Selected quad for the lemma: country_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
country_n call_v chief_a river_n 2,359 5 7.2429 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

is called Cambro-Britannia that is Welsh Britanny and Scotland possest by the Scots is in like manner called Scoto-Britannia that is Scotch-Britanny which now together with England since the Union of the two Kingdoms goes under the name of Great Britain In the Author's PREFACE The Guardian of my Threshold So Limentinus among the Romans was the God of the Threshold qui limentis i. e. liminibus praeest but it may be taken for the Officer of the Gate the Porter who gives admission to strangers In a different Character Accordingly in the Latin the Author's Citations are printed in Italick which because they are so frequent I thought fit rather to notifie by a distinction as usual in the Margin thus Intercidona Pilumnus Deverra These were Heathen Deities to whom they attributed the Care of their Children whom else they thought Silvanus might like Oberon King of the Fairies surprize or do some other mischief to In the FIRST BOOK CHAP. 1. Pag. 2. lin 23. Among the Celts and Gauls Who are reckoned for one and the same people as for instance those Gauls who removed into the Lesser Asia mixing with the Greeks were called Gallo-Graeci but by the Greeks were styled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whence by contraction I suppose 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 L. 41. Bellagines that is By-Laws From By that is a Village Town or City and Lagen which in Gothish is a Law so that it signifies such Laws as Corporations are govern'd by The Scots call them Burlaws that is Borough-Laws So that Bellagines is put for Bilagines or Burlagines This kind of Laws obtains in Courts Leet and Courts Baron and in other occasions where the people of the place make their own Laws CHAP. II. Pag. 4. l. 7. Adrastia Rhamnusia Nemesis Which is all but Nemesis the Goddess of Revenge called Adrastria from King Adrastus who first built her a Temple and Rhamnusia from Rhamnus a Village in the Athenian Territory where she was worshipped L. 42. Elohim that is Gods And so Judges are properly called according to the original notation of the word whose Root 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alah though in Hebrew it signifie to curse yet in the Arabick Language a descendent of the Hebrew it betokens to judge Thus 't is said in the Psalms God standeth in the Congregation of the Gods and I have said Ye are Gods c. L. 45. It subjoins to it the name of God To wit that Name of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 El which signifies a mighty God In this sense the Cedars of God are lofty stately Cedars and by Moses his being fair to God is meant that he was exceeding fair Pag. 5. lin 18. Not only Berecynthia but also Juno Cybele Why Cybele is the very same Goddess who was called Berecynthia from Berecynthus a Hill of Phrygia as also Cybelus was another where she was worshipped And she had several such Names given her from the places of her worship as Dindymene Pessinuntia Idaea Phrygia This then was a slip of our worthy Author's memory or his haste CHAP. III. Pag. 5. lin 34. Not by the number of dayes but of nights Thus in our common reckoning we say a Sennight that is seven nights septinoctium for what in Latin they say septimana seven mornings and a fortnight that is fourteen nights Again for Sundayes and Holy-dayes the Evening which concludes the fore-going day is said to be their Eve that is Evening And the Grecians agree with us in setting the night before the day in that they call the natural day which is the space of twenty four hours comprehending day and night 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Night-day not Day-night CHAP. IV. Pag. 6. lin 22. King Phranicus It is so ordinary a matter for Historians when they treat of things at great distance of time to devise Fables of their own or take them up from others that I doubt not but this Phranicus was designed to give name to France whereas it was so called from the Franks who came to plant there out of Franconia a Countrey of Germany called East-France L. 29. With Corinus one of the chief of his company From whom Cornwall had its name formerly called in Latin Corinia or Cornavia say some now Cornubia And possibly if that were so Corinium also or Cirencester a Town in Glocestershire and Corinus too the River Churne that runs by it owe their appellations to the same Noble person L. 31. New Troy that is London Called also Troynovant and the people about it called Trinobantes or Trinovantes from whom also the City it self was styled Augusta Trinobantum that is the Royal Seat of the New Trojans L. 40. King Belin. Who gave name to Billinsgate that is Belin's Gate as King Lud to Ludgate Pag. 8. lin 39. Eumerus Messenius Some such fabulous Writer as our Sir John Mandevil who tells us of People and Countreys that are no where to be found in the World CHAP. VI. Pag. 9. lin 19. In the time of Brennus and Belinus The first of these was General of the Gauls who were called Senones and going into Italy with them sackt Rome There he built the City Verona called by his Name Brennona as he had done Brennoburgum now Brandenburg in Germany From his prowess and famed Exploits it is supposed that the Britans or Welsh do to this day call a King Brennin Of the other viz. Belinus some mention hath been made already CHAP. VII Pag. 10. lin 24. Locrinus Camber and Albanactus From the first of these three Brethren to wit Locrinus it is said that the Welsh call England Lhoegr that falling to the eldest Sons share from the second Camber that a Welsh-man is named Cumra and the Countrey Cambria and from the third Albanactus that Scotland or at least good part of it retains the term of Albania a title still belonging to the King of Britain's second Brother the Duke of York Though for my part for this last name of Albanactus I am somewhat of opinion that it might be devised by some smattering Monk purposely in favour of the Trojan Story as much as to say in a mungrel word Alba 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 King of Alba a City of Italy built by one of Aeneas his Sons L. 29. Gavelkind From the Saxon gafel or gafol a Debt or Tribute and cyn or kynd the Kindred or Children or as Mr. Lambard gif eal cyn i. e. given to all who are next of Kin or as Vorstegan give all kind i. e. give to each Child his part An ancient custom of the Saxons whereby the Fathers Estate was equally divided amongst his Sons as it is still amongst the Daughters if there be no Sons It obtains still in several places especially in Kent by the concessions of the Conqueror Pag. 11. lin 22. The Laws of second Venus Not having Plato by me nor any other means to inform my self better I imagine that by the first Venus they mean the force of Lust and Beauty which doth so naturally
the whole Book p. 13 CHAP. X. The Druids reckoning of time An Age consists of thirty Years What Authors treat of the Druids Their Doctrines and Customs savour of Pythagoras and the Cabbalists They were the eldest Philosophers and Lawyers among the Gentiles Some odd Images of theirs in Stone in an Abby near Voitland described p. 15 CHAP. XI The Britans and Gauls had Laws and Customs much alike and whence that came Some things common to them both set down in relation to the breeding of their Children the Marrying of their Wives the Governing of their Families burning Women that killed their Husbands and burning some Servants with the dead Master for company Together with some Remarks of their publick Government p. 16 CHAP. XII Women admitted to publick debates A large commendation of the Sex together with a vindication of their fitness to govern against the Salick Law made out by several examples of most Nations p. 18 CHAP. XIII Their putting themselves under protection by going into great mens service Their Coins of money and their weighing of it Some sorts of flesh not lawful to be eaten by them p. 21 CHAP. XIV Community of Wives among the Britans used formerly by other Nations also Chalcondylas his mistake from our Civil Custom of Saluting A rÄ—buke of the foolish humour of Jealousie p. 22 CHAP. XV. An account of the British State under the Romans Claudius wins a Battel and returns to Rome in Triumph and leaves A. Plautius to order affairs A Colony is sent to Maldon in Essex and to several other places The nature of these Colonies out of Lipsius Julius Agricola's Government here in Vespasian's time p. 24 CHAP. XVI In Commodus his time King Lucy embraces the Christian Religion and desires Eleutherius then Pope to send him the Roman Laws In stead of Heathen Priests he makes three Arch-Bishops and twenty eight Bishops He endows the Churches and makes them Sanctuaries The manner of Government in Constantine's time where ends the Roman account p. 27 CHAP. XVII The Saxons are sent for in by Vortigern against the Scots and Picts who usurping the Government set up the Heptarchy The Angles Jutes Frisons all called Saxons An account of them and their Laws taken out of Adam of Bremen p. 29 CHAP. XVIII The Saxons division of their people into four ranks No person to marry out of his own rank What proportion to be observed in Marriages according to Policy Like to like the old Rule Now Matrimony is made a matter of money p. 30 CHAP. XIX The Saxons way of judging the Event of War with an Enemy Their manner of approving a proposal in Council by clattering their Arms. The Original of Hundred-Courts Their dubbing their Youth into Men. The priviledge of young Lads Nobly born The Morganheb or Wedding-dowry p. 32 CHAP. XX. Their severe punishments of Adultery by maiming some parts of the body The reason of it given by Bracton The like practised by Danes and Normans p. 33 CHAP. XXI The manner of Inheriting among them Of deadly Feuds Of Wergild or Head-money for Murder The Nature of Country-Tenures and Knights Fees p. 36 CHAP. XXII Since the return of Christianity into the Island King Ethelbert's Law against Sacriledge Thieves formerly amerced in Cattel A blot upon Theodred the Good Bishop of London for hanging Thieves The Country called Engelond by Order of King Egbert and why so called The Laws of King Ina Alfred Ethelred c. are still to be met with in Saxon. Those of Edward the Confessor and King Knute the Dane were put forth by Mr. Lambard in his Archaeonomia p. 37 CHAP. XXIII King Alfred divides England into Counties or Shires and into Hundreds and Tythings The Original of Decenna or Court-leet Friburg and Mainpast Forms of Law how People were to answer for those whom they had in Borgh or Mainpast p. 39 CHAP. XXIV King Alfred first appointed Sheriffs By Duns Scotus his advice he gave Order for the breeding up of Youth in Learning By the way what a Hide of Land is King Edgar's Law for Drinking Prelates investiture by the Kings Ring and Staff King Knute's Law against any English-man that should kill a Dane Hence Englescyre The manner of Subscribing and Sealing till Edward the Confessor's time King Harold's Law that no Welch-man should come on this side Offa's Dike with a weapon p. 41 CHAP. XXV The Royal Consorts great Priviledge of Granting Felons Estates forfeited to the King Estates granted by the King with three Exceptions of Expedition Bridge and Castle The Ceremony of the Kings presenting a Turf at the Altar of that Church to which he gave Land Such a Grant of King Ethelbald comprized in old Verse p. 43 THE CONTETNS BOOK II. CHAP. I. WIlliam the Conquerour's Title He bestows Lands upon his followers and brings Bishops and Abbots under Military service An account of the old English Laws called Merchenlage Danelage and Westsaxen-lage He is prevailed upon by the Barons to govern according to King Edward's Laws and at S. Albans takes his Oath so to do Yet some new Laws were added to those old ones p. 47 CHAP. II. The whole Country inrolled in Dooms-day Book Why that Book so called Robert of Glocester's Verses to prove it The Original of Charters and Seals from the Normans practised of old among the French Who among the Romans had the priviledge of using Rings to seal with and who not p. 51 CHAP. III. Other wayes of granting and conveying Estates by a Sword c. particularly by a Horn. Godwin's trick to get Boseham of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury Pleadings in French The French Language and Hand when came in fashion Coverfeu Laws against taking of Deer against Murder against Rape p. 54 CHAP. IV. Sheriffs and Juries were before this time The four Terms Judges to act without appeal Justices of Peace The Kings payments made at first in Provisions Afterwards changed into Mony which the Sheriff of each County was to pay in to the Exchequer The Constable of Dover and Warder of the Cinque Ports why made A disorder in Church-affairs Reformed p. 56 CHAP. V. William Rufus succeeds Annats now paid to the King Why claimed by the Pope No one to go out of the Land without leave Hunting of Deer made Felony p. 59 CHAP. VI. Henry the First why called Beauclerk His Letters of Repeal An Order for the Relief of Lands What a Hereot was Of the Marriage of the Kings Homagers Daughter c. Of an Orphans Marriage Of the Widows Dowry Of other Homagers the like Coynage-money remitted Of the disposal of Estates The Goods of those that dye Intestate now and long since in the Churches Jurisdiction as also the business of Wills Of Forfeitures Of Misdemeanors Of Forests Of the Fee de Hauberk King Edward's Law restored p. 60 CHAP. VII His order for the restraint of his Courtiers What the punishment of Theft Coyners to lose their Hands and Privy members Guelding a kind of death What Half-pence and
salute and own him King He after he had built New Troy that is London gave Laws to his Citizens and Subjects those such as the Trojans had or a Copy of theirs A matter of Six hundred years after Dunvallo Molmutius being King ordained my Authors besides Jeoffry of Monmouth are Ralph of Chester in his Polychronicon and Florilegus that their Ploughs Temples and Roads that led to Cities should have the priviledge to be places of refuge But because some time after there arose a difference concerning the Roads or High-wayes they being not distinguished by certain Limits and Bounds King Belin Son of the foresaid Molmutius to remove all doubt caused to be made throughout the Island four Royal High-wayes to which that priviledge might belong to wit the Fosse or Dike Watlingstrete Ermingstrete and Ikeniltstrete But our Learned Countrey-man and the great Light of Britan William Camden Clarenceaux King at Arms is of opinion these Cause-wayes were cast up by the Romans a thing that Tacitus Bede and others do more than intimate Moreover so sayes Jeoffry he ordained those Laws which were called Molmutius his Laws which to this very time are so famed amongst the English Forasmuch as amongst other things which a long time after Gildas set down in writing he ordained that the Temples of the Gods and that Cities should have that respect and veneration that whatsoever runagate Servant or guilty person should fly to them for refuge he should have pardon in the presence of his enemy or prosecutor He ordained also That the Wayes or Roads which led to the aforesaid Temples and Cities as also the Ploughs of Husbandmen should be confirmed by the same Law Afterwards having reigned Forty years in peace he dyed and was buried in the City of London then called Troynovant near the Temple of Concord by which Temple there are not wanting those who understand that Illustrious Colledge on the Bank of Thames consecrated to the Study of our Common Law now called the Temple and which he himself had built for the confirmation of his Laws At this rate Jeoffry tells the story but behold also those things which Polydore Virgil hath gathered out of ancient Writers whereof he wanted no store He first used a Golden Crown appointed Weights and Measures for selling and buying of things punisht Thieves and all mischievous sorts of men with the greatest severity made a great many High wayes and gave order how broad they should be and ordained by Law that the right of those Wayes belonged only to the Prince and set dreadful Penalties upon their heads who should violate that right alike as upon theirs who should commit any misdemeanour in those wayes Moreover that the Land might not lye barren nor the people be frequently oppressed or lessened through Dearth or want of Corn if Cattle alone should possess the Fields which ought to be tilled by men he appointed how many Ploughs every County should have and set a penalty upon them by whose means that number should be diminished And he made a Law That Labouring Beasts which attended the Plough should not be distrained by Officers nor assigned over to Creditors for money that was owing if the Debtor had any other Goods left Thus much Polydore CHAP. V. A brief Account of Q. Regent Martia and of Merchenlage whether so called from her or from the Mercians Annius again censured for a Forger and his Berosus for a Fabulous Writer THe Female Government of Martia Widow to King Quintiline who had undertaken the Tuition of Sisillius Son to them both he being not as yet fit for the Government by reason of his Nonage found out a Law which the Britons called the Martian Law This also among the rest I tell you but what Jeoffry of Monmouth tells me King Alfred translated which in the Saxon Tongue he called Merchenlage Whereas nevertheless in that most elaborate Work of Camden wherein he gives account of our Countrey Merchenlage is more appositely and fitly derived from the Mercians and they so called from the Saxon word Mearc that is a Limit Bound or Border These are the Stories which Writers have delivered to us concerning those times which were more ancient than the History of the Romans but such as are of suspected o● doubtful that I may not say of no credit at all Among the more Learned there is hardly any Critick who does not set down Annius in the list of Forgers And should one go to draw up the account of Times and to observe that difference which is so apparent in that Berosus of Viterbium from Sacred Scriptures and the Monuments of the Hebrews one would perhaps think that he were no more to be believed than another of the same name who from a perpendicular position of the wandring Stars to the Center of the World in the Sign of Cancer adventured to foretel that all things should be burnt and from a like Congress of them in Capricorn to say there would be an universal Deluge The story is in Seneca CHAP. VI. The story of Brutus canvast and taken to be a Poetick Fiction of the Bards Jeoffry of Monmouth's credit called in question Antiquaries at a loss in their judgements of these frivolous stories SOme have in like manner made enquiry concerning our British History and stumbled at it From hence we had Brutus Dunvallo and Queen Martia There are some both very Learned and very Judicious persons who suspect that that story is patched up out of Bards Songs and Poetick Fictions taken upon trust like Talmudical Traditions on purpose to raise the British name out of the Trojan ashes For though Antiquity as one has it is credited for a great witness yet however 't is a wonder that this Brutus who is reported to have killed his Father with an Arrow unluckily aimed and to have been fatal to his Mother at her very delivery of him for which reason Richard Vitus now after so many Ages makes his true name to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Mortal should be mentioned by none of the Romans a wonder I say that the Latin Writers should not be acquainted with the name of a Latin Prince who gave both Name and Government to Britany Did Euemerus Messenius alone ever since the World began sail to the Panchoans and the Triphyllians Indeed it is an ordinary thing for Poets to ingraft those whom they celebrate in their Poems into Noble Stocks and Illustrious Families and by the assistance of their Muses heightning every thing above the truth to feign and devise a great many stories And what else were the Bards as Athenaeus tells us out of Possidonius but Poets reciting mens praises in song How many things are there in that Fabulous Age which in Joseph Scaliger's account would more aptly be called the Heroick Age of the World I mean down from that much talked of Deluge of Pyrrha to the beginning of Iphitus his Olympiads how many idle stories are there mixt
one should be suspected of Larceny or Thest he might in his own Hundred or Ward being either condemned or giving security in some Manuscripts it is being acquitted he might either incur or avoid the deserved penalty William of Malmsbury adds to this that he that could not find security was afraid of the severity of the Laws and if any guilty person either before his giving security or after should make his escape all of that Hundred and Tything should incur the Kings fine Here we have the Original of Decenna or a Court-leet of Friburg and perhaps of Mainpast Which things though grown out of use in the present Age yet are very often mentioned not only in the Confessors Laws but also in Bracton and in other Records of our Law What Decenna was the word it self does almost shew And Ingulph makes out that is a Dousin or Courtleet Friburg or Borgh signifies a Surety for Fri is all one as free He who passes his word for anothers good behaviour or good a bearing and is become his security is said to have such a one in his Borgh Being ingaged upon this account to the Government to answer for him if he misbehave himself And hence it is that our people in the Country call those that live near them or as I may say at the next door Neighbours When yet those that would find out the reason why the people of Liege in the Low Countries are called Eburones do understand that Burgh which is the same as Borgh to stand for a Neighbour and this is plainly affirmed by Pontus Heuterus in other Originations of the like kind Manupastus is the same thing as a Family As if one would say fed by hand Just in the like sence Julius Pollux in Greek terms a Master of a Family Trophimos that is the feeder of it That the Rights of Friburg and Manupast were in use with the English some five or six Generations ago is manifest Curio a Priest is fined by Edward the third because there had been one of his Family a Murderer And the ancient Sheets concerning the Progress or Survey of Kent under Edward the second do give some light this way Ralph a Milner of Sandon and Roger a Boy of the said Ralph in Borgh of Twicham Critick whoever you are I would not have you to laugh at this home-spun Dialect came by night to the Mill of Harghes and then and there murdered William the Milner and carried away his Goods and Chattels and presently fled It is not known whither they are gone and the Jury mistrusts them the said Ralph and Roger concerning the death of the aforesaid William therefore let them be driven out and out-lawed They had no Chattels but the aforesaid Ralph was in Borgh of Simon Godwin of Twicham who at present has him not and therefore lies at mercy And Roger was not in Borgh but was of the Mainpast of Robert Arch-Bishop of Canterbury deceased there being no Engleshire presented the Verdit is the murder upon the Hundred The first discoverer of it and three Neighbours are since dead and Thomas Broks one of the Neighbours comes and is not mistrusted and the Villages of Wimesbugewelle and Egestoun did not come fully to the Coroners Inquest and are therefore at mercy And about the same time Solomon Rois of Ickham came to the House of Alice the Daughter of Dennis Whenes and beat her and struck her upon the Belly with a staff so that she dyed presently And the foresaid Solomon presently fled and the Jury mistrust him concerning the death aforesaid therefore let him be driven out and be outlawed He had no Chattels nor was he in Borgh because a Vagrant The Verdit the murder lies upon the Hundred c. And according to this form more such Instances But let it suffice to have hinted at these things adding out of Henry Bracton If out of Frank-pledge an Offender be received in any Village the Village shall be at mercy unless he that fled be such an one that he ought not to be in Leet and Frank-pledge as Nobles Knights and their Parents their eldest Sons it is in the yearly Records of Law in Edward the first 's time and we may take in Daughters too a Clergy-man a Freeman I fear this word has crept in and the like according to the custom of the Country and in which case he of whose Family and Mainpast they were shall be bound in some parts and shall answer for them unless the custom of the Country be otherways that he ought not to answer for his Mainpast as it is in the County of Hertford where a man does not answer for his Mainpast for any offence unless he return after Felony or he receive him after the offence committed as in the Circuit of M. de Pateshull in the County of Hertford in such a year of King Henry the fifth In sooth these usages do partly remain in our Tythings and Hundreds not at all hitherto repealed or worn out of fashion CHAP. XXIV King Alfred first appointed Sheriffs By Duns Scotus his advice he gave Order for the breeding up of Youth in Learning By the way what a Hide of Land is King Edgar's Law for Drinking Prelates investiture by the Kings Ring and Staff King Knute's Law against any English-man that should kill a Dane Hence Englescyre The manner of Subscribing and Sealing till Edward the Confessor's time King Harald's Law that no Welch-man should come on this side Offa's Dike with a weapon 36. THe Governors of Provinces who before were styled Deputy-Lieutenants we return to Ingulph and King Alfred He divided into two Offices that is into Judges whom we now call Justices and into Sheriffs who do still retain the same name Away then with Polydore Virgil who fetches the first Sheriffs from the Norman Conqueror 37. John Scot Erigena advised the King that he would have his Subjects instructed in good Letters and that to that end he would by his Edict take care of that which might be for the benefit of Learning Whereupon he gave strict order to all Freemen of the whole Kingdom who did at least possess two Hides of Land that they should hold and keep their Children till the time of fifteen years of their Age to learning and should in the mean time diligently instruct them to know God A Hide of Land that I may note it once for all and a Plough-Land that is as much Land as can be well turned up and tilled with one Plough every year are read as synonymous terms of the same sence in Huntingdon Matthew Paris Thomas Walsingham and expresly in a very old Charter of Dunstan Although some take a Hide for an hundred Acres and others otherwise do thou if thou hadst rather so do fansie it to be as much ground as one can compass about with a Bull-hide cut into Thongs as Queen Dido did at Carthage There are some who are not unwilling
he would hearken to them and grant that they might continue under their own Countrey Laws Whereupon calling a Council he did at the last yield to the request of the Barons From that day forward therefore the Laws of King Edward which had before been made and appointed by his Grand-father Adgar seeing their authority were before the rest of the Laws of the Countrey respected confirmed and observed all over England But what then Doth it follow that all things in William's time were new How can a man chuse but believe it The Abbot of Crowland sayes this of it I have brought with me from London into my Monastery the Laws of the most Righteous King Edward which my Renowned Lord King William hath by Proclamation ordered under most grievous penalties to be authentick and perpetual to be kept inviolably throughout the whole Kingdom of England and hath recommended them to his Justices in the same language wherein they were at first set forth and published And in the Life of Fretherick Abbot of S. Albans you have this account After many debates Arch-Bishop Lanfrank being then present at Berkhamstead in Hartfordshire the King did for the good of peace take his Oath upon all the Reliques of the Church of S. Alban and by touching the holy Gospels Fretherick the Abbot administring the Oath that he would inviolably observe the good and approved ancient Laws of the Kingdom which the holy and pious Kings of England his Predecessors and especially King Edward had appointed But you will much more wonder at that passage of William le Rouille of Alençon in his Preface to the Norman Customs That vulgar Chronicle saith he which is intitled the Chronicle of Chronicles bears witness that S. Edward King of England was the Maker or Founder of this Custom where he speaks of William the Bastard Duke of Normandy alias King of England saying that whereas the foresaid S. Edward had no Heirs of his own Body he made William Heir of the Kingdom who after the Defeat and Death of Harald the Usurper of the Kingdom did freely obtain and enjoy the Kingdom upon this condition to wit that he would keep the Laws which had before been made by the fore-mentioned Edward which Edward truly had also given Laws to the Normans as having been a long time also brought up himself in Normandy Where then I pray you is the making of new Laws Why without doubt according to Tilbury we are to think that together with the ratifying of old Laws there was mingled the making of some new ones and in this case one may say truly with the Poet in his Panegyrick Firmatur senium Juris priscamque resumunt Canitiem leges emendanturque vetustae Acceduntque novae which in English speaks to this sense The Laws old age stands firm by Royal care Statutes resume their ancient gray hair Old ones are mended with a fresh repair And for supply some new ones added are See here we impart unto thee Reader these new Laws with other things which thou maist justly look for at my hands in this place CHAP. II. The whole Country inrolled in Dooms-day Book Why that Book so called Robert of Glocester's Verses to prove it The Original of Charters and Seals from the Normans practised of old among the French Who among the Romans had the priviledge of using Rings to seal with and who not 1. HE caused all England to be described and inrolled a whole company of Monks are of equal authority in this business but we make use of Florentius of Worcester for our witness at this time how much Land every one of his Barons was possessed of how many Soldiers in fee how many Ploughs how many Villains how many living Creatures or Cattel I and how much ready mony every one was Master of throughout all his Kingdom from the greatest to the least and how much Revenue or Rent every Possession or Estate was able to yield That breviary or Present State of the Kingdom being lodged in the Archives for the generality of it containing intirely all the Tenements or Tenures of the whole Country or Land was called Dooms-day as if one would say The day of Doom or Judgment For this reason saith he of Tilbury we call the same Dooms-day Book Not that there is in it sentence given concerning any doubtful cases proposed but because it is not lawful upon any account to depart from the Doom or Judgment aforesaid Reader If it will not make thy nice Stomach wamble let me bring in here an old fashioned Rhyme which will hardly go down with our dainty finical Verse-wrights of an historical Poet Robert of Glocester One whom for his Antiquity I must not slight concerning this Book The K. W. vor to wite the worth of his londe Let enqueri streitliche thoru al Engelonde Hou moni plou lond and hou moni hiden also Were in everich sire and wat hii were wurth yereto And the rents of each toun and of the waters echone That wurth and of woods eke that there ne bileved none But that he wist wat hii were wurth of al Engelonde And wite al clene that wurth thereof ich understond And let it write clene inou and that scrit dude iwis In the Tresorie at Westminster there it yut is So that vre Kings suth when hii ransome toke And redy wat folc might give hii fond there in yor boke Considering how the English Language is every day more and more refined this is but a rude piece and looks scurvily enough But yet let us not be unmindful neither that even the fine trim artifices of our quaint Masters of Expression will themselves perhaps one day in future Ages that shall be more critical run the same risk of censure and undergo the like misfortune And that Multa renascentur quae nunc cecidere cadentque Quae nunc sunt in honore As Horace the Poet born at Venusium tells us That is Several words which now are fal'n full low Shall up again to place of Honour start And words that now in great esteem I trow Are held shall shortly with their honour part 2. The Normans called their Writings given under their hand Charters I speak this out of Ingulph and they ordered the confirmation of such Charters with an impression of Wax by every ones particular Seal under the Testimony and Subscription of three or four Witnesses standing by But Edward the Confessor had also his Seal though that too from Normandy For in his time as the same Writer saith Many of the English began to let slip and lay aside the English Fashions bringing in those of the Normans in their stead and in many things to follow the customs of the Franks all great persons to speak the French Tongue in their Courts looking upon it as a great piece of gentility to make their Charters and Writings alamode of France and to be ashamed of their own Country usages in these
altered being taken for the best Chattle that the Tenant hath at the hour of his death due to the Lord by custom be it Horse Ox c. That Hereot and Relief do not signifie the same thing appears by this that they are both often sound to be paid out of one and the same Tenure and again that the heir alway succeeds into the Estate upon the payment of the Relief but not alwayes upon the payment of the Hereot Lin. 42. In French is called a Relief From the Verb Relever to raise again and take up the Estate which had faln into the Lords hand by the death of the Ancestor It is a summ of money which the new Homager when he is come to age payes to the Lord for his admission or at his entrance into the estate Whence by the old Civilians 't is called Introitus and in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This summ was moderately set wherein it differed from Ransom which was much more severe The Kings rates upon his Homagers were thus An Earls heir was to give an hundred Pounds a Barons an hundred Marks a Knights an hundred Shillings at most and those of lesser estate less according to the ancient custom of their Tenures as Spelman quotes it out of the Charter of Henry the Third Pag. 61. lin 11. Of the greater Uavasors They were a sort of Gentlemen next in degree to the Barons They did not hold immediately of the King but of some Duke Marquess or Earl And those that held from them again were called Valvasini or the lesser Vavasors There is little certainty what their Offices or Priviledges were or indeed whence they were so called whether qu. ad valvas stantes or valvae assidentes for their sitting or standing at their Lords door if those of that quality did so as some would have it or that they kept the doors or entrances of the Kingdom against the enemies as Spelman sayes or whether from Vassal●i as the Feudists derive the name from that inferiour Tenure they had mediately from the King by his great Lords which seems the more likely because these greater Vavasors who did so hold are sometimes termed Valvasores regii and Vassi dominici that is the Kings Vassals Lin. 27. Her Dowry and right of Marriage In the Latin it is dotem suam maritagium Now Dos is otherwise taken in the English than in the Roman Laws not for that which the man receives with his Wife at marriage a Portion but for that which the Woman hath left her by her Husband at his death a Dowry And Maritagium is that which is given to a Man with his Wife so that 't is the same as Dos among the Romans saith Spelman But this is too general I think that the man should be obliged to return at his death all to his Wife that he had with her beside leaving her a Dowry I am therefore rather inclined to Cowell who tells us Maritagium signifies Land bestowed in marriage which it seems by this Law was to return to the Wife if her Husband dyed before her The word hath another sense also which doth not belong to this place being sometime taken for that which Wards were to pay to the Lord for his leave and consent that they might marry themselves which if they did against his consent it was called Forfeiture of marriage Lin. 35. The common Duty of Money or Coinage So I render the word Monetagium For it appears that in ancient times the Kings of England had Mints in most of the Countreys and Cities of this Realm See Cowell in the word Moniers For which priviledge 't is likely they paid some duty to the chief place of the Mint Thus in Doom●sday we read as Spelman quotes it that in the City Winecestre every Monyer paid twenty shillings to London and the reason given pro cuneis monetae accipiendis for having Stamps or Coins of Money For from this Latin word Cuneus which our Lawyers have turned into Cuna from whence the Verb Cunare comes our English word Coyn. Now it is more than probable that the Officers of the Chief Mint might by their exactions upon the inferiour Mints give occasion for the making of this Law Lin. 42. Or Children or Parents By Parent here we are to understand not a Father or Mother but a Cousin one a-kin as the word signifies in French and as it is used in our Laws And indeed the Latin word it self began to have that sense put upon it in vulgar speech toward the declension of the Empire as Lampridius informs us Pag. 62. lin 21. A pawn in the scarcity of his money That is if he were not able to pay his forfeit in specie i. e. to lay down the money he was to give security by a pawn of some of his Goods or Chattels See Cowell in the word Gage This in Latin is called Vadium a pawn or pledge from Vas vadis a surety Hence Invadiare to pawn or ingage a thing by way of security till a debt be paid Lin. 23. Nor shall he make amends From the French amende in our Law-Latin emenda which differs from a Fine or mulct in this that the Fine was given to the Judge but Amends was to be made to the Party aggriev'd Now there were three sorts of this Amende the Greater which was like a full Forfeiture the Mid-one at reasonable terms and the Least or Lowest which was like a gentle Amercement This distinction will help to explain the meaning of this Law L. 30. Per fée de Hauberke This in Latin is called Feudum Hauberticum i. e. Loricatum sayes Hotoman from the French word Haubert that is a Coat of Mail when a Vassal holds Land of the Lord on this condition that when he is called he be ready to attend his Lord with a Coat of Mail or compleat Armour on Now Haubert as Spelman tells us properly signifies a High Lord or Baron from Haut or hault high and Ber the same as Baro a Man or Baron And because these great Lords were obliged by their place and service to wait upon the King in his Wars on Horse-back with compleat Armour and particularly with a Coat of Mail on hence it came sayes he that the Coat of Mail it self was also called Haubert though he doth afterward acknowledge that the word is extended to all other Vassals who are under that kind of Tenure But then at last he inclines to think that the true ancient writing of the word is Hauberk not Haubert as it were Hautberg i. e. the chief or principal piece of Armour and Berg he will have to signifie Armour as he makes out in some of its compounds Bainberg Armour for the Legs and Halsberg Armour for the Neck and Breast and derives it from the Saxon Beorgan i. e. to arm to defend Add to this saith he that the French themselves and we from them call it an Haubergeon as it were Haubergium Lin. 33. From
was his rescript and Juraque ab hâc terrâ caetera terra petet was Ovid's prophecy à nobis leges Romanas Caesaris vobis transmitti quibus in regno Britanniae uti voluistis Leges Romanas Caesaris enim nuper miseratione Divinâ in regno Britanniae fidem Christi habetis penes vos in regno utramque paginam Ex illis Dei gratiâ per concilium regni vestri sume legem per illam Dei patientiâ vestrum reges Britanniae regnum vicarius verò Dei estis in regno What the sequel hereof was thus only appears that after he had in lieu of the Archflamens at London York and Caer-leon constituted three Archbishops with twenty-eight Bishops in other places making large Gifts of Possessions to their Churches Ecclesias Matthew the Monk of Westminster speaks it cum suis coemeteriis if we may believe that then there were with us Church-Yards for Burials ita constituit esse liberas ut quicunque malefactor ad illa confugeret illaesus ab omnibus remaneret with which the British Constitutions and Customs have here their last limit CHAP. III. The Saxon Customes and Laws except what is in Lambard's Archaeonomy during their Government until the Normans ITALY had at length so much to do in defence of her self that she could hardly afford help to others Gothick incursions grew so violent and dangerous the Picts and Scots were as troublesome to the Britains who desiring aid of the Romans were in their expectations frustrate To provide therefore some other way Vortigern being then King Martial Succour against the Neighbour violence of the Northern People of this Island was requested and obtained from Germany Thence hither issued Saxons Jutes some will have the old name Vites and Angles which differed more in name than Nation and are in good Authors but Synonymies of the same Countrey-people These in process of time contrary than the Britains first hoped established to themselves in divers parts of that we now call England several Kingdomes extruding Vortigern's posterity and their subjects into the Western parts where to this day they remain And how can we but conjecture that of particular Customes of Law-government in their own Countrey they made requisite use in this their part of the Island What those were until Christianity made some abolition may best be observed out of Tacitus de moribus Germanorum who relates divers of their Customes and Rites Religious But at inquisition of their Superstition we aim not their profane Laws being chiefly proposed for Collection I. Rex vel Princeps saith Tacitus speaking of some of them whose antique Reliques seem yet to continue in our Municipals prout aetas cuique prout nobilitas prout decus bellorum prout facundia est audiuntur authoritate suadendi magis quam jubendi potestate si displicuit sententia fremitu aspernantur sin placuit frameas of necessity you must here remember our Wapentakes concutiunt Honoratissimum assensûs genus est armis laudare II. Licet apud Concilium accusare quoque discrimen capitis intendere Distinctio poenarum ex delicto proditores transfugas arboribus suspendunt ignavos imbelles corpore Lipsius will have it torpore and shews great reason for it in love towards his own Countrey infames coeno ac palude injecta insuper crate mergunt Diversitas supplicii illuc respicit tanquam scelera ostendi oporteat dum puniuntur flagitia abscondi III. Levioribus delictis pro modo poenarune equorum pecorumque numero convicti multantur Pars mulctae Regi vel civitati pars ipsi qui vindicatur vel propinquis ejus exolvitur IV. Eliguntur in iis Conciliis Princeps qui jura per pagos vicosque reddunt Centeni singulis ex plebe Comites which observe to symbolize with our Hundreds consilium simul authoritas adsunt V. Nihil neque publicae neque privatae rei nisi armati agunt sed arma sumere non ante cuiquam moris quam civitas suffecturum probaverit Tum in ipso Concilio vel principum aliquis vel pater vel propinquus scuto frameäque Juvenem ornant Haec apud illos Toga hic primus here have you resemblance of our Knighting juventae honos ante hoc domus pars videntur mox Reipublicae VI. Insignis nobilitas aut magna patrum merita principis dignationem etiam adolescentulis assignant Note there the propagation of Gentry through true honour deserving vertue to whose memory is dedicated that worship which is oft-times bestowed on unworthy Posterity VII Dotem non uxor marito sed uxori maritus I might compare this to our most ancient and then common Dower al huis d'esglise offert VIII To their religious Rites in Marriage-knots he adjoyns the punishment of her which violates her chosen bed Accisis crinibus nudatam coram propinquis expellit domo maritus ac per omnem vicum verbere agit IX Publicatae pudicitiae understand it of unmarried Wenches nulla venia non formâ non aetate non opibus maritum invenerit X. Sororum filiis idem apud avunculum qui apud patrem honor XI Haeredes successoresque sui cuique liberi nullum testamentum si liberi non sunt proximus gradus in possessione fratres patrui avunculi neither until 32 H. 8. had we any Lands devisable except by special custome binding the Common-law XII Suscipere tam inimicitias seu patris seu propinqui our Northern deadly-feud offers it self here to be thought on quam amicitias necesse est Nec implacabiles durant Luitur enim etiam homicidium certo armentorum ac pecorum numero this interprets the were in the Saxon Laws of William Lambard recipitque satisfactionem universa Domus XIII Suam quisque Servus sedem suos penateis regit Frumenti modum dominus aut pecoris aut vestis ut colono injungit servus hactenus paret Divers others of their Manners and Customes hath the same Author but not any which except these recited I think may be fitly styled Law or constituted Order of that Nation But to be more particular Adam of Breme will tell us out of Einhard of the Saxons which gave chief denomination to such Germans as floated hither thus XIV Quatuor differentiis gens illa consistit Nobilium scilicet liberorum libertorumque atque servorum XV. Legibus firmatum ut nulla pars copulandis conjugiis propriae sortis terminos transferat sed Nobilis nobilem ducat uxorem liber liberam libertus conjungatur libertae servus Ancillae Si vero quispiam horum sibi non congruentem genere praestantiorem duxerit uxorem cum vitae suae damno componat XVI Ejus gentis cum quâ bellandum fuit this is by Tacitus in the same words repeated of the Germans quoquo modo interceptum cum electo popularium suorum patriis quemque armis committunt victoria hujus
Verses which Joseph Scaliger has rescued out of its rust and mouldiness has it Mars pater nostrae gentis tutela Quirine Et magno positus Caesar uterque polo Cernitis ignotos Latiâ sub Lege Britannos c. that is in English Sire Mars and Guardian of our State Quirinus hight after thy fate And Caesars both plac'd near the Pole With your bright Stars ye do behold And th' unknown Britans aw T' observe the Roman Law The stately Seraglio or Building for the Emperours Women at Venta Belgarum a City at this day called Winchester and other things of that kind I let pass In the time of the Emperours Vespasian Titus and Domitian Julius Agricola Tacitus his Wives Father was Lord Deputy Lieutenant here He encouraged the Barbarous people to Civil fashions insomuch that they took the Roman habit for an honour and almost every body wore a Gown and as Juvenal has it in his Satyr Gallia Causidicos docuit facunda Britannos The British Lawyers learnt of yore From the well-spoken French their lore T'imply hereafter we should sée Our Laws themselves in French would be CHAP. XVI In Commodus his time King Lucy embraces the Christian Religion and desires Eleutherius then Pope to send him the Roman Laws In stead of Heathen Priests he makes three Arch-Bishops and twenty eight Bishops He endows the Churches and makes them Sanctuaries The manner of Government in Constantine's time where ends the Roman account IN Commodus the Emperours time the Light of the Gospel shone afresh upon the Britans Lucius the first King of the Christians for the Romans as in other places so in Britany made use of even Kings for their instruments of slavery by the procurement of Fugatius and Damianus did happily receive from Pope Eleutherius the Seal of Regeneration that is Baptism and the Sacred Laws of eternal salvation He had a mind also to have the Civil Laws thence and desired them too Ovid long since had so prophesied of Rome Juráque ab hâc terrâ caetera terra petet that is And from this Countrey every other Land Their Laws shall fetch and be at her command Now Eleutherius wrote him this answer You have desired of us that the Roman and Caesarean Laws may be sent over to you that you may as you desire use them in your Kingdom of Britanny The Roman and Caesarean Laws we may at all times disprove of but by no means the Law of God For you have lately through Divine mercy taken upon you in the Kingdom of Britanny the Law and Faith of Christ you have with you in the Kingdom both pages of Holy Writ to wit the Old and New Testament Out of them in the name and by the favour of God with the advice of your Kingdom take your Law and by it through Gods permission you may govern your Kingdom of Britanny Now you for your part are Gods Vicegerent in your Kingdom Howsoever by injury of time the memory of this great and Illustrious Prince King Lucy hath been imbezill'd and smuggled this upon the credit of the ancient Writers appears plainly that the pitiful fopperies of the Pagans and the Worship of their Idol-Devils did begin to flag and within a short time would have given place to the Worship of the true God and that Three Arch-Flamens and Twenty Eight Flamens i. e. Arch-Priests being driven out there were as many Arch-Bishops and Bishops put into their rooms the Seats of the Arch-Bishops were at London at York and at Caerleon in Wales to whom as also to other Religious persons the King granted Possessions and Territories in abundance and confirmed his Grants by Charters and Patents But he ordered the Churches as he of Monmouth and Florilegus tell us to be so free that whatsoever Malefactor should fly thither for refuge there he might abide secure and no body hurt him In the time of Constantine the Emperour whose Pedigree most people do refer to the British and Royal Blood the Lord President of France was Governour of Britanny He together with the rest those of Illyricum or Slavonia of the East and of Italy were appointed by the Emperour In his time the Lord Deputy of Britanny whose Blazonry was a Book shut with a green Cover was honoured with the Title of Spectabilis There were also under him two Magistrates of Consular Dignity and three Chief Justices according to the division of the Province into five parts who heard and determined Civil and Criminal Causes And here I set up my last Pillar concerning the Britans and the Roman Laws in Britanny so far forth as those Writers which I have do supply me with matter CHAP. XVII The Saxons are sent for in by Vortigern against the Scots and Picts who usurping the Government set up the Heptarchy The Angles Jutes Frisons all called Saxons An account of them and their Laws taken out of Adam of Bremen AFterwards the Scots and Picts making incursions on the North and daily havock and waste of the Lands of the Provincials that is those who were under the Roman Government they send to desire of the Romans some Auxiliary Forces In the mean time Rome by a like misfortune was threatned with imminent danger by the fury of the Goths all Italy was in a fright in an uproar For the maintaining of whose liberty the Empire being then more than sinking was with all its united strength engaged and ready prepared So this way the Britans met with a disappointment Wherefore Vortigern who was Governour in Chief sent for supplies from the neighbouring Germans and invited them in But according to the Proverb Carpathius leporem He caught a Tartar for he had better have let them alone where they were Upon this account the Saxons the Angles the Jutes the Frieslanders arrive here in their Gally-Foists in the time of Theodosius the younger At length being taken with the sweetness of the soil a great number of their Countrey-men flocking over after them as there were at that time fatal flittings and shiftings of quarters all the World over and spurred on with the desire of the chief command and rule having struck up a League with the Picts they raise a sad and lamentable War against their new entertainers in whose service they had lately received pay and to make short in the end having turned the Britans out of their Ancestors Seats they advanced themselves into an Heptarchy of England so called from them Albeit they pass by various names yet in very deed they were all of them none other but Saxons A name at that time of a large extent in Germany which was not as later Geographers make it bounded with the Rivers of the Elb of the Rhine and the Oder and with the Confines of Hessen and Duringen and with the Ocean but reached as far as into the Cimbrian Chersonesus now called Jutland It is most likely that those of them that dwelt by the Sea-side came over
by Ship into Britanny To wit at first Horsus and Hengistus came over out of Batavia or the Low Countreys with a great company of Saxons along with them after that out of Jutland the Jutes for Janus Douza proves that the Danes under that appellation seised our Shores in the very beginning of the Saxon Empire out of Angela according to Camden about Flemsburg a City of Sleswick came the Angles out of Friseland Procopius is my Author the Frizons One may without any wrong call them all Saxons unless Fabius Quaestor Aethelwerd also did his Nation injury by calling them so He flourished Six hundred and fifty years ago being the Grand-child or Nephew of King Aethelulph and in his own words discourses That there was also a people of the Saxons all along the Sea-coast from the River Rhine up to the City Donia which is now commonly called Denmark For it is not proper here to think of Denmark in the neighbouring Territories of Vtrecht and Amsterdam by reason of the narrowness of that tract Those few Observes then which Adam of Bremen hath copied out of Einhard concerning the Saxons forasmuch as our Ancient Saxons I suppose are concerned in them I here set down in this manner and order CHAP. XVIII The Saxons division of their people into four ranks No person to marry out of his own rank What proportion to be observed in Marriages according to Policy Like to like the old Rule Now Matrimony is made a matter of money 23. THe whole Nation consists of four different degrees or ranks of men to wit of Nobles of Free-men born of Free-men made so and of Servants or Slaves And Nithard speaking of his own time has divided them into Ethelings that is Nobles Frilings that is Free-men and Lazzos that is Servants or Slaves It was enacted by Laws That no rank in cases of Matrimony do pass the bounds of their own quality but that a Noble-man marry a Noble-woman a Free-man take a Free-woman a Bond-man made Free be joyned to a Bond-woman of the same condition and a Man-servant match with a Maid-servant And thus in the Laws of Henry Duke of Saxony Emperour Elect concerning Justs and Tournaments When any Noble-man had taken a Citizen or Countrey-woman to Wife he was forbid the exercise of that sport to the third Generation as Sebastian Munster relates it The Twelve Tables also forbad the marriage of the Patricii or Nobles with the Plebeians or Commons which was afterwards voided and nulled by a Law which Canuleius made when he was Tribune of the people For both Politicians and Lawyers are of opinion That in marriages we should make use of not an Arithmetical proportion which consists of equals nor of a Geometrical one which is made up of likes but of a Musical one which proceeds from unlike notes agreeing together in sound Let a Noble-man that is decayed in his estate marry a Commoner with a good fortune if he be rich and wealthy let him take one without a fortune and thus let Love which was begot betwixt Wealth and Poverty suite this unlikeness of conditions into a sweet harmony and thus this disagreeing agreement will be fit for procreation and breed For he had need have a good portion of his own and be nearer to Crassus than Irus in his fortunes who by reason of the many inconveniencies and intolerable charges of Women which bring great Dowries doth with Megadorus in Plautus court a Wife without a Portion according to that which Martial sayes to Priscus Vxorem quare locupletem ducere nolim Quaeritis Vxori nubere nolo meae Inferior Matrona suo sit Prisce Marito Non aliter fiunt foemina virque pares Which at a looser rate of Translation take thus Should I a Wife with a great fortune wed You 'l say I should be swéetly brought to bed Such fortune will my Liberty undo Who brings Estate will wear the Bréeches too Unhappy match where e're the potent Bride Hath the advantage wholly on her side Blest pairs when the Men sway the Women truckle There 's good agréement as 'twixt Thong and Buckle And according to that of the Greek Poet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Take if you 'l be rul'd by me A Wife of your own degrée But there is little of our Age fashioned to the model of this sense Height of Birth Vertue Beauty and whatsoever there was in Pandorae of Good and Fair do too too often give place to Wealth and that I may use the Comedians word to a Purse crammed with Money And as the merry Greek Poet sayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To be Noble or high-born Is no argument for Love Good Parts of Bréeding lye forlorn 'T is Money only they approve I come back now to my friend Adam CHAP. XIX The Saxons way of judging the Event of War with an Enemy Their manner of approving a proposal in Council by clattering their Arms. The Original of Hundred-Courts Their dubbing their Youth into Men. The priviledge of young Lads Nobly born The Morganheb or Wedding-dowry 24. THey take a Prisoner of that Nation with which they are to have a War by what way soever they can catch him and chose out one of their own Countrey-men and putting on each of them the Arms of their own Countrey make them two fight together and judge of the Victory according as the one or the other of them shall overcome This very thing also Tacitus himself hath to whom Einhard sends his Reader For though he treat in general of the Germans yet nevertheless without any question our Saxons brought over along with them into this Island very many of those things which are delivered to us by those who have wrote concerning the Customs of the Germans Among which take these following 25. In Councils or publick Assemblies the King or Prince i.e. a chief person according as every ones Age is according to his Nobility according to his Reputation in Arms according to his Eloquence has audience given him where they use the authority of perswading rather than the power of commanding If they dislike what he sayes they disapprove it with a Hum and a rude noise If they like the proposal they shake and rustle their Spears or Partisans together It is the most honourable kind of assent to commend the Speaker with the clattering of their Arms. From hence perhaps arose the ancient right of Wapentakes 26. There are also chosen at the same Councils or Meetings chief persons as Justices to administer Law in the several Villages and Hamlets Each of those have a hundred Associates out of the Commonalty for their Counsel and Authority This is plainly the pourtraict of our Hundreds which we still have throughout the Counties of England 27. They do nothing of publick or private affair but with their Arms on but it is not the custom for any