditions which augmented from day to day in his Kingdome gaue power to the Bishop of Valence and De la Roche Faucaud to accord the Affaires with Qu. ELIZABETHS Commissioners esteeming and the Queene of Scotland with them that it were a thing vnworthy their Maiesty to enter into equall dispute with their Subiects And Queen ELIZABETH deputed as speedily into Scotland W. Cecill and N. Wotton Deane of Canterburie and Yorke At the same time the C. of Murray made some propositions But Cecill thought that they ought not to be made by Subiects nor agreed on by Princes During these debatings the decease of Queene Marie of Lorraine mother to the Queen and Regent of the Kingdome of Scotland hapned a pious most prudēt Princesse who was neuerthelesse ignominiously and vnworthily handled by hot-headed Preachers as it may appeare euen by the Ecclesiasticall History of Scotland which Queene ELIZABETH caused to be suppressed vnder the Presse and by the Lords of the Assembly who as being borne Councellors of State had vnder the name of Queene of Scotland and her Husband suspended her from all administration as contrary to the glory of God and the libertie of Scotland The Articles of which the Commissioners after the siege begun agreed vpon are these THe treaty of peace made in the Castle of Cambray betwixt Queene ELIZABETH and Henry the Second the French King shall be renewed and confirmed They shall cease both the one side and the other to make preparation of warre The Fortresse of Aymouth in Scotland shall be demolisht The said King and Queene Mary shall quit the title and armes of England and Ireland The strifes touching the recompence of the iniurie done to Queene ELIZABETH and the assurance of the first Article are remitted to another Assembly which shall be holden at London and if they cannot then be agreed of it shall be referred to the Catholique King The King and the Queene shall reconcile themselues with the Nobles amongst their Subiects of Scotland the Confederates shall be therein comprised and aboue all the Catholique King This Treatie shall be confirmed within sixtie dayes the intertayning of it sworne on both sides This Peace is published as well in the Campe as in the City with a common reioycing of all The English growing weary of the warre seeing their neighbouring Countrey vtterly spoyled The French because they were depriued of all traffique commerce and the Scots for not hauing beene payed their wages And indeed it was holden for the weale good and well-fare of Great Brittaine since Scotland retained his ancient liberty and England kept the dignity and surety which it had gotten And since that time she hath beene really exempt and freed from all subiects of feare from Scotland side The English haue merrily acknowledged that Queene ELIZABETH was the founder of the surety and the Protestants of Scotland Restoresse of the liberty During all that time Queene ELIZABETH for the singular loue which shee bore to the parties was so attentiue to the publique good that shee razed from her heart the loue of powerfull Princes who sought her in marriage to wit CHARLES Arch-duke of Austria second Sonne of Ferdinando the Emperour who made this suit by the Count of Elpheston Of Iames Earle of Arran who was recommended by the Protestants the which propounded to themselues to vnite by his meanes the Kingdomes of England and Scotland which were diuided which was also quickly reiected and neuerthelesse to her Maiesty praise Of Erric King of Sueden who to the same purpose imployed Iohn his Brother Duke of Finland to this end sent into England by Gustaue his Father a little before his death and grounding his hopes vpon this that hee was of the same Religion as Queene ELIZABETH was made himselfe so credulously importunate that hee thought of nothing but England notwithstanding that the King of Denmarke his sworne enemy had resolued to take him in the way thinking that it concerned him greatly if England and Sueden betweene which Denmarke lyes should be ioyned by the meanes of a marriage Queene ELIZABETH acknowledged and praised his singular and Soueraigne loue and made him answer that his comming should be very agreeable
start-ups and their Countrey yeelded as a prey to strangers This carried them violently into a manifest Rebellion and they were the first who disturbed the publique peace of this Kingdome which had continued vnshaken for the terme of eleuen yeeres vnder the happy Reigne of Queene ELIZABETH they being boldly and powerfully incited hereunto by Nicholas Morton a Priest sent from the Pope to denounce Queene ELIZABETH for an Heretike and therefore depriued of all power and gouernement Suddenly likewise they diuulge by a publique Manifestation That they tooke vp armes to no other end but to set vp againe the Religion of their Ancestors to remoue from about the Queenes bad Councellors to restore the Duke and some other great Men who were dismissed of their places and dignities to former libertie and grace But as for the Queenes Maiestie they would attempt nothing against her but vowed that both then and at all times they would perseuer and continue her most obedient Subiects They writ also to the Papists dispersed throughout the whole Kingdome to ioyne their forces together But in stead of cohering to them the most part sent to the Queene both their Letters and the Bearers All the particular men of the Kingdome and the Duke of Norfolke himselfe both their seruice and meanes and to be employed against them So that vpon this occasion shee made a iust triall of her Subiects singular and vnspotted fidelitie and of Gods rare clemency and protection for which shee gaue him great and vnfaigned thankes The Rebels went presently to Durham the next Episcopall See where they rent and trampled vnder foot the sacred Bibles and Bookes of the Liturgie written in the English Tongue as they light vpon them in the Churches Afterwards they celebrated Masse wheresoere they went they leuied and brought into the field many men vnder flying colours wherein were painted in some the fiue wounds of our Lord in others the Challice of the Eucharist Robert Norton a venerable and graue Gentleman who was old and bald carried the Crosse with the Colonell ensigne they came by small dayes marches to Chiffordmore which is not farre from Wetherbie where making a generall muster of their Army vpon the two and twentieth day of their Rebellion they could make no more but sixe hundred Horse and foure thousand foot and when they heard that the Queene of Scots for whose releasement out of imprisoment they had principally taken vp armes was conducted from Tudberie to Couentrey a strong Citie and committed to the guard and custodie of the Earles of Shrewsburie and Huntington that the Earle of Sussex of the one side of them had raised a mightie Armie to set vpon them that Sir George Bowes lay at their backes with chosen and maine troupes and had fortified Bernard-Castell and how the Earle of Cumberland and the Lord Scrope had manned and secured Carlile and dayly leuied more forces they retired from those quarters and returning speedily in a manner the same way they came they came before Rabie which is the principall house and seate of the Earles of Westmerland from whence departing they straitly beleaguerd Bernard Castle which in a short time yeelded to them for want of prouision victuall all and Sir George Bowes with Robert Bowes his brother and all the Souldiers of the Garison issued out with their Armes They were formerly proclaimed Traitors by sound of Trumpet The same very day my Lord of Sussex accompanied with the Earle of Rutland the Lords of Hunsdon Euers and Willowbie of Parham marched against them with seuen thousand men When they saw they were come to Ackland being terrified and daunted they fell to flight and fell backe toward Hexham which place also leauing speedily they crossed along by vnbeaten paths that so they might creepe couertly vnder the hedges and came to the Castle of Naworth where vnderstanding that the Earle of Warwicke and the Lord Clynton Vice-Admirall followed close at their heeles with twelue thousand men drawne out of the South parts of England the two Earles fled into the neerest parts of Scotland with a few men vnknowne to the rest where the Earle of Northumberland obscured himselfe for a while about Harclaw in the little countrey Hamlets amongst the Grymes most notable Theeues who deliuered him afterwards into the Earle of Murray's hands The Earle of Westmerland found some meanes to hide himselfe about Carry Furnhurst and Bucklie and at last scapt into Flanders with some other English in his company where he liu'd a long but a poore life vpon a small Pension which the King of Spaine allowed him The rest saued themselues some by flight some by lurking in holes and dennes For example and terrour sixe inferiour Magistrates were hanged at Durham and others among which one Plumtree a Priest was a man of greatest note There were formerly executed at Yorke Digbie Falthrope Bishop and Pouenham And certaine moneths after Christopher and Thomas Nortons brethren were put to death at London and some others in other places After this the most apparāt notable Rebels were condemned of high Treason and banisht as namely the Earles of North. Westm the Countesse of North. the Daughter to the Earle of Wigorne Edward Dacres of Morton Iohn Neuill of Leuerserg Io. Swineborne Tho. Marquenfield Egre. Ratcliffe brother to the Earle of Sussex Char. Neuill Ro. Norton of Nortonconniers Christ Marmaduke and Thomas of the Family of the Nortons Ro. and Na. Tempests George Stafford and about some fortie others of Noble and worthie Houses whose conuiction and banishment was confirmed by the whole house of Parliament and pardon granted to some who had no Estates nor euer went out of the Kingdome And thus the flame of this Rebellion was in a short time quencht Chiapine Vitelli who was priuie to it as I told you before openly admiring the same in the presence of her Maiestie and many great men of the Kingdome but no doubt inwardly greeuing this Rebellion was so easily and suddenly supprest and that so his owne comming into England tooke so little effect From the combustions of this Rebellion thus couered and extinguisht as out of the ashes of that former fire a little flame began to kindle at Naworth in Cumberland neere to the Valley of Seuerus which was raised by Lau. Dacres second sonne to Geor. Lord Dacres of Gilesland This man after the death of the young Lord Dacres his Nephew because he was the sonne of his elder Brother being angry that so large a Patrimonie should by Law discend vnto his Neeces whom the Duke of Norfolke their Father in law had betrothed to his three sonnes hee commenced suite against them but perceiuing that it would come to no prosperous issue on his side hee secretly combin'd with the Rebels and attempted to carry away the Queene of Scots but all in vaine But the Rebels being defeated sooner then he expected and proclaimed Traitors openly whilest himselfe
English in England should surprize and leade into Scotland the Gouernour of the Meridional frontier and of Barwick and others and not release them before they had promised in writing to returne Shee tooke all this as a great iniury and a disgrace done to the name of the English and to her honour And so much the more because the Regent had constituted that inquisition should be made vpon the borders of Scotland whether those which were of the Commission did come to the place armed This proposition she iudged to come from a heart puff● vp with enmitie but that other with ambition that is to say that the Regent should prescribe a place of meeting to the Queene of England notwithstanding that shee had not long before appointed a meeting-place in the City of Yorke to the Regent Murrey Neither could the affrighted Regent satisfie the Queene vntill hee vnarmed had met with Huntington Deputy for England at Bonderod a Towne vpon the Borders and there promised with good offices to salue this hurt and for the reparation of the English name he sent Carmichel his indeered friend into England who for a space was detayned there in free imprisonment at Yorke and soone after was sent backe with honour and rewards For the fault was found to be sprung from Forster whilest hee aboue measure sustained the Cause of a notorious Malefactor Thus was the Queene reconciled to the Regent who remained euer after constant in his friendship chastising the Fugitiues of either side to his great praise and the good of both the Kingdomes In this yeere dyed not any in England of any noble remarke or note But in Scotland the thrice-Noble Iames Hamilton Duke of Castell-Herauld who being sonne to the Daughter of Iames the second King of Scotland was giuen as a tutor to Mary Queene of Scots appointed Gouernour and Heire to the Kingdome so long shee was vnder age and when he had deliuered her to the French he was created Duke of Castell-Herauld in France afterwards was constituted the chiefe of the three Gouernours of Scotland during Queene Maries imprisonment whose Cause whilest he constantly defended being an open man and of a nature peaceable he was much afflicted by the iniuries and plots of some troublesome spirits The Earle of Essex perceiuing himselfe much troubled aswell by the Ambushes of Turlogh and the Lord of Dungannon as also by the obiected Difficulties in England and learning that it was deliberated in England concerning his repeale he silently deplored the misreies whereinto by extreme iniurie he was precipitated he complained of the losse of his owne and his mens fortunes hee lamented Ireland which he perswaded himselfe that with two thousand Souldiers he could reduce into obedience he instantly demanded that for his honour he might compound the matter with Turlogh and hauing giuen vp to the Vice-Roy his command in Vlster because that with that small Company of men which he had assigned him he was not of power sufficient to prosecute what he had begunne hee was presently commanded to resume the same But hee had scarce resumed it and began to march against Turlogh but he receiued Letters of Command wholly to with-drawe himselfe from that warre and in as honourable termes as he could to conclude a Peace Which beeing presently performed he charged vpon the Scots of Hebrides which had seized vpon Clandeboy and forced them to fly into Caues and hauing with the ayde of Norris surprized the Island Rachlin and slaine 400. of the Islanders hee forced the Castle to yeeld and there placed a Garrison And beeing now in the middle course of victory hee was againe commanded beyond his expectation to resigne his authority and onely as a priuate Captaine had command ouer three hundred men And sure nothing was omitted by the close and subtill dealings of Leicester with continuall troubles to oppresse the milde and peaceable spirit of this Noble Worthy Henry Sidney was then sent the third time Vice-roy into Ireland when the Plague made large hauock of the Isle neuerthelesse he passed to Vlster where many humbled themselues to him and requested with Prayers their safe-guard to wit Mac-Mahon Mac-Guir Turlogh Leinich and others as many also in Lemster of the seditious Family of O-Conor and O-Mor who by force of Armes had holden their ancient Possessions in Leise and Ophale whereof by an Ordinance they had beene dispossessed Beeing arriued at Mounster he assisted as a mourner to honour the Funerals of Peter Carew a true Noble Knight and of memorable vertues who as heire to Stephanide and Reymond Crasse who were the first Conquerers of Ireland and of the of Ydorne had conquered by the Rites of Warre part of his Patrimony Comming to Corcagh the Earle of Desmond visited him and with great respect offered vnto him all willing and ready seruices From thence being carried to Connach he receiued Homage of the sonnes of Clan-Richard which were Rebels and pardoned all their offences after they had humbly implored the same in the Church of Galloway and so hee gouerned the Prouince with great and worthy applause THE NINETEENTH YEERE OF Her Reigne Anno Dom. 1576. ANew yeere beginning the two match-makers for the Duke of Alanzon la Mottefenelon and la Porte began to charme the eares of Queene ELIZABETH with sweete and amorous discourses To whom reply was made That it was then no time for such talke the Duke being so farre ingaged in the Ciuill Warres wherewith France was infested that he could not readily come into England Neuerthelesse two Ambassadours were sent into France one after another to renewe a fraternall friendship betweene the King and the Duke and to dehort them from the affaires of the Netherlands lest the Spaniard should kindle a new war in France shewing them how easie a thing it would be to him hauing then a puissant Army in Italy to surprize Saluces or beeing with his forces possest of Prouence to command the entry of the Mediterranean Sea especially the treasury of France being so neere exhausted of other semblable matters she admonished them to deterre them from the Low-Countries For the Prince of Orange for his owne particular profit and the hope of retaining the Principality of Orange which was situate in France hee ceased not to inuite the French into the Netherlands and promised to the Hollanders and Zelanders who as if they were borne to the Sea did infest the Sea with their Vessels purposely built for their Pyracies the pillaging of the shipping of the English Merchants vnder a pretext framed that they relieued the Dunkirkes their enemies with victuals and vnder borrowed names transported into Spaine the merchandizes of Antwerpe and other places which themselues were accustomed to transport thither and for their owne profit but now durst not by reason they knew themselues guiltie of reuolt Holstock was forthwith sent with Ships furnished for the warres to represse them who tooke aboue two hundred
priuiledges belonging to the place were gathered together a certaine impunitie imboldening them For EDVVARD the third had granted to the Earle of Desmond all Regall Liberties that the Kings of England had in that Countie except for Burnings Rapes Forestallings and Treasure found Notwithstanding the President iudging that these Liberties were granted rather for the exercise of Iustice then for the protecting of Mischiefe valiantly defeated the most selected troopes of the forlorne Rebels which the Earle of Desmond had layd in Ambuscado and made search through all Kerria and punished many of them seuerely The Earle of Desmond vexing at this and grieuously complaining to the Lord Deputie of Drury as well of this as of the Taxe which they call Ceass This Taxe is an exaction of Victuals at a certaine price as the Glebe among the Ancients for Prouision of the Deputies Family and the Garrison Souldiers Of this Taxe he complained not alone but in Lemster the most ciuill part of the Isle the Viscount Bultinglas Deluin Hoth and Trimleston Barons and also other of the Nobler sort complaining denied to pay it as not to be exacted but by authoritie of Parliament And thereupon sent Deputies into England who being heard before the Councell were committed and in like manner in Ireland were those that sent them vntill they submitted to pay it It appearing by the Records of the Kingdomes Exchequer to be instituted long agoe and is a certaine right of Maiestie called Royall Prerogatiue which is not subiect to the Lawes nor yet repugnant as the Lawyers haue iudged it But the Queene commanded the Lord Deputie to vse a moderation in such like exactions and vsed the old saying While they may sheare her subiects doe not shaue them and said moreouer AH how greatly I feare lest that which Bato in time past to Tiberius vpon the reuolting of Dalmatia be obiected against vs by the Irish You you are in fault who commit not your flockes to Shepheards but to Wolues THE TVVENTIETH YEERE OF Her Reigne Anno Dom. 1577. DOn Iohn of Austria perceiuing himselfe too weake for the States of Holland strengthened by the amitie of neighbour Princes sent Gastel to Queene ELIZABETH to thanke her for the ayd which she had offered him against the French to declare his desire of Peace She by Edw. Horsey now sent the second time to him commends his disposition to Peace and withall treates that the goods of the English detained in Antwerpe might be restored Answer was made verie slowly he being much distracted as he pretended with other affaires wholly intending The perpetuall Edict for Peace as they call it which scarce lasted a yeere Queene ELIZABETH seriously desiring Peace sends Sir Thomas Leighton to the Prince of Orange to perswade him not to labour or attempt any thing against Peace vntill Iohn Smith who was sent into Spaine to procure a Peace should returne The Prince of Orange who from his heart condemned this perpetuall Edict hauing opportunely learned that Don Iohn of Austria did endeuour to marrie the Queene of Scots which occasion he willingly catch't and by Famier forthwith aduertiseth Queene ELIZABETH to auert her from Peace She neuerthelesse as seeming to know nothing by Daniel Rogers congratulates with Don Iohn for the perpetuall Edict of Peace although she had discouered for certaine that by the perswasion of the Earle of Westmerland and the English Fugitiues and the inclination of the Pope and the fauour of the Guizes he had an assured hope to attaine to this mariage and together with it to swallow England and Scotland and had alreadie resolued to possesse himselfe of the Isle of Man situate in the Irish Sea as a fit place for the inuading of England on Ireland side and from the West-side of Scotland where the Queene of Scots had many people at her deuotion and in the opposite part of England to make vse of North-Wales and the Counties of Cumberland Lancaster and Chester where the most part of the Inhabitants are most addicted to Poperie And certainly as we haue learned by Perez the King of Spaines Secretarie Austria caried away with ambition seeing himselfe falne from all hope of the Kingdome of Tunis had dealt secretly with the Pope to pull downe ELIZABETH from her Throne to marrie the Queene of Scotland and to subdue England and vnknowne to Philip wrought with the Pope to excite Philip for the publike good to the English Warre Don Iohn himselfe is readie to goe for Flanders this was prosecuted in Spaine and anon after Escouedo is sent from Flanders to desire that a Port in Biskye might be granted him from whence with a Nauie he might inuade England But Philip not likeing these designes begun to neglect him as a man too ambitious Neither did Queene ELIZABETH vnderstand of these things till as I haue said the Prince of Orange did informe her Notwithstanding it wanted not suspition that Thomas Copley a prime man among the English Fugitiues being commended to the French King by Vaulx Secretarie to Don Iohn had beene made Knight and Baron But Copley endeuouring to auoide suspition protested obedience to his Prince and that he had accepted this Title out of no other reason but for the greater accesse of honour to his wife his companion in exile and that his Pension from Spaine would be the greater because a Gentleman of Title is of more esteeme among Spaniards and he thought he was capable of the Title of a Baron his Grandmother being the eldest Daughter to the Baron of Hoo and his great Grandmother the eldest Daughter of the heires of the Baron of Welles In the meane time Don Iohn vnderhand prosecutes this match and withall the better to cloke the matter sends the Viscount of Gaunt Embassadour to ELIZABETH who shewed her the Articles of Peace and to demand a longer terme for the paiment of the Money which the States borrowed of her This she willingly grants and after treates with him by Wilson that the dammages which the English Merchants receiued at the sacking of Antwerpe may be repared He deludes her and while he pretended to be busie about this perpetuall Edict of Peace breakes out into Warre and by craft surprises Castles and Townes and writes to the King of Spaine that the wisest course is to take the Islands of Zeland before they lay siege to the interiour Prouinces and being thus transported with hope striues to perswade him by Escouede his Secretarie that it were easier for him to take England than Zeland At length when all things tended to warres in the Low-Countries the States send to Queene ELIZABETH the Marquis of Maure and Adoulfe Medkerke to borrow of her a hundred thousand pound sterling for eight moneths Shee made them this answer That if they could borrow it else-where Shee with the Citie of London would willingly giue caution for it prouided that such Townes of the Low-Countries as She shall
as the other Cities and Townes of the Kingdome were decayed that if it had not beene looked to in time the ordinary Magistrates would not haue sufficed to haue gouerned such a multitude nor the Countries neere about to haue fed them and if any Epidemicke infection should haue happened it would haue infected the ioyning-houses that were filled with Lodgers Inmates The Queen made an Edict prohibiting any new dwelling-house to be built within three thousand paces of the Gates of London vpon paine of imprisonment and losse of the materialls which should be brought to the place to build withall and euery one forbidden to haue more than one Family in a House In the Low-Countries Generall Norris and Oliuer Temple with some companies of Flemmings ioyned to their English forces at the breake of the day set Ladders against the walls of Malines a rich Towne of Brabant tooke it killed a great number of the inhabitants and religious persons the taking whereof got them some commendations of valour but they polluted it with a vile pillage and rauenous sacriledge For they did not onely with great insolency take away the goods of the Inhabitants but set vpon the Churches and the holy things to the violating euen the dead And we haue seene I am ashamed to say it many of their Tombe-Stones transported into England and exposed to sale to set out publique witnesses of this impietie It wil not be amisse to remember the great Earth-quake which is a thing that very rarely happneth in England The third of Aprill about sixe of the clocke in the euening the skie being calme and cleare England shooke in a moment from beyond Yorke and the Low-Countries as farre as Collen insomuch that in some places Stones fell downe from Houses and Bels in Steeples were so shaken that they were heard to ring and the Sea it selfe it being a great calme was exceedingly moued And the night following the Country of Kent shooke and likewise the first of May in the night Whether this was caused by the Windes which were entred into cliffes and hollow places of the earth or by waters flowing vnder the earth or otherwise I leaue that to the iudgement of the Naturalists After this followed a commotion against Papists throughout England but themselues were authors of these beginnings The English Seminaries who were fled into Flanders at the perswasion and instigation of William Allan borne at Oxford accounted and esteemed by them a very learned man assembled themselues together at Douay where they begun to set vp a Schoole and the Pope appoynted them an annuall pension Since Flanders beeing moued with troubles the English Fugitiues banished by the command of Requesens and the Guizes allied to the Queene of Scotland did the like in establishing such other Schooles for English youths in the City of Reims and Pope Gregory the Third in Rome who as fast as time depriued England of Priests and Seminaries he furnished the Land with new supplies of their young ones who sowed the seedes of the Roman Religion all ouer England for which cause they were called Seminaries As well as those who were there bred and borne As among other things the Ecclesiasticall and Politicall power the zeale borne to the Pope the Founder thereof the hatred of Queene ELIZABETH and the hope conceiued to reestablish the Roman Religion by the Q. of Scotlands means were debated and disputed of Diuers so perswaded verily beleeued that the Pope had by diuine right full power ouer all the Earth as well in Ecclesiasticall as Politicall matters and by this fulnesse of power power to excommunicate Kings and free-Princes to depriue them of their Crownes and Scepters after the absoluing their subiects from all oath of fidelity and obedience to them This caused the grant of Pope Pius the Fifth's Bull declaratory published Anno 1569. the Bull of Rebellions kindled in the North parts of England Irelād as I haue already spoken of also that many desisted from Diuine Seruice who before seemed to frequent the Church with much zeale and integrity and that Hans Nelson and Maine Priests and one Shrood durst affirme and maintaine that Queene ELIZABETH was a Shismatique and that she therefore ought to be deposed of Regall rule and so degraded for which they were soone after iustly put to death Such Seminaries were sent in diuers places both in England and Ireland first some young men prematurely inuested in that order and instructed in the said Doctrine then after as they increased a greater number for the administrating the Sacrament of the Roman Church and preaching as they seemed to make shew of but indeed as Queene ELIZABETH her selfe and the Lords of her Maiesties most honourable Priuy Councell found out it was meerely to seduce her subiects to withdraw them from all obedience and loyalty due to their Soueraigne to oblige them by reconciliation to put in practice and truely execute the Sentence of Pope Pius the Fifth pronounced against her Maiesty and by this meanes to make way to the Pope and Spanish designe for the inuading of England And as it was knowne that to the infringing and contemning of the Lawes authority diuers Children young men of sundry Callings were daily vnder-hand secretly sent beyond the Seas in those Seminaries where they hauing made a vow to returne were receiued that from thence new supply of others vnknowne came priuatly into England and that still more were expected to come with such Iesuits who then made here their first entrance and abode so an Edict was proclaimed in the moneth of Iune expresly charging and commanding all such who had children Wards kindred or such others in the Regions beyond the Sea to exhibit and giue vp their names to the Ordinary within ten dayes after to send for them to come ouer within the prefixt time of foure moneths and presently after the said return euery one ought to declare and giue notice thereof to the Ordinary prohibiting likewise to lay out or furnish with money such as should stay or dwell out of England either directly or indirectly neither to nourish relieue or lodge such Priest deriued of those Emissaries nor Iesuits vpon paine for them who should doe otherwise to be reputed and held for fautors of Rebels and supporters of seditious persons to incurre the seuerity and rigour exprest in the Lawes of the said Kingdome Before this Proclamation was published the Papists feined to haue too late taken aduice of the incommodities that this Bull produced they made a shew to be extreme sorry that euer it was sent ouer they supprest Sanders Apology and prohibited to dispute any more such question concerning the Popes authority to excommunicate and degrade Princes But all this most cautelously and cunningly as the euent made it euident for this disputation increased daily amongst them as naturally men are most addicted to things prohibited sith Robert Persons and Edmond
subiects In the meane time as I dayly laboured in the Court for the gouernment of Saint Katherines I receiued Letters from the Cardinall Comense wherein I found mine enterprize much commended and an absolution in the Popes name This I likewise imparted to the Queen What effect it wrought with her I know not But it gaue fresh courage to mee and remoued all scruple Neuerthelesse I had no will to offer any violence to the Queene if she would be perswaded to deale more mildly with the Catholiques But so often as I was to come into her presence I laid aside my dagger lest I should be transported to murder her And when I considered her person and her truely royall vertues I was distracted with many doubtfull cares for my vowes were recorded in heauen my Letters and promises amongst men These things did I often tosse ouer in my vnquiet minde She neuer deserued well of mee indeed she saued my life but if in such a cause had shee taken it away it had beene tyrannie Thus being discontented with my estate and condition I left the Court. At last I happened on a booke of Alans against the Iustice of Great Britaine out of which I was taught That Princes excommunicate for heresie might be lawfully depriued both of rule and life This vehemently incited me to prosecute my purpose This to Neuil whom I had inuited to my table I read ouer six whole moneths before he did accuse me After this he came home to me And let vs heare quoth hee somewhat since we can obtaine nothing of the Queen and so he propounded some things concerning the releasing of the Queene of Scots But quoth I a matter of more weight and more aduantagious to the Catholique Church is now hammered in my head The next day he likewise visited me and touching the Bible with his hand he did sweare he would conceale and constantly pursue all whatsoeuer that might bee profitable to the Catholique Religion I in the same manner took mine oath So we determined with ten Knights more to set vpon the Queene as shee rid through the fields and there to murder her which thing till now he hath concealed But receiuing newes of the Earle of Westmerlands death being transported with the hope of succeeding him he forthwith violating his oath discouered and accused me This was his confession in the presence of the Lord of Hunsdon and Fra. Walsingham Priuy Counsellors to the Queene acknowledging his fault he craued pardon by his Letters to the Queene to Burghley the chiefe Treasurer and to the Earle of Leicester A few daies after being brought to iudgement in the Palace of Westminster and the Articles of his accusation being read he confessed himself guilty His confession being recorded in the Acts Iudgment was demanded to be pronounced against him confessing himselfe guilty Whereupon Hatton thought it expedient to satisfy the multitude there present that the crime might openly bee declared according to his confession which Parry of his owne accord confirmed and desired the Iudges that he might reade it himselfe But the Clerk of the Crowne did read it with the letters of Cardinall Comese those which Parry had writ to the Queene to Burghley to Leicester which he acknowledged for true yet he denyed that he euer had any absolute determination to kill the Queene But being commanded to speake if he had any thing to hinder iudgement from being pronounced against him hee disturbedly answered as tormented in his conscience for the crime which he had vndertaken and said I see plainely that I must dye because I was not fast and constant in my resolution Being commanded to speake his meaning more amply My blood quoth he be vpon you So the sentence of death being pronounced he began to rage and summoned the Queene to Iudgement before God The fift day after he was set vpon a Slead and drawne through the middest of the Citie to Westminster being at the place of his execution after he had vaunted how faithfull a guardian he had beene vnto the Queene hee said hee neuer had any intention to take her life away Thus in boasting manner not in a word committing himselfe to God he was punisht like a Traytor according to the Law in the great Palace yard at Westminster where the States of the K●ngdome were in great number assembled for the holding of the Parliament I● this Parliament some either out of a desire of nouation or reformation earnestly persecuted the Ecclesiasticall estat● although the Queene had forbidden it demanding lawes to represse the iurisdiction of Bishops in that which conce●ned the gift of Faculties in the Collation of the holy Orders Ecclesiasticall Censures and the oath they take in their office proposing a new oath to be taken in the Chan●ery and Kings Bench that is they should not counter●and the ciuill Law of England They required that eue●y Pastor should be resident in his owne Church and dec●●med that the Church of England was destitute of learned teachers when without doubt it could then number vp more learned Diuines then any former age or any other reformed Church But the Queene fauouring aboue all the Ecclesiasticall moderation reproued those Nouators as changing still to worse and reiected their demands and propositions as intended to subuert her Prerogatiue and soueraigne power ouer Ecclesiasticall matters But as for the Association which I haue spoken of it was by the suffrages of all confirmed and established THat foure and twenty or more of the Queenes Priuy Councell or of the Nobilitie chosen by the Queenes Letters Patents should make inquest after those that would inuade the Kingdome incite rebellion or attempt to offend or offer violence to the Queenes Person for or by any one whomsoeuer that shall lay claime to the Crowne of England And that he for whom or by whom any such thing is attempted shall be altogether vncapable of the Crowne of England and depriued of all right and pursued to the death by all the Queenes subiects if by these foure and twenty Noblemen they shall be iudged culpable of inuasion rebellion offence or violence and so publikely declared Lawes also were enacted for the defence of the Queene against the Iesuites and Popish Priests which did then inuent by the Ball of Pius Quintus the Pope many mischieuous and dangerous matters That is to say That they should depart the Realme within fortie dayes And that those which should after that time come or stay in the Kingdome should bee holden guilty of Laesae Maiestatis And all such as wittingly or willingly did receiue or nourish them should be guilty of Felony For so are all capitall Crimes vnder Laesae Maiestatis called That those which were brought vp amongst the Seminaries if they returned not within sixe moneths after the denunciation made and submitted themselues to the Queene in the presence of a Bishop or two Iustices should be holden
and Leicester his brother Tho Starkey Gerard Gore and other Merchants of London to recompence their losses which they had sustained in Africa being to all others prohibited to traffique in Mauritania Cesariense for the space of ten yeares Which Mulley Hamet Xerisi receiued into protection In the beginning of this yeare dyed Edward Lord Clinton High Admirall who in the yeare 1572 was by Queene ELIZABETH created Earle of Lincolne He was honorably interred at Windsor Henry his sonne succeeded him in his honours but Charles Howard Lord of Effingham Chamberlaine to the Queene in the Admiralty And to him in his Office succeeded the Lord Carie Baron of Hunsdon Gouernour of Barwick who a few yeares before supplyed the place of Fra Russell Earle of Bedford the second Earle of that Family a Nobleman true professor of Religion and vertue who hauing ouer-liued three of his sonnes Edward Iohn and Francis and had but one liuing who was Lord Russell Baron of Thornaugh and three daughters all three Countesses one maried to the Earle of Warwicke the second to the Earle of Bathe and the third to the Earle of Cumberland hee dyed of a Gangrene the next day after his sonne Francis was slaine vpon the borders of Scotland as before is related and was interred with Iohn his father at Cheney in Buckingham-shire to him succeeded Edward sonne to Francis his third sonne About the end of this yeare the Earle of Leicester being out of an itching desire of rule and glory easily perswaded by those which studied more to assure their owne fortune and power in the Court then his Honour passed with great pompe and state into the Netherlands with this Title Generall of Her MAIESTIES auxiliary troops Hee had also some command ouer the Nauy-Royall His Lordship was accompanied with the Earle of Essex the Lord Touchet Baron of Audley and the Lord North Baron of Kertling vvith Sir William Russell Sir Tho. Sherley Sir Arthur Basset Sir Walter Waller Sir Gernase Clifton and many other Knights attended on by a chosen company of fiue hundred Gentlemen The Queene at his departure forbade him to entertaine a thought of any thing which vvould bee vnworthy either of her or of the place which he vvas seated in Shee commanded him to learne vvith all possible diligence vvhat Garisons the Estates maintained how and by vvhat means And her Maiestie still being carefull good to the Souldiers charged him to know by vvhat Art they inhaunced put down the value of their money for in that Art they excelled all others lest the Souldiers should receiue that at a higher rate then they could put it off for She admonisht him to cut off all prouision from the enemy and to his power restraine the Dunkerks vvhich much infested the seas Finally shee recommended to his trust the Nobilitie of that Country and aboue all the children of the Prince of Orange THE NINE AND TWENTIETH YEERE of Her Raigne Anno Dom. M.D.LXXXVI DVDLEY Earle of Leicester landing at Flushing was first by his Nephew Sir Philip Sidney Gouernor of that Citie honorably receiued and after by all the townes of Zeland and Holland with all sorts of honours acclamations triumphs deuoted panegyricks Banquettings and such like things And being in the moneth of Iuly come to the Hage the Court of Holland the Estates generall so they are called by Letters Patents gaue to him the soueraigne command and absolute authoritie ouer the Vnited Prouinces with the Title of Gouernor and Captaine Generall of Holland Zeland and the vnited and confederate Prouinces Then being saluted of all with the attribute of His Excellence and tickled with flatteries as if hee had beene seated in the highest and amplest degree of honour he began to assume royall and Kingly thoughts of Maiesty But the Queen being highly offended that the Estates had imposed and receiued him with such exceeding honours with a little letter abated the swelling winde wherewith hee was puffed vp then when he least thought thereof And these were the contents YOu shall vnderstand by this messenger which wee haue expresly sent vnto you with what contempt you haue behaued your selfe against our pleasure Wee had not thought that you a man we haue raised from the dust and fauoured aboue all others would haue violated in so great a matter our command with so great contempt euen in a matter which so much and neerely concerneth vs and our honour But though against your duty you haue made so little respect of our honor yet thinke not that we are so grosly negligent in the repairing thereof that wee can passe ouer so great an iniury with silence and obliuion Therefore we command you that you setting apart all excuses incontinently according to the faith and duty wherein you are bound vnto vs performe all whatsoeuer Heneage our vnder-Chamberlaine shall in our name declare vnto you except you will draw vpon your head a greater danger In other Letters which she sent to the Estates generall she thus reasoned THat they without her aduice or priuity had to her reproach transferd vpon Leicester the absolute rule of the vnited Prouinces notwithstāding she herselfe had refused the same and had manifestly declared to all the world that she had but onely giuen ayde and succours to her afflicted neighbors and not in any wise taken any command vnto her And therefore she aduised them To dispoile Leicester of that absolute authoritie since she had prescribed to him his limits not that she thought their cause was not to be defended but that she might keepe safe her honour which then her life she rather esteemed The Estates answered THat they were much agrieued that in giuing to Leicester without her aduice the absolute rule they had offended her Maiesty and requested her to mitigate the offence by the necessity of matter remonstrating to her that of necessity that authority must haue been transferd vpon one or other for the auoyding of troubles neither was the authority such as that word Absolute did seeme to inferre seeing that principality and seueraigne rule with the dignity of Gouernor still remained intire amongst the people But to reuoke the power which had already been transferd would be a meanes to precipitate the Netherlands into extreame dangers By these letters of the Estates and those of Leicester which hee as one well skil'd how with feigned teares and griefe to re-obtaine the fauour of so gracious and milde a Princesse had written in a sorrowfull stile this offence by little and little vanished into obliuion In the meane space Leicester receiued the contributions of of the Prouinces and established military lawes and whilst he laboured to impose new taxes vpon their commerce hee stirred vp the hate of the people against him Now had Charles Earle of Mansueld by order from the Duke of Parma Gouernor for the Spaniard in Flanders for the space of some few moneths beleagerd Graue a towne in Brabant situated
vpon the riuer Mase and had round intrenched himselfe Leicester to releeue the towne sent the Earle Hoenloe a Germane and Iohn Norris an English Captain who hauing begun to raise a scance neere to the towne that they might from thence send prouision succors to the besieged were soone assailed and repulst by the Spaniard but certaine fresh companies of English ioyning with the other and falling vpon the Spaniard repulsed them vvith a great slaughter only Norris receiued a small hurt But the Duke of Parma comming with fresh supplies beganne furiously to play vpon the town with his great artillery whereupon Homart Gouernor of the town being a yong man vnexperienced in martiall affaires without abiding any assault after hee had conditioned for his owne and the Inhabitants liues he yeelded vp the towne Whilest Leicester in the meane space expulsing the Spaniards out of the Betow an Isle situated betweene the Rhine and the Waale and fortified the scance neere Telon Hemart for hauing vnaduisedly yeelded Graue was for an example to others beheaded The Duke of Parma passing into Guilderland lodged his army before Venlo where Skenke of Freezland and Roger Williams a Welchman being men of a resolute courage put in practice a haughty enterprise breaking through the army of the Duke by night with intent to enter into the towne and hauing slaughtered many they had pierced as farre as the Dukes tent But they were repulsed and though they failed of their expectation yet were they praysed amongst the best souldiers for their aduentrous hardinesse Soone after the towne of Venlo was yeelded vp In the interim the Lord Willoughby Gouernor of Bergen op Zome intercepted store of Corne which was caried toward the enemy On another side Phillip Sidney and Maurice sonne to the Prince of Orange surprised Axele a towne in Flanders Sidney swelling with courage by reason of this successe being allured with hopes from some of the garison of Graueline hee by night attempted to take the towne but La Motte the Gouernor by whom this plot was laid issued out vpon him vnexpected whereby he perceiued that he was deluded and retired with the losse of some few men safe and in perfect health William Pelham Generall of the English horse scoured vp and downe Brabant Parma parting from Venlo marched to Bergen where Colonell Morgan with 1200 English vnder his command lay in Garison which he beleagerd Leicester made hast to raise him but finding himselfe vnequall in the number of his men slenderly prouided of munition not any place for retreat at hand the leaguer of his enemy strongly fortified to draw the enemy from Bergen he in likewise beleag●rd Duisbrough and after that by the force of his cannon he had made a breach preparing to giue an assault the towne vpon composition yeelded so hee entred and tooke possession of the towne before the Duke of Parma had altogether left Bergen to come to releeue it Parma suspecting that they would also march against Zutphen a neighbouring City he caused prouision to be caried into the towne but at the second returne of the cariage the English by the fauour of the time which was then misty encountred the Spaniards which conuoyed the same Then began betwixt them a tumultuous conflict The English standing two volleys of shot vntoucht remained firme putting to flight the troope of horse sent forth vnder the conduct of G. Cressiac a Wallon who dismounted from his horse by the Lord Willoughby vvas taken Hannibal Gonzago with many others being slaine Yet few of the English perished but oh He that countervail'd many men whose valor parallel'd if not exceeded the best Sidney his horse being slaine whilst he ascended another was shot through the thigh of which wound fiue and twenty dayes after he dyed hauing scarce out-liued his father foure moneths and was much lamented of all good men Leicester his vncle returning into England performed his obsequies and funerall duties in the Church of St. Paul at London with great magnificence and solemnities due to a noble Souldier Iames the King of Scots honored him with an Epitaph both the Academies cōsecrated their teares to him and the new Colledge of Oxford erected a stately monument to his lasting memory And to speake truth the vertue of this man his natural magnificent bounty his adorned literature and his sweet and milde behauiour well deserued all this yea and more Leicester though sad sorrowful eagerly assaulted the forts before Zutphen and to expugne them with better successe he seized vpon the Iland with the places of defence therin then assaulting the lesser fortresse hee subdued it by the valour of Edward Stanley who laying hold of a Spaniards Pike wherewith he strucke him kept such fast hold that hee was by the Pike drawne into the Fort vvhereat the Spaniards were in such sort amazed that they fearefully fled Leicester for this valorous exploit Knighted Stanley rewarding him with 40 pounds English presently paid him down and a 100 Marks yearely pension during his life The night following the Spaniards abandoned the greater fort leauing behind them all their munition and retyred into Zutphen Leicester thought it not expedient to beleaguer the towne at that time being then almost in the depth of vvinter and the vveather very sharpe besides hauing garisons round about it he thought it sufficiently besieged For Sir Edward Stanley remained at Deuentrey being sixe English miles from thence on the North side with 1200 footmen as well English as Irish Rowland Yorke kept the fortresses of Zutphen neere to Deuentry with 800 foote and 100 horse There were garisons likewise placed towards the East parts at Lillo Sherenbourg and Douay Leicester hauing placed the rest of his troopes in garison and seeing that the Duke of Parma was farre thence retired hee returned to the Hage where the Estates receiued him with many complaints THat the moneyes were not well distributed that hee inclined his eares to evill Counsellors that the numbers of the auxiliary English were not compleat that foreigne souldiers were inrol'd without their consent that militarie discipline was neglected that waggons and pioners were compeld that the priuiledges of the prouinces were contēned that new formes of contribution were deuised They requested him to apply a speedy and healthfull remedy to these things He that had his whole intendments busied about his returne into England with a courteous answer gaue them faire promising But vpon the day wherein he was to depart he committed the administration of the Prouinces to the Counsell of the Estates and vpon the same day by letters of restraint secretly dispatcht he reserued to himselfe the whole authority ouer the Gouernours of the Prouinces Townes and Castles and exempted likewise the accustomed iurisdictions from the Counsell of the Estates and Gouernours of the Prouinces and so vpon the third day of December he passed ouer into England Thus for this
Hardinesse is a Vertue which encourages one to blame or defend things iustly her mediocrity is betwixt cowardnesse and temerity To her belong Magnanimity Magnificency Patience and Perseuerance Of True Honour TRue HONOVR which belongeth to Liberality and Iustice is a Diuine Vertue subiect neither to fortune nor force it is that which all good and vertuous men aime at leuell their actions Of Temperance TEMPERANCE is a morall Vertue which moderates sensuall voluptuousnesse and the couetousnesse thereof and the dolour or griefe which is still as it were linked with couetousnes shee mediates or is a meane betweene Intemperancy and Stupidity shee is perfected made whole by Bashfulnesse Honesty shee keepes vnder her Abstinēcy Continency Sobriety and Chastity To her do belong Gentlenesse Clemency Humility Meeknesse and Moderation Of Magnanimity MAGNANIMITY belonges to Force and Courage it is a carefull vertue and as it were a spur to purchase supreme honours her mediocrity or mean is betweene Saperba and ●●●●animity Of Clemency CLEMENCY is a morall vertue which moderating anger quencheth in vs fre or choler to produce pious actions she mediates or is a meane betweene Cruelty and too great Indulgency Of Truth TRVTH by which in all our actions humane society we should make things as they be her meane or moderation is betweene Simulation and dissimulation Of Liberality LIBERALITY is a Vertue truely Noble and most Diuine appertayning to Iustice This excellent Vertue moderating the desire to abound in riches rules the purchasing of goods and orders expences to produce in vs and bring forth to the world rare actions it is a meane betweene Auarice and Prodigality Of Ciuility CIVILITY is also a morall vertue which consisteth in vttering gracefully a speech or discourse in Company by this Vertue both praise and a good opinion is acquired it is a meane betweene Mirth and Melancholy Of Courtesie COVRTESIE is a Vertue truely morall by which we purchase loue in shewing our selues gracious and officious to those who stand in need of vs it is a meane betweene submission and rudenesse or harsh disposition Qu. Elizabeths extraction by the Fathers side The birth of the Lady Anne Bolene The King fals in loue with Anne of Bolone The reason why he puts away his wife The King entreats the Pope for expedition The Prelates and Peeres doe the like The King seeing himselfe contemned renounceth the Pope Marrieth Anne A Nunne of Kent suborned Authoritie of Ecclesiasticall giuen to the King Anne beheaded The King exerciseth his cruelty vpon Papists and Lutherans and his auarice vpon the Monasteries The Law of Six Articles He marries and diuorces Anne of Cleue Katharine Parre Reconciles himselfe with the Emperour Charles Assures the succession to his Children Take Bologne Dyed King Edward the Sixth succeedeth his Father The doctrine of the Gospel is brought in A miserable reigne vnder a King that is a Childe The Protector is sacrificed to death Elizabeth in fauour with her brother Her studies Mary is proclaimed Elizabeth ioynes with her The English with much adoe subiect themselues to the power of the Pope Vpon what conditions they were reconciled to the Church of Rome Reioycing for it at Rome Ireland erected a Kingdome by the Pope The Papists feare Elizabeth They persecute her The Kings of France Spaine comfort her Shee is for feare of death constrained to follow the Romish Religion They goe about to send her out of the Kingdome and exclude her from the succession thereof Calais lost Qu. Mary dyes And Cardinall Pole Booke 1. 1558. Booke 1· 1559. Booke 1. 1560. 1561. 1562. 1563. 1564. 1565. 1566. 1567. 1568. 1569. 1570. 1571. 1572. 1573. 1574. 1575. 1576. 1577. 1578. 1579. 1580. Booke 1. 1558. Queene Maries death is knowne Queene Elizabeth is proclaimed Queene by the Kings Heraulds of Armes Her Maiestie makes choice and election of a priuie Councell Her Maiestie hath a speciall care aboue all things to re-establish the true Religion She ordaines and settles states and domesticall affaires Her Maiestie takes a great care for forraine affaires Queene Elizabeth is earnestly solicited to marriage with Philip King of Spaine her Sisters Widdower Her Maiestie refused to marry with the King of Spaine The reason why Booke 1. 1559. Her Maiesty deliberates and labours for the re-establishment of the Protestants Religion She considers what dangers might happen therby Without the Realme Within the Kingdome Booke 1. 1558. The Queene rebukes and reprehends the impatience of certaine zealous Ministers of the Word of God Queene Elizabeth allowes diuine Seruice to be read in the English Tongue Her Maiestie celebrates her Sisters Funerall and that of the Emperour Charles the Fifth Booke 1. 1559. Queene Elibeth re-establisheth and creates diuers Noblemen On Wednesday the 23. day of Nouemb. Queene Elizabeth remoued from Hatfield vnto the Charterhouse to the Noble Lord NORTHS House where her Maiesty lay fiue dayes and rode in open Charet from the Lord NORTHS House along Barbican entring into the City at Criple-Gate and so came to the Tower from thence to Westminster where she was inaugurated Q. Elizabeths opiniō concerning sacred things She cals a Parliament which is held the second yeere of her raigne Propositions to reforme Religion The 18. of March. They establish a Dispute betwixt Protestant and Papist The successe thereof Sir Edward Carne is detayned at Rome Disputes and strifes for the Towne of Calais A treaty of peace with the French King The Castell in Cambresis Articles of Peace made and agreed vpon 'twixt the Queenes Maiestie and the French King Henry the second A Peace is concluded agreed vpon betweene the Queenes Maiesty and the Queene of Scotland The Lord Baron Wentworth and others are called in question and brought in compasse of the Law concerning the losse of Calais The whole Parliament doe exhort Queene Elizabeth to marry Thomas Gargraue's Speech made to her Maiesty to that purpose Her Maiesties answer to them all Other Laws and ordinances established by that Parliament The Nobles of the Land reestablished The Lyturgie appointed in English Papist Bishops deposed and discharged from their Benifices Other Protestants learned and zealous Diuines are instituted Bishops in their places By what degrees Religigion was altered here The profit which proceeds from change of Religion Her Maiesties diligent care to defend both the the true Religion and Common-Wealth Qu. Elizabeths Motto or Posey SEMPER EADEM Her answer to forraigne Princes interceding for the Papists The Emperour seekes the Queene for his Son The King of France challengeth the Kingdome of England for the Queene of Scotland Is killed as hee prepared for the war Francis the Second and the Queene of Scotland tooke the title of the Kings of England The original of the hidden hatred which hath beene betweene the Queenes of England and Scotland The French deale vniustly with the English Send men of warre into Scotland The Scots refuse to obey the Queene Regent They seeke helpe of Qu. Elizabeth They deliberate of
likewise his children to returne into Scotland The Ministers are against the King of Scotlands Authoritie Q. Elizabeth obtaineth of the Musconian Emperor a peace for the King of Sweden That Emperor requires an absolute alliance with England being a suter to her Maiesty to grant him an English Lady for his wife Sir Hierome Bowes is sent Ambassador to him from England The Emperor died A certaine kind of Deere called Maclis Theodore the New Emperor of Muscouia disallow'd the company or Monopolie of Englands Merchants Alberto Alasco a Polonian Nobleman came then to England to see Queen Elizabeth A wonderfull and fearfull Earthquake in Dorsetshire The death of Thomas Ratcliffe Earle of Sussex Likewise the decease of Henry Wriothesly Earle of South-hampton Sir Humphrey Gilbert Knight drowned vpon the Sea by shipwracke It is a most difficult matter and a very hard thing to bring the Colonies in farre countries The death of Edmund Grindal Lord Archbishop of Canterbury A wood called Tamarin first brought into England Iohn Whitgift is preferred to the Archbishopricke of Canterbury He endeuored to vnite the English Church Brownist Schismatiques One Someruille strangled himselfe in prison and Ardern is hanged The English betray Alost and doe deliuer it into the hands of the cruell Spaniard A miserable end of Traitors The Earle of Desmond is killed Nicholas Sanders an English Seminarie Priest affamisht himselfe Vicount of Balting glasse fled away out of Ireland Sir Iohn Perot is made Lord Deputy of Ireland Labouring men are sent into Ireland The gesture and behauiours of Iohn Perot Vice-Roy of Ireland Booke 3. Troubles in Scotland The Earle of Gowry is taken The conspirors are dispersed Queene Elizabeth succoureth some of them The King demandeth them by the League but in vaine Walsingham fauoureth the fugitiues Hunsdon against thē Controuersie or the power of a Secretary argued The arraignment of Gowry He defendeth his own cause He is beheaded The treason of Francis Throckmorton The Lord Paget retyreth into France The complaints of the Catholikes Spies are suborned Many suspected The malice of the Papists against the Queene The clemency of the Queene towards the Papists Priests are banished Fugitiues demanded of the King of France The answer of the King of France The Spanish Ambassador sent out of England Waade is sent into Spaine Is not receiued· Throckmortons confession He denieth all He seeketh an evasion Being condemned he inlargeth his confession About to d●e he denyeth all A new treaty with the Queene of Scots Propositions made to her She answereth She demandeth to be associated in the Kingdome with her sonne The treaty dissolued by surmises An association begun in England The Queen of Scots maketh new propositions The Scots of the English faction oppose them The insolencie of the Scotch Ministers Against the Lawes Ecclesiasticall Lawes of Scotland Buchanans writings reproued A fained conference The Scots and English make incursions one vpon another The Ambassie of Patrick Gray Hee is suspected of bad dealing The patience of the Queene of Scots offended She is committed to new guardians She earnestly seeketh for liberty Things plotted against her Counsell holden amongst the Papists The death of the Earle of Westmer land NEVILL a most noble● most ancient and illustrious name The death of Plowden Alancon dyeth The Prince of Orange is slaine The power of Spaine growne terrible Booke 3. The French King inuested with the order of the Garter Is accused of treason He perceiueth not the euasion His confession He consulteth with Iesuits about the murthering of the Queene With the Popes Nuncio With Morgan With Priests With the Pope himselfe He discloseth the matter to the Queene He wauereth in his minde Alans book addeth fresh courage to him Neuil offereth him his helpe He discloseth the matter Parry is arraigned Punished with death Lawes demanded in the Parliament against Bishops Against Non-residents The association established Lawes against Iesuits and Priests Felony Praemunire The Earle of Arundel resolueth with himselfe to fly out of England He writeth to the Queene Is apprehended The Earle of Northumberland is found dead The Coroners Enquest The causes of his imprisonment manifested The Earle of Northumberland is lamented of diuers Queene Elizabeth laboureth to contract a league with the Prince of Germany The like with the King of Scots A relation of the death of Russell The manner of his death The proofes amongst the borderers The death of Thomas Carre of Fernihurst The fugitiue Scots are sent out of England backe into Scotland They haue intelligence of others remaining in the Kings Court. They enter into Scotland Sterlin is taken by them They are reconciled to the King Amnistie Maxwell establisheth the Masse The rebellion of the Bourgs in Ireland Mac-William * or Sheriffe The Scots of Hebrides called into Ireland The Gouernor laboreth for a peace but in vaine He pursueth the rebels And he brings them to submission Next the Scots of Hebride Whom he doth assault and defeats them The title of Mac-William abolished The Estates of the Netherlands consult of a Protector Reasons of the French side For the English They are refused by the French The English consult about the protection The Dutch offer themselues to the Queene Antwerpe is yeelded vp The Queen deliberateth with her selfe She takes vpon her the protection Vnder what conditions The Queen publisheth the causes She sends forth a Nauy to the West Indies to diuert the Spaniard The towne of S. Iames taken by the English frō the Spaniard A disease called Calentura whereby many perish The surprize of Hispaniola or Saint Dominick by the English The proud and audacious Motto of the Spaniards Auarice and Couetousnesse The English doe assault the City of Cartagena They set fire vpon the townes of S. Anthony and S. Helena They come to Virginia They bring the Colony thence Tobacco The booty of the English voyage and expedition Their pillage A search made for the discouerie of a way to the East India * Or Straits An Edict against Woad The company of the Barbary Merchants The death of the Earle of Lincolne Of the Earle of Bedford The Earle of Leicester sent into Holland His instructions Booke 3. Absolute Authoritie is giuen to Leicester by the Estates The Queen offended thereat She expostulateth with him With the Estates also They excuse themselues Leicester sendeth succours to releeue the City of Graue besieged But it is yeelded vp The Spaniards expelled out of the Betow An aduentrous enterprize Venlo is lost Axele is taken Graueline attempted Duisbourgh beleagerd Which yeelds Sir Philip Sidney is slaine The valour of Edward Stanley of the house of Elford The Estates complaine to Leicester against himselfe He returneth into England The Earle of Arundell is accused of many things He answered them well and is but fyned The King of Denmarke intercedeth for Peace with the Queene of England Queene Elizabeth answereth She furnisheth Henry King of Navarre with money She desireth a league with Scotland By what counsell The fugitiues
being so fit a place for ambuscadoes Notwithstanding this aduice they must vndertake it and hee exhorteth them to behaue themselues couragiously and himselfe being threescore and ten yeeres of age marched in the Front and the others followed him But they were no sooner gone downe but they were showred vpon with musket-shot like hayle driuen by a tempest from the bushes where the Rebels were placed and not a man of them to be discerned The most part of them were slaine there the rest retyring and clyming vp the Rockes and ragged wayes with much adoe came to the Deputie who stood vpon a Hill expecting the euent with the Earle of Kildare and Sir Iohn Wingfield Master of the Ordnance who knowing the danger would not suffer George Carew one of his Nephewes to goe thither reseruing him for greater honours Peter Carew the younger G. More Audeley and Cosby himselfe were slaine there Shortly after seuen hundred or threabout of Italians and Spaniards commanded by San-Ioseph an Italian sent by the Pope and the King of Spaine vnder pretext to establish the Romane Religion but the end of it was to diuide Queene ELIZABETH's forces and to call home those which shee had in the Low-Countries landed at Smerwick without any resistance in regard that Winter who had waited for them in that place seeing the Equinox of Autumne past was returned for England fortified the place with Bulwarkes and named it the Fort Del-Or But as soone as they had knowledge that the Earle of Ormond Gouernour of Mounster was comming towards them they by the aduice of the Irish quitted the Fort and went to the Valley of Grauingel being of difficult accesse by reason of the Mountaines and Woods which enuironed it The Gouernour tooke some of them by the way who being examined what number they were and what designe they had confessed that they were seuen hundred that they had brought armes for fiue thousand and looked daily for greater numbers from Spaine That the Pope and the King of Spaine were resolued to driue the English out of Ireland and to effect the same had sent store of treasure to Sanders the Popes Nuncio to the Earle of Desmond and to Iohn his brother The same night the Italians and Spaniards not knowing which way to turne themselues in regard they could not remaine in Caues and Dennes which were retreats for Cattell by the benefit of the darke night returned to the Fort and Ormond was camped before it but wanting Cannon other things requisit for battery was constrained to attend the Lord Deputies comming who was speedily there and with him Zouchey Raleigh Deny Mackworth Achin and other Captaines At the same time Winter being reproued for his comming away returned from England with his Ships of Warre The Lord Deputie sent a Trumpet to the Fort to aske those that kept it Who brought them into Ireland By whom they were sent and wherefore they had built a Fort in Queene ELIZABETH's Kingdome● and to command them presently to quit it They answered that they were sent some from the most holy Father the Pope of Rome and the rest from the most Catholique King of Spaine to whom he had giuen Ireland Queene ELIZABETH being falne from it by reason of her Heresie and therefore would keepe what they had gotten and get more if they could Whereupon the Deputie and Winter hauing consulted of the manner how they should besiege it caused the Sea-Souldiers by night and without noyse to bring Culuerings from the Ships and hauing made a Bulwarke vpon the shoare drawes them easily forward and places them for battery The Land-Souldiers bent their greatest Ordnance to the other side and plaid vpon the Fort foure daies together The Spaniards make many sallies out but euer to their losse and the English lost but one man who was Sir Iohn Cheeke a braue and valiant young Gentleman sonne to Sir Iohn Cheeke a noble Knight most learned and iudicious San-Ioseph who commanded the Fort a very Coward and vnfit for the warres being affrighted with this continuall battery thinkes presently of rendring it and seeing Hercules Pisan and the other Captaines striuing to disswade him from it as an vnworthy thing to be done by Souldiers and insist that by their faint-heartednesse they should not diminish the courage of the Irish who were comming to their succour and prepared to sustaine the assault with a remarkable cowardlinesse sounds the intentions of the Souldiers and seditiously threatning the Captaines in the end brought them to condiscend to render it vp So seeing no succour neither from Spaine nor from the Earle of Desmond the fifth day of the said siege they put forth a white Flagge and demanded a Parley But it was refused them because they tooke part with Rebels with whom they were not to parley After they desired that they might goe out with bagge and baggage which was also denied them Also that it might be permitted to the General and the chiefe Commanders but that likewise was denied them though it was requested with much importunitie and the Deputie speaking outragiously against the Pope commands them to yeeld vpon discretion Insomuch as not being able to obtaine any thing else they put out the white Flagge againe and all together cry aloud Misericordia Misericordia And giue themselues vp to the Deputies mercy who presently tooke counsell what course hee should take with them But in regard they equalled the number of the English it was to be feared seeing the Rebels were aboue fifteene hundred and that lest the English who were destitute of Meat Apparell if they should not be comforted and refreshed with the spoyles of the enemy might be moued to reuolt also there being no shipping to carry them into their owne Countrey it was resolued against the Deputies will who full of mercy and compassion wept for it that all strangers the Commanders excepted should be put to the Sword and the Irish to be hanged which was presently executed Neuerthelesse the Queen who from her heart detested to vse cruelty to those that yeelded wished that the slaughter had not beene and was with much difficultie appeased and satisfied about it This is all that which passed in Ireland which I was willing to follow with a continued declaration to the end that the order of the History might not be interrupted though many things passed amongst them which I should haue remembred before if I had followed the order of the time Vpon the beginning of this yeere the ornaments of the head which exceeded in dressings and Clokes which came downe almost to the heeles no lesse seemly than of great expence were reformed by a Statute and Swords reduced to three-foot length Poniards to twelue inches from the hilt and Target-Pikes to two And forasmuch as the City and Suburbs of London were so increased in buildings by reason of the multitude of people which flowed thither from all parts so