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A43598 The life of Merlin, sirnamed Ambrosius his prophesies and predictions interpreted, and their truth made good by our English Annalls : being a chronographicall history of all the kings, and memorable passages of this kingdome, from Brute to the reigne of our royall soveraigne King Charles ...; Life of Merlin, sirnamed Ambrosius Heywood, Thomas, d. 1641. 1641 (1641) Wing H1786; ESTC R10961 228,705 472

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Monkes severally and either of them outbid the other the King casting his eye upon the third who came as their servant thinking his businesse had been to the same purpose demanded of him if hee would give more then his brethren had proffered who answered him againe that he would neither offer nor give to the value of one penny neither would he take any such charge upon him which came unlawfully by symony whose words when the King had duly considered he said that he of the three was best worthy to take so holy a charge upon him and gave it him freely Duke Robert being at this time in the holy Henry usurpeth the crown Wars the yongest brother Henry third son to the Conquerour and first of that name began his Reigne the fift day of August in the yeere of our Lord eleven hundred and one and this was he whom Merlin cals Leo Iustitiae the Lion ●…f Iustice who banisht from his Court all flattering and effeminate Sycophants he was also abstinent and abhorring gormondizing and the excesse of Feasts hee was further well studied in the seven Liberall Arts and used to fight more with counsaile then the sword and yet upon just occasion hee would shew himselfe as valiant as he proved fortunate In the second yeere of whose Reigne Robert his brother being there imployed in the Wars of Palaestine against the Miscreants and Infidels receiving newes that his brother William was dead and that his brother Henry had usurped Duke Robe●…t offered to bee made King of Ierusalem the Crown of England notwithstanding that the Christian Princes offered to make him King of Ierusalem yet he refused that honour but with great speed returned into Normandie and there raised forces to claime his right unto the Crown of England and landed at Portsmouth but a mediation of peace was made betwixt them and that hee should have the same yeerly revenue of three thousand Marks which he had in the days of King William with which he returned fully satisfied at which his Lords and Peeres were much discontented as also for other things which in his easie nature hee had yielded to both against his honour and profit Duke Robert neglected by his Peeres for which he was by them lesse regarded and in the end quite neglected This Robert in his Fathers days was in all his enterprizes victorious and after did many brave exployts at the siege of Acan against the Turks and as is before said was by the great suffrage of the Christian Hoast chosen King of Ierusalem but whether hee thought it to be an honour with too much trouble or for the covetousnesse of the Crowne of England hee made refusall thereof for which it hath beene thought that hee sped the worse in all his endevours after For a dissention fell betwixt him and his Nobles so that they sent to King Henry his brother that if hee would come over into Normandy they would deliver up the whole Country into his hands and acknowledge him their sole Lord and Governour of which profer it is said Henry accepted but before any hostility was threatned Robert came into England to visit his brother and new sister for the King was lately married to Mawd the Duke Roberts easie and liberall disposition daughter of Malcolme King of Scotland at whose request he released to his brother the tribute of three thousand Marks by the yeere and so departed Notwithstanding which by the instigation of bad and wicked Counsellours this seeming brotherly love was quite abrogated and dissolved so that the King with a strong Army invaded Normandy and by reason that Roberts Peeres and Nobles fell from him hee chased him from place to place and won from him his Cities Cane Roan and Faloys with all other places defensible so that Robert was forced to defire aide of Philip the French King and after of the Earle of Flanders but they both failed him so that with those few forces which hee could make hee gave battaile to his brother in the which hee was surprized and taken prisoner and sent over into England and put Duke Robert taken pr●…soner by his b●…other into the Castle of Cardiffe in Wales where hee remayned his whole life time and being dead was buried at Glocester and thus hee who might have been King of Ierusalem and twice King of England had he taken the opportunity offered The Duchy of Duke Robert him died with no greater title then the bare Duke of Normandy Warres then grew betwixt the King of England and the French King in which they sped diversly but in the end Henry beat him in his own Country and had of him a glorious victory to the great terrour and astonishment of all the French Nation and those lesser Princes of his Confederacie making good that of the Prophet The Lion next of Iustice shall appeare Who 'gainst the Celticke Towers shall ladders reare And cause the Lily like the Aspen shake Whose rore shall all the Island Serpents quake By the Lily is meant the Flowre de Lyce which The Prophes●…e explained the French King beares in his Scutcheon which was said to quake like an Aspen whose leafe of all others is soonest moved with the winde by reason of the great affright and terrour hee put the French into at the noyse of his Drummes the thundring of his Horses hoofs and the lowdnesse of his warlike instruments About the twentieth yeere of this Kings Reigne when he had been three yeeres together in Normandy the King took shipping at Harflute a part of that Duchie the foure and twentieth day of November and arrived safe in England not many houres after And soon upon that his two sonnes William who was Duke of Normandy with Richard his brother with Notha the Countesse of Parsie Richard Earle of Chester with his wife the Kings Niece The Archdeacon of Hereford with Knights Gentlemen and others to the number of an hundred and forty persons These took shipping at the same Port to follow the King but in their passage the ship sunke under them and they were all drowned to one man saving a Butcher who reported that this disastrous misfortune fell The Kings two sonnes with many others drowned by the negligence of the Master and Saylers who in the night being at dissention amongst themselves ran the Vessell upon a Rocke and split her from which danger the young Duke William was escaped by getting into a boat neer the sh●…are but when hee heard the lamentable out-cry of the Countesse Notha hee commanded the Rowers to row back and if it were possible to save her life who having recovered her into the boat they were by a tempestuous gust so over-charged that it was violently overturned and they all swallowed in the Sea of which strange accident Merlin also prophesied in these words The Lions whelps their nature shall forsake Catuli Leonis in aequoreo pisces transformabuntur And upon them the shape
Navy upon the British Seas first with three hundred and sixty thousand souldiers who first invaded Ireland and made great spoyle of the Country and from thence hee was invited by the Saxons to assist them against the British Nation to which hee assenting invaded the Kingdome with fire and sword committing many direptions and outrages chasing the King from place to place and from Citie to Citie till hee was in the end forced to flie into Wales where they shut him up and by this means the German Worme by the means of this Sea-wolfe had the upper hand of the Red Dragon whilst these things were thus in agitation there came to this great Generall of the Africans from the transmarine parts of Gallia one Isimbardus Isimbardus the Nephew to Lewis the French King Nephew to Lewis the French King who complained unto him that his Uncle against all Iustice kept his right from him imploring his aid for the recovery therof promising him great rewards in pledge whereof like a wretched Apostata hee renounced his Faith and Christianitie of which proffer Gormundus accepted and made his speedy Expedition for France But the Miscreant Isimbardus failed of his purpose and was justly punisht by the hand of God for his Apostasie for at their landing in the Port of Saint Waleric a young Gentleman called Hugo sonne to Robert Earle of the Mount having received an affront from this Isimbard challenged him to a single Duell who entertaining the Challenge was by the foresaid King left dead in the field and the French setting A just reward of ●…postasie upon the Hoast of the Pagans gave them a great discomfiture in so much that of all that infinite number scarce any were left to beare the tydings of their disaster into their Country but either perisht by the sword or were drowned in the Ocean in which time saith the prophet Religion shall faile which hapned when The failing of Religion made good in Gormundus and the Saxons this Gormundus with the Saxons rioted and made havock in this Island suppressing Religious Houses and ruinating Churches so that scarce a Christian Native durst shew his head but he was subject to persecution and torture But it follows in the prophesie that the honour of Londons Clergie shall give place to Dorobernia or Canterbury that the Seventh who sate in the Eboracensian See which is the Archbishopricke of Yorke shall be compeld to flie into Armorica or Little Britaine and that Menevia shall be adorned with the Pall that belonged to the Citie of Legions give me leave to use a little circumstance in the explaining of these that finding the truth of his predictions by the successe the Reader may be more easily induced to give credit unto the rest in which I shall strive though plain to be much briefer The three prime Seats or Sees were the three The former Prophesie explained Archbishopricks which were London Yorke and the City of Legions now note how punctually he comes to the purpose the dignity of Londons Metropolitanship was transferd to Canterbury by Saint Augustine whom Pope Gregory sent hither with others to preach the Gospel who also gave the primacie of the City of Legions unto Menevia a Citty of Wales scituate neer to the Demeticall Sea but the Citty of Legions stands vpon the River Osca not far from the Severne Sea which was first erected by King Belinus whose valiant brother Brennus being Generall of the Senon Galls after many Honourable exployts and glorious Victories by him atcheived assaulted the famous Citty of Rome tooke sacked and spoyled it in the dayes of Ahashuerosh and Hester Gabinus and Porsenna being Consuls the first of whom hee slue in Battail and the other tooke Prisoner c. By the Arch-Bishop of York the seventh inaugurated Of Samson Archbishop of York and his six brothers into that See who should bee compeld to seek shelter in Little Britaine is intimated Samson then Resident who in that great persecution made by the Africans and the Saxons with six of his brothers all Clergiemen and of great sanctitie of life fled into the lesse Britaine and there establisht his Metropolitan Cathedrall The rest of his six brothers whose names were Melanius Matutus Maclovius Pabutaus Paternus The names of the Archbishop Samson's six brothers and Waslovius being all Divines were made the Rectors of other Churches and became in short time to be capable of Episcopall Dignities which seven Brothers not only the Natives of the Country but all the bordering Provinces call the seven Saints of Britain meaning the lesse Britaine even to this day now let it be held any deviation or digression from the subject now in hand if I borrow so much patience of the Reader to acquaint him with a strange and almost miraculous story or legend by what accident or rather Divine providence these seven holy and devout brothers were by the mutuall congresse of two Noble parents the Father and Mother begot and conceived in one wombe and after mature time of Teeming delivered into the World at one day but because I am loth to swell the pages of this Chapter beyond the limits of the former I will referre the relation thereof unto that next ensuing CHAP. 7. Of the conception and birth of these seven pious and religious Brothers and being sent to death how preserved educated and doctrinated with a continuance of Merlins Prophesies and their explanation THe Legend reports that their mother The like is reported by the Countesse Altorfence the Mother of the Guelfi in Italy being a Noble and chast Matron but in her feminine ignorance not acquainted with the accidents belonging to other women conceived a strange opinion from which she could not be removed that it was not possible for any of that sex to conceive more then one at once unlesse she had had the consociety of so many severall men as shee brought forth children in so much that she vilisied and disreputed holding all those no better then adulteresses and prostitutes who were delivered of Twins or a more numerous issue But the God of all flesh and the Creatour God the justifier of innocence of Nature being also the searcher of hearts and a justifier of innocence to convert this Lady from her erroneous beliefe and to cleere these unjust aspersions with which shee had branded other chast and fruitfull wombs so by his providence ordained that by her sole Lord and Husband she at one congression was conceived of seven sonnes and delivered of them at one time being within the compasse of one day Which shee seeing and much amazed at the prodigious novelty of such an unexpected issue and now favouring by a reciprocall retribution these accusations and suspicions which shee had so often cast upon other good women might be throwne upon herin a desperate way thereby thinking to salve her reputation which shee thought hazarded at last if not quite lost shee consulted with the midwife and one
that tenth putting them to cruel deaths as winding their guts out of their bellies with other torturing deaths then he caused the elder brothers eys to be pluckt out and sent to a religious house in Ely where hee dyed shortly after but the younger he preserv'd as an husband for his daughter and sent him to his mother Emma all which fulfils the former prophesie which saith And he an Hidra with seaven heads shall grace Glad to behold the ruine of his race And then upon the Neustrian blood shall pray By Neustria is understood Normandy And tithe them by the pole c. Emma not trusting the tyranny of Goodwin by whom she had left one son the better to secure the other shee sent him into Normandy but Edward after sirnamed the Co●…fessor made King Hardy Canutus beeing dead he was sent for over to receive his iust and lawfull inheritance so that this Edward the sonne of Egelredus and his last wife Emma began his Raigne over England in the yeare of Grace 1043. and was soon after maried to Goditha whom Guido calleth Editha the sole daughter of Earle Goodwin who as all Authors affirme lived with her without any carnall society whether it were in hatred of her kinred as by the greatnesse of her father compel'd to that match or for that he altogether devoted himselfe to chastity it is left uncertaine In the beginning of his Raigne his mother The Kings mother accused of adultery with Alwin Bishop of Winchester Emma was accused to have too much familiarity with the B. of Winchester therefore the King by the counsell of Earl Goodwin seised vpon many of her iewels and confined her to a strict keeping in the Abby of Worwell the Bishop Alwin was also under the Custody of the Clergy but shee more sorrowing for his defame then her owne wrote unto divers Bishops to doe their Iustice affirming she was ready to undergoe any triall whatsoever to give the World satisfaction of her innocence who laboured to the King that their cause might have a just and legall hearing but Robert Archbishop of Canterbury Robert Archbishop of Canterbury against the mother Queen not pleased with the motion said unto them My Brethren Bishops how dare ye plead for her who is a beast and no woman as by defaming the King and her sonne and yielding her selfe a prostitute to the incontinent Alwin proceeding further but if it be so that the woman would purge the Priest who shall then purge the woman who is accused to have been consenting to the death of her sonne Alfred and hath prepared infectious Drugs for the poysoning of her sonne Edward but be she guilty or no if shee will agree to goe bare foot upon nine plough-shares burning and fiery hot for her selfe foure shares and for the Bishop five he may be then cleered and she also To which shee granted and the day of her This 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chronicles of same for truth purgation assigned at which day the King in person with many of his Lords were present she was hoodwinkt and led to the place where the Irons lay glowing hot and having passed over the nine shares unhurt shee said Good God when shall I come to the place of my purgation When they opened her eyes and shee saw that she had past the torment without any sence of paine she kneeled downe and gave thanks to the protectour of chastity and innocence Then the King repented him of his credulitie restoring unto her what hee had before taken from her asking of her forgivenes and blessing But the Archbishop Robert who was once a Monke in Normandy and was sent for over by the King and first made Bishop of London and Emma acquit from the suspition of Incontinency after raised to be Metropolitan fled into his Countrey and was no more seene in England after After many insolencies committed against the King by Earle Goodwin and his sonnes too long to reherse they were forced to abandon Earle Goodwin and his sons flie the Land the Land and flie into Flanders to Earle Baldwin whose daughter Iudith Swanus his eldest sonne had married and then by a Parlament they were made Out-lawes and Rebels and their goods and Lands seized where they continued as exiles for the space of two yeeres during which time William the bastard Duke of Normandy came with a Noble Traine to visit the King his Cousin and were royally entertained returning with great gifts and presents into his Country after which Goodwin by intercession of his friends here in England was called home with his sonnes who were received into grace and restored to their former dignities and possessions giving for pledges of his fidelity his sonne Wilnotus and Hacun the sonne of Goodwin and his sons restored Swanus whom the King sent to William Duke of Normandy to be kept in safe custodie Not long after in the twelfth yeere of the Reigne of this Edward the Confessor upon an Easter Monday Goodwin sitting with other Lords at the Kings Table in the Castle of Winsor it hapned that the Kings Cupbearer stumbled but recovered himselfe of a fall at which the Earle laughed heartily and said there one brother helped the other meaning one leg had supported the other which the King observing said yea and so my brother Alphred might have lived to have helped and sustained me had it not bin for Earl Goodwin by which words the Earl apprehending that he upbraided him with his brothers death thinking to excuse himself of the Act said so may I safely swallow this morsell of bread that is in my hand as I am innocent of that deed in swallowing of which hee was choaked which the King seeing commanded him to be dragged from the board his bodie being Goodwins remarkable death conveighed to Winchester and there interred Macrinus saith that he was suddenly struck with a palsie of which hee died ●…hree days after howsoever hee underwent a most remarkable judgement His eldest sonne living who was Harold for Swanus died in his pilgrimage to Ierusalem had all his Fathers Dignities and Honours conferd upon him But in processe of time all those his Lands in Kent of which hee was Earle were eaten up and devoured by the Sea upon wh●…se dangerous shelves and quick-sands many thousands have beene wrackt and drowned and they are called Goodwins Sands unto this day which verifieth that part of the prophesie of the Hydra where he saith Burst shall he after gordg'd with humane blood And leave his name in part of the salt flood Harold having done many noble services for the King and the countrey in all which hee came off with great honour and victorie about the 20. yeere of King Edward hee sayled towards Normandy to visite his brother Wilnotus and his Nephew Hucun who lay there as pledges for the peace betwixt the King and Harold sayleth into Normandie Earle Goodwin buteither by the mistake of the unskilfull Pilot
slaine of men of note the Duke of Athenes the Duke of Burbon Sir Iohn Cleremont Marshall of France Sir Henry Camian Banneret who bore that day the Oriflambe a special relick that the French Kings used in all battailes to have borne before them the Bishop of Chabous with divers others to the number of fifty foure Bannerets Knights and others And of prisoners taken in that battaile were Iohn King of France Philip his fourth sonne Iohn King of France tooke prisoner Sir Iaques of Burbon Earle of Poitou and brother to the Duke of Burbon Sir Iohn of Artoys Earle of Ewe Sir Charles his brother Earle of Noble men took prisoners Longevile Sir Giffard Cousin German to the French King Sir Iohn his sonne and heire William Archbishop of Sence Sir Simon Melen brother to the Earle Canlarvive and Earle of Vandature The Earles of Dampmartin of Vendosme of Salisbruch of Moyson the Martiall Denham with others as Bannerets Knights and men of name according to their owne Writers fifteene hundred and above from which battaile escaped Charles eldest son of King Iohn and Duke of Normandy with the Duke of Anjoy and few others of name And King Edward after due thanks given to Almighty God for his Charles Duke of Normandy escapeth from the battaile triumphant victory retyred himselfe to Burdeaux with his Royall prisoners where the King and the rest were kept till Easter following In the one and thirtieth yeere of the King the sixteenth of April Prince Edward being eight and twenty yeeres of age tooke shipping with his prisoners at Burdeaux and the foure and twentieth of May was received with great joy by the Citizens of London and thence conveyed to the Kings palace at Westminster where the King sitting in his estate Royall in Westminster Hall after hee had indulgently entertained the Prince he was conveyed to his lodging and the French King royally conducted to the Savoy where he lay long after and in the Winter following were royall Iusts held in Smithfield at which were present the King of Three Kings present at the Iusts in Smithfield England the French King the Scotch King then prisoners with many noble persons of all the three Kingdoms the most part of the strangers being then prisoners Whilst K. Iohn remayned in England which was for the space of 4 yeers and odde days The king of England and the blacke Prince his son with their Armies over-run the greatest part of France during the time of Charles his Regency over the kingdome who was king Iohns eldest son against whom they had many memorable victories spoyling where they list and sparing what they pleased in so much that king Edward The Father and sonne victorious in ●…rance made his owne conditions ere any peace could be granted at length the king was delivered and royally conveyed into his country who so well approved of and liked his entertainment here that in the thirty seventh yeere of king Edward he returned into England and at Eltham besides Greenwich dined with the king and in the same afternoon was royally received by the Citizens and conveyed through London to the Savoy which was upon the twenty fourth of Ianuary but about the beginning of March following a grievous sicknesse tooke him of which he dyed the eight of Aprill following King Iohn dyeth at the Savoy whose body was after solemnly conveyedto St. Denis in France and there royally interred In the fortieth yeere of the king one Barthran de Cluicon a Norman with an Army of Frenchmen entred the land of Castile and warred upon Peter king of that Country and within foure moneths chaced him out of his kingdome and crowned Henry his bastard brother in his stead wherefore hee was constrained to flie to Burdeaux and to demand aide of Prince Edward who commiserating his case as being lawfull king howsoever of a tyrannous and bloudy disposition he granted his request so that hee assisted Peter with his English Archers against the bastard Henry with his French Spear-men whose two Armies m●…t neere unto a town called Doming where betwixt them was a l●…ng P. Edwards victoryia Spaine and cruell fight but in the end the victory fell to the Prince and Henry with his whole army were rowted In which battail were taken Barthran de Claicon and Arnold Dodenham Marshall of France with divers others as well French as Britons and Spaniards and slain to the number of five thousand of the enemies and of the princes Army sixteen hundred after which hee enstated Peter in his kingdome who after perfidiously denyed to pay the princes army For which he was after divinely punished as also for killing his owne wife the daughter to the Duke of Burbon for his Bastard brother Henry knowing how hee was justly abandoned by the English having gathered new forces gave him battaile in which being taken his brother commanded his head to be strooke off which was immediately done after which Iohn of The death of Don Peter Gaunt Duke of Lancaster the Kings sonne and Edward his brother Earle of Cambridge married the two daughters of this Peter late King of Castile Iohn espoused Constance the elder and Iohn a Gaunts title to Spain Edward Isabel the younger by which marriages the two brethren claimed to be inheritours to the Kingdome of Castile or Spaine In the one and fiftieth yeare of the King upon the eighth of Iune being Trinity Sonday dyed that renowned souldier Edward the black Prince in the palace of Westminster whose body The death of the blacke Prince was after carried to Canterbury and there solemnly interred who in his life time was much beloved both of the Commons and the whole kingdome especially for removing from the kings person all such as had misled him in his age by which the Common Weale was much oppressed amongst others was the Lord Latimer noted for principall and Alice Pierce the Kings Concubine with Sir Richard Skory Alice Pierce the Kings Con●…ine all which were according to the Commons just complaint by the Prince removed but hee was no sooner dead but the king contrary to his promise before made called them again admitting them to their former Offices and Honours and Alice his prostitute to his wonted grace and favour In the two and fiftieth yeer the two and twentieth day of Iune dyed at his Mannor of Sheen The death of K. Edward the third now called Richmond the royall and most victorious Prince king Edward the third of that name of whom it was truly predicted The spirits of many Lions shall conspire To make one by infusion so entire He by his mighty courage shall restore What his sire lost and grandsire wonne before As also that of the unparalleld blacke Prince his sonne who died before his Father A numerous issue shall his Lionesse bring Black shall the first be and though never King Yet shall he Kings captive but ere mature Die shall this brave Whelp of a
there lyes buried the foundation of which place was first laid by the Lord Gray Cotner but to carry our prediction along with the premisses to prove that they differ n●…t in the least circumstance Wales and the North against him both shal rise But he who still was politick and wise Shall quell their rage c. Wee read also of divers justs and marti●…ll exercises Divers turnaments justs performed in Smithfield betwixt Englishmen and strangers performed in Smithfield in the presence of the King the Nobility and Ladies in his sixt yeere the Lord Morif a Baron of Scotland challenged Edmund Earle of Kent in which the Earle bore himselfe so valiantly that to him was given the honour of the Turnament and in the tenth yeere came the Seneschall of Henalt with a brave company of his owne Countrimen and strangers to performe the like martiall exercises in the same place before the King Against the Seneschall himself ran the Earle of Somerset to whom was given the honour of the first day upon the second day came in a Knight Henalder as Challenger against whom rose as defendant Sir Richard Arondell who after certain courses run on horsback with their Lances they combated on foot with Axes where the Henalder had the better for he brought him on his knee the third day came a third challenger whom Sir Iohn Cornwayle encountred and put to the worst upon the fourth day appeared an Esquire Henalder and was met by Iohn Cheyney who at the second course overthrew his adversary The honour fals to the English horse and man for which the King instantly made him Knight on the fift day came a fift challenger him one Iohn Steward an Esquire opposed and came off with honour Against the sixt challenger came in a Gentleman called William Porter who so couragiously demeaned himselfe that there hee wonne his Knighthood Against the seventh Champion appeared Iohn Standish Esquire whom for his valour there shewne the King also Knighted a Gascoigne also demeaned himselfe so well against another stranger that he was also made knight upon the eight and last day came in two Henalders challengers against whom came two English Brothers who were of the Garrison at Calice betwixt whom was so long and so violent a bickering that they were commanded by the King to cease combat lest any of them who so well had fought might in the end have come off with disgrace Thus this challenge was finished to the great honour of the King who bountifully feasted the Strangers and with rich gifts sent them backe into their Countries In the eleventh yeere in a Parliament held at A bill put up into the Parliament house by the commons Westminster the Commons put up a Bill unto the King to take all the temporall lands out of the Clergy mens possessions the effect whereof was that the Temporalities disorderly wasted by the Churchmen which might suffice to find to the King fifteene Earles fifteene hundred The effect of the bill Knights six thousand two hundred Esquires and an 100 Almes houses to the reliefe of poore people more then were at that time in the land and besides all those that the King might put yearely into his coffers twenty thousand pound and of this by particulars they made manifest proofe to which bill no answer was made but that the King would take thereof further deliberation In his fourteenth yeer the King cald a Counsell at White Friers in which it was concluded that speedy provision should bee made for the The King prepares a voyage for the Holy Land Kings Voyage to visit the holy Sepulchre but after the Feast of Christmasse whilst hee was praying at Saint Edwards shrine to take there his leave and speed him upon his journey so grievous a sicknesse tooke him that they feared he would there have expired wherefore they bare him to the Abbots Palace and brought him into a chamber and laid him upon a pallat by the fire who when he came to himselfe asked what place he was in those that attended him told him that it belonged to the Abbot of Westminster and finding himselfe so extreamly sick he demanded if that chamber had any particular name they answered that it was called the Hierusalem who presently replyde then thanks be The King falls sick to the father of Heaven who hath thus greatly admonisht mee of mine end For now I know that I shall die in this chamber according to a prophesie long since spoke of mee which said I should die in Hierusalem which spoken and having made his peace with Heaven hee in the same place departed this life the twentieth The King died the twentieth of March. of March after hee had reigned fourteene yeers five moneths and one and twenty days still upholding the former prediction much trouble hee 'l indure And after when he thinks himselfe secure Hoping to wash the kids bloud from his hand Purpose a voyage to the Holy Land But faile yet in Hierusalem shall die Deluded by a doubtfull Augury This King left behind him foure sonnes Henry who was King after him Thomas Duke of Clarence Iohn Duke of Bedford and Humphrey Duke of Glocester and two Daughters the one Queen of Denmarke the other Duchesse of Bavaria or Barr His body was after conveyed by water from Westminster to Feversham in Kent and thence to Canterbury where he was royally interred CHAP. 25. The Coronation of Henry the fift A prophesie of his Reigne His victorious Battaile over the French at Agencourt His second Voyage into France His victories by Sea and Land He is made heire by the mariage of his wife to the Crowne of France His third Voyage into France The birth of Prince Henry The death of Henry the fift HEnry the fift of that name and sonne to Henry the Fourth began his Reigne the one and twentieth of March in the yeere of Grace one thousand foure hundred and The coronation of Henrie the fift twelve and in the ninth of Aprill following was crowned at Westminster this Prince before the death of his Father applyed himselfe to all irregularity associating himselfe onely with riotous and evilly disposed persons as Gamesters Drunkards Robbers by the high-way and the like but hee was no sooner admitted to the government of the Land but he suddenly became a new man changing his dissolute life into a discreet carriage his wildnesse to wisdome and his sensualitie into a wondrous sobriety who lest he should be reduced to his former riots he sent to all those vain fellows with whom he had been before familiar such competent gifts as might maintaine them in a fair and even course of life but with this proviso that not any of them should dare to come with in ten miles of his Court after a day by him assigned of whom and whose Reigne it was thus predicted Note a strange mixture in the planets seed A prophesi●… of his Reigne For now a Mercury
siege and one night whilst the Guardians thereof were asleep they undermined the earth and were likely to have wonne it but a noble Roman named Manlius Torquatus waking by the crie of Geese and Ganders prevented the Galls and saved the Capitoll For which cause the Romans for a long time after on the first day of Iune The feast of Ganders did annually celebrate the feast of Ganders But Brennus and his people held the Romans so short that they slew many of the Senators and compelled the survivers to lay him downe a thousand pound weight in Gold besides they took the spoyle of the City so that they were inforced to call backe Furius Camillus whom they had before most ungratefully banisht from Ardea and created him the second time Dictator who gave strong battaile to the Galls and won from them all the gold and jewells which they had taken from the Romans Therefore Bren ne●… his Army towards Greece entering Brennus inva deth Greece Macedonia and dividing his people into two hoasts the one he retained with himselfe and sent the other into Galatia which after was caled Gallograecia and lastly from Gallograecians the Nation were termed Galathians Then Bren conquered Macedonia and overcame their Duke or King Sosthenes and after spoyled the gods of their Temples and said in sport Rich gods ought to contribute towards men some part of their wealth Thence hee came to Delphos where the Oracle was and robbed the Temple of Apollo upon which there was a great Earthquake and Haile-stones of mighty weight and bignesse which destroyed some part of his Hoast and upon the rest an huge part of the rockie mountaine fell and buried them in the Earth and Bren being wounded and despairing of safety drew his Sword and killed himselfe And his ●…rother Belinus after hee had honourably governed the The death of Brennus Kingdome of Britaine with his brother and alone for the space of twenty sixe yeares expired and was buried at Belingsgate leaving a Sonne behinde him called Gurguintus Barbarosse or Gurguint with the red Beard Gurguintus Hee beganne his Reigne in the yeare of the world foure thousand eight hundred thirty foure he conquered Denmarke and forced from them an annuall Tribute of one thousand pound Denmarke made t●…butary to England After which victory hee sayled towards England in great triumph but in his course upon the sea hee met with a Fleet of thirty Sayle who hali●…g them and demanding of what Countrey they were and the purpose of their Navigation they answered him Their people were called Balenses and that they were exiled from Spaine and with their wives and children had long sayled upon the sea beseeching the King to have compassion of them and to grant them within his large dominions some place to inhabit and they would bee his true and faithfull subjects The King commiserating their estate by the advice of his Barons granted them a wide and vast The first plantation of Ireland Countrey which is the farthest of the westerne Islands which of their Captaine Irlomall was called Ireland and that was the first plantation of that Countrey And after this Gurguintus had established the Lawes of his fore-fathers and exercised justice amongst his Subjects for the space of nineteene yeares he dyed and was buried at Troynovant leaving a sonne called Guintolinus Hee with great honour and clemency guided the Land taking to wife an honourable and learned Lady called Marcia who added to the former Lawes of the Land other wholesome statutes and decrees which were greatly imbraced continued long of efficacy and force which Alured long after King of England caused to be translated out of the British into the Saxon tongue and called them Marthe he lege or the Marcian Lawes to this woman for her great wisedome the government of the Kingdome was committed with the Guardianship of his sonne Cecilius for the space of twenty Cecilius sixe yeares after which time the King expired and was buried at London of this Cecilius there is little or nothing remembred but that he governed the Realm 15 years leaving to succeed him his son Kimarus who was a wild yong Kimarus man and irregular both in his private life and publicke government who when he had reigned three yeares being in his disport of hunting was trayterously slaine by his servants Him succeeded his son Elanius who expired in the second Elanius of his reigne whom succeeded his bastard sonne called Morindus begotten of his Concubine Faugrestela Morindus He was made King in the yeare of the world foure thousand eight hundred fourescore and ten who was a Prince of great valour and courage but given to wrath and cruelty of goodly presence comely personage but a mervailous strength above all the Nobles of the Realme In his time came the King of Mauritania and invaded his Realme whom he incountred with a puissant army and chased to sea taking many of his Souldiers prisoners whom he caused in his owne view to be put to many cruell and tormenting deaths at length riding upon the Sea Strand he espyed an huge Monster which the waters cast up alive which out of his great courage and ambitious of glory purposing to slay with his owne hands he was by it devoured after he had governed the kingdome eight years leaving behinde him five sonnes Gorbomannus Archigallo Elidurus Vigenius and Peridurus Gorbomannus being the first begotten sonne of Gorbomanus Morindus succeeded his Father being a just Prince in whose time was more riches and plenty than in any of the dayes of his predecessors who to the great sorrow both of his Peeres and people dyed without issue after hee had reigned eleven yeares after whom his second brother Archigallo was instated in the Soveraignty Archigallo this Prince was of a contrary condition to the former who gave himselfe to dissen ion and strife imagining causes against his Nobles to deprive them of their possessions and dignities and raising men of base and sordid birth and quality to office and honour And so he could inrich himselfe not caring how hee impoverisht his subjects For which by one assent of the Nobility and Commons he was deposed from all regall dignity after hee had tyrannized five yeares In whose stead was instated the third brother Elidurus Elidurus in the yeare of the world foure thousand nine hundred and fifteene who was so milde and gentle to his Subjects that they added to him a sirname and called him Elidure the meeke To expresse the goodnesse of his condition it happened that hunting in a Wood called Calater neare unt●… Yorke hee found his banisht brother wandring in the thicke of the Forrest whom he no sooner saw but dismounted A●…are president in a brother from his Steed and imbraced him in his armes and so conveighed him into the City privately where hee concealed him for a time and at length feigning himselfe sicke hee so
wrought with his Nobility severally and apart that hee had won them to re-instate his brother Archigallo in the Throne after he himselfe had governed for the terme of five yeares who being againe advanc't to the supreme power and Majesty hee changed his former Conditions ordering all things according to equity and Iustice during his naturall life and then dyed after he had lastly reigned ten yeares and lyeth buryed at Yorke Then was Elidurus againe The death of Archigallo made King against whom his two yonger brothers Vigenius and Peridurus had great indignation because for his vertue and piety he was so much beloved of the Britons therefore they conspired against him and tooke him prisoner in battaile when the second time hee had reigned two yeares committing him unto safe custodie These two Brothers were then joyntly made Kings and divided the Land betwixt them Vigenius dyed after he had governed his part of the Kingdome seven yeares after whose death Peridurus seized the whole under his Dominion who ruled with great Temperance and Prudence insomuch that hee was praised above his other brethren and Elidurus quite forgot who after he had reigned with his brother and alone for the terme of nine yeares expired after whom Elidurus was fetcht from prison Elidure the third time made King and the third time instated in the Throne who continued in his former sincerity and integrity and lastly being of a good age ended his life when hee had this last time governed foure yeares and was buried at Carleil leaving a Son called Gorbomannus who began his raigne in Gorbomanus the second the yeare of the World foure thousand nine hundred forty five after whom succeeded Margan and after Margan his brother Emerianus Margan Emerianus who was deposed for his cruelty and tyranny after whom successively raigned twenty Kings of whom small or no mention is made by any approved Author the last of which was called Blegabridus a cunning Musitian who Blegabridus for his excellency in that faculty was called of the Britains god of Glee-men or Minstrells After whom succeeded nine Kings of whom there is left neither name or memory saving that the last of them was named Hely who governed King Hely the Kingdome forty yeares wanting seven months which time of thirty three successive Kings that is from Elidure to the last yeare of Hely amounted to one hundred fourescore and sixe yeares This Hely left behind him three sons Lud Cassibeline and Nennius King Lud. Lud the eldest sonne of King Hely began his Reigne in the yeare of the world five thousand one hundred thirty one who in all his actions shewed himselfe honourable repaired old Temples and builded new and so of Cities and Townes but especially in Troynovant hee caused sundry structures to bee made both for the inlarging and beautifying of the City walling it round and ditching it about and in the west part of the Wall made a strong gate and commanded it to be called after his name Luds-gate Luds Towne now London and for he much affected the City as the place where he most frequented hee changed the name thereof from Troynovant to Caerlud or Luds Towne now London Hee was strong and mighty in subduing his enemies liberall given to hospitality and much loved and feared of the Britains who reigning in great peace and prosperity eleven yeares then dyed and was buryed in Port-Lud or Ludgate leaving two Sons Androgeus and Tenantius In regard of the pupillage and minority of Cassibelan made King of Britaine the two young Princes Cassibelan their Vncle and brother to King Lud was made King in the yeare of the world 5142. This man was of great wisedome and courage exercising Iustice mixt with mercy amongst his subjects insomuch that they favoured him greatly above his Nephewes yet he provided that they were royally educated according to their births and when they came to yeares of discretion he gave to Androgeus the City of London and the Earledom of Kent and to Tenantius the Dukedome of Cornwall c. CHAP. 3. The first conquest of this Land by Iulius Caesar Britaine made tributary to the Romans the birth of our Saviour under Cimbeline King of Britaine How Southampton came to bee so called and the Citie of Glocester and Coilchester Vespatians conquest of the Isle of Wight of Catnesse in Scotland of Lucius the first Christian King of the Britaines and of other Roman Governours CAius Iulius Caesar being imployed by the Senate of the famous City of Rome with Lucius Publius his Collegue in the warres of Gallia now called France being on the Sea side at Callis beholding the white Cliffes and Rocks of Britaine Iulius Caesar ambitious to Conqeur Britaine demanded of the Natives what manner of people inhabited this Island and being fully satisfied concerning the people and commodities thereof he was ambitious to adde it to the Roman Empire and to that purpose sent Messengers to Cassibelan then King to make him and his Land tributary to Rome At which he being highly moved sent him backe peremptory answer that every Soveraigne was bound to keep his Subjects from slavery and servitude and maintaine them in their Franchises and liberties and that hee would doe to his utmost ability and power With this answer Caesar who was of an invincible Courage much incensed instantly made ready his Navy and sayled towards Britaine with purpose to adde His first attempt and successe this Kingdome to his conquest of France but the Britaine 's had pi●…cht stakes on the shore which much hindred their landing whilst Cassibelan gathering a strong Host gave the Romans battaile and beat them backe unto their ships but after he had new rigged and repaired his Navy and furnisht himselfe with a sufficient Army ●…e returned againe the second time and His second attempt was likewise beaten backe to his great dishonour For which victory twice obtained by the Britaines he assembled all his Lords and made a great triumph at London where were sundry martiall exercises performed in the performance of which one of Androgeus his Knights having slain one of the Kings Kinsmen whom hee much loved hee sent to have him stand to the tryall of the cause but Androgeus denyed to give up to the censure of the Law and departed Difference betwixt the 〈◊〉 and Androgeus in secret without taking leave from the Court which gave Cassibelan great cause of incensement against him Whose indignation Androg us justly fearing sent Letters unto Caesar that if hee would make a third attempt upon this Countrey hee with all his whole power would bee re●…dy to assist him against his Uncle pretending that he not onely usurped his right in the Crowne but had done to him divers other affronts and injuries Caesar glad of so good an opportunity after Hostages given for his fidelity which were his sonne Sceva with thirty others of the sonnes of his Nobility and Gentlemen a third time
the Romans Coil King of Britaine by which reason there grew great affinity and friendship betwixt the two Nations for he became their willing Tributary Hee was very bountifull to all men by which hee purchased great love both from the Lords and Commons H●…e built the Towne in Essex called Coilchester and when he had peaceably governed the Realme for the space of foure and fifty yeares he dyed and was buried at Yorke leaving a sonne called Lucius who was inaugurated in the yeare of grace one hundred and foure Lucius the first Christian King in Brita●…ne score who had the honour to be called the first Christian King of this Island who being a man devoutly given sent to Eleutherius then Bishop of Rome to be instructed in the true faith who to that purpose imployed two learned men called Fuganus and Dimianus who were honourably received by this King Lucius and by whom hee and a great part of the Britaine 's were converted from Paganisme and Idolatry to the true Christian beliefe which hapned in the eighth yeare of his Raigne who after his conversion ordained that all the Idolatrous Arch-Flamins and Flamins should bee made Arch-bishops and Bishops to the number of three Archbishops and twenty eight Bishops and should have the government of the Church lately establisht These being confirmed by the fore-named Bishop of Rome he indowed them with lands and possessions and consecrated all the Pagan Temples to the worship of Christ and when hee had peaceably governed the Land for the space of twelve yeares hee left this earthly Tabernacle for a better and was buryed at Glocester who because hee dyed without Heire the Land grew into great combustion for Lucius dyeth without issue the terme of fifty yeares in which none had the absolute nomination of King or Soveraigne Then Severus the Roman Emperour tooke upon him the government of the Realme in the Severus named himselfe King of Britaine yeare of grace two hundred and eight and ruled the Kingdome five yeares in which time he caused a Ditch and Wall to bee made of Turves and stakes of an hundred and two and twenty Miles in length from Durham to the Scotch Sea during which the Picts with their Duke or Leader Fulgenius came out of Scotland with a strong army and destroyed much of the Countrey beyond Durham against whom Severus for his Conquest of Parthia sirnamed Parthicus assembled a great Hoast of Romans and Britaines and gave them battaile neare unto York in which he was slain and his army discomfited and in that City lyeth interred leaving behinde him two sons namely Geta and Bassianus This Bassianus was the sonne of Severus a British woman Bassianus made King of Britaine and he had Geta by a Roman Lady the Britaine 's therefore made the son of their Country-woman their Soveraigne in the yeare of Grace two hundred and twelve But the Romans held for Geta For which mortall war grew betwixt the two brothers in which Geta was slain and Bassianus who was after made Emperor having incestuously married his stepmother for which many other tyrannies exercised by him on the natives he grew into great hatred of the people and was slaine at a place called Edessa after hee had beene Emperour for the space of seven yeares Carassius aspireth to the Crowne In this interim of his Reigne one Carassius 〈◊〉 Britain of low birth but eminent in armes and the practice of Martiall Exercises obtained of the Senate the keeping of the Coasts and Frontiers of the Land and to oppose the invasion of all strangers so that he drew to him many hardy Knights of the Britans promising unto them many donatives with honour and office if they would make him King of the Land which so far prevailed with them that they with an unanimous consent proclaimed him their Sovereigne and King against whom Bassianus moving battaile and to suppresse them as rebels was slaine by this Carassius who tooke upon him the Regall Dignitie in the yeare of the Incarnation of Christ two hundred and eighteene When the Romans had notice of the death of Alectus made Ruler of Britain their Emperour Bassianus they sent into Britain a great Captain cald Alectus with three Legions to punish the pride and rebellion of Carassius to which Captain Fortune was so favorable that he chaced him from place to place and in the end slue him in battaile after he had eight years usurped This Alectus for his good service done was made Consul of Rome and Governour of the Land who hotly pursued divers British Lords who had tooke part with Carassius against the Romans and exercised great tyranny amongst them so that hee grew into great hatred and contempt of the Natives And therefore they accited one Asclepiodotus Duke of Cornwall who gathered a great hoast of the Britains and made warre against the Romans chasing them from place to place and Country to Country so that at the last Alectus was glad to retire himselfe within the fortifications of London whither Asclepiodotus pursued him and laid siege about the City provoking him to battaile who at length issuing out with his forces many were slaine on both sides but in the end Alectus was slaine after hee had sixe yeares The death of the Roman Alectus governed the Land When Livius Gallus a Roman Captain understood the death of their Generall hee with the survivours of the Army retyred into the Citie for his best security where for a while I leave him CHAP. 4. The Duke of Cornwall made King of Britaine how Walbrook took first name Constantius the Roman marrieth with Helena daughter to King Coill and is made King His Reigne and buriall His sonne Constantine made King after him who was cald the Great and was the first Christian Emperour His great Devotion and after falling into Heresie Octavian his Deputy in Britain usurpeth and after made King Maximinus a Roman by Marriage with his daughter succeeds him c. ASclepiodotus Duke of Cornwall began Asclepiodorus King of the Britains his Dominion over the Britans in the yeare of Grace two hundred thirty two who entred the City of London before by him besieged where he slue this Livius Gallus neere unto a Brook which ran then through a part of the City from Whence Walbrook took the name whom it was called Gallus or Wallus brook and the street VVal-brooke even unto these times Thus having quite vanquished the Romans hee governed the Realme in great peace exercising Iustice exalting meriting and good men and punishing the refractory and evilly disposed till at length a great discontent s●…rred up by wicked and seditious persons was raised betwixt him and Coillus or Coil who was then Earle or Duke of Kaircollin or Colchester so that they assembled their severall forces and met in battaile in which conflict Asclepiodotus was slai●…e after hee had governed the Realme according to the most Writers thirty yeares Then Coil
Eliud left little or nothing behind him worthy memory and when he had been King five yeers departed this life Galfridus reckoneth 3 other Kings Three Kings by some Authors not admitted successively to follow Eliud namely Dedacus Cloterus and Gurginetus but Lanquet an Author well approved will not admit them into his Chronicle I therefore proceed with the rest It is agreed by all that Merianus was King and two yeares enjoyed the principality but of what condition Merianus hee was there is left no memory to posteritie Four yeers also reigned his successor Bledinus whom some call Bladunus a man raised to that honor by his Bledinus valor but being discended from obscure parentage therefore not knowing himself wel in his greatnes as is commonly seene by many it was the cause of shortning both of his life sovereignty for he was slain by the treason of his owne servants of whose treacherous murder Capenus taking advantage being Capenus a potent Lord and in great opinion with the people hee so far insinuated into their affections that with an unanimous suffrage they proclaimed him King for his predecessor died and left no heire behind him in which authority hee demeaned himself like a royall and worthy Prince and when hee had swayed the Scepter th●… years he died being very aged and much lamented Him succeeded one Owen a Cambrian Britain who Owen though hee could neither claime the priviledge of bloud birth or title yet being valiant prosperous in all his martiall employments as managing the wars under Capenus by whom he was greatly honoured being also politick and wise and a good souldiou●… so a discreet statesman he was thought the worthiest then in the Kingdome to take upon him the Dominion of the Realm and so ended some troubles raised in his predecessors days by his valor and wisdom he brought to a happy issue and so died a single man after he had two years governed the Kingdome next him was inaugurated Sisillius otherwise called Cecilius Cecilius who bore himselfe with great humanity and affability during the time of his living a subject studying popularity and by sundry ways insinuating himself into the hearts of the people but when hee came to the Regall Title and that the power and soveraignty was wholly in his owne dispose he then began to expresse his naturall avaritious conditions by exacting on the Commons imposing divers taxes and tributes upon them by which they were sore vexed and grieved in so much that a rumour was raised amongst them which they first only whispered but at length animated by their intolerable impositions they feared not to clamour aloud that their former King died not without suspition of poyson of which they spa●…ed not to accuse him not only as an accessary but the prime causer and procurer thereof and therefore rising in armes against him they drove him to that ●…rrow exigent that he was forc't to fly f●…om one place of refuge to another who at length gathering some few forces about him gave them battail in which he was slain after he had governed the Kingdom two yeers after whom Blegabredus 〈◊〉 reigned in his stead this man had in him more musicke then majesty for he was held most excellent both in minstrelsie and poesie so that hee seemed to be son or at least minion of Apollo for hee not only composed his own Hymnes and Dities but set them and then sung and playd to them and because it was an art rarein those times practised by few especially by any of generous condition quality being excellent and eminent in a Prince he was therefore by it the more honored and admired who having swayd the Scepter 20 yeers departed this life leaving to succeed him his brother Archemail who was of a more stern robustuous nature a man unlettered Archemail and therefore a contemner of all Arts and Sciences who after he had governed the Realm two yeeres but with more austerity and rigou●… then his brother before him had done in a full age expired After him reigned Eldon or Eldol no sonne but a kinsman for the two brothers died issuless who was Eldol a man of peace and therfore the more indeered unto the hearts of his subjects under whose Reigne they lived in great rest prosperity gathering great store of wealth about them during the foure yeers of his Reigne after which season he changed this life for a new being much lamen●…d of his people after whose death stept up into the ●…hrone Rodrech or Rodian Rodrech alias Rodian a man not like his predecessor beloved as being litigious and alwayes in contention with the Commons as holding them in contempt only favouring the Nobility and Gen●…ry and to prefer and advance them greatly oppressed the other extorting from them by sundry exactions for which hee grew into great hatred amongst them of which having intelligence he thought severely to punish them by arms but was prevented by death after hee had governed the kingdome not fully 4 yeers In his place reigned Samuel Pennisel Samuel Pennisel whom some Writers would make two men but their judgments are not altogether approved this man with great care industry sought and laboured to pacifie the tumults and combustions before raised to that purpose kept the Nobility and Gentry more short so that he suffered them not as before to insult and tyrannize over the Country but granted to them sundry immunities and privileges for which he was greatly beloved by them but left the world after he had 5 yeers swayd the Scepter whom Pyrpyrhus next succeeds a man much affected Pyrpyrhus by the people and fortunate in all things saving his short Reigne who died after two yeers sovereignty Capoyr came next to the Crown governed an equall Capoyr time with them of whom no memorable thing is recorded for in two yeeres Reigne a Prince hath scarcely time to express himself what maner of King he would be whether a tyrant or father of his people whether addicted to peace or war he left one to succeed him named Gligurt Divill who was a Prince very sober and discreet in all his actions and was an upright Iusticer maintaining good Laws in his Dominions but reigned four yeers only his son Hely succeeded him before spoken of so that all the time of H●…ly the father of King Lud. these severall Kings Reigns ●…y those who writ contemporaries of the passages of seasons and sought to reconcile them by their computation amounteth to 124 yeers Thus desiring the Reader to excuse this necessary digression without which there must needs be a great maym in the Chronicle I now fall punctually upon Merlin's Prophesies continuing them and confirming their truth by Chronologie from the time in which he uttered them to the Reign of King Charles our royall Lord and Sovereigne c. A true Historie of the strange Birth of Ambrosius
The white Dragon shall invite the Almans daughter which implyeth a greater supply of the German nation and crowne themselves For from that time they bare the Scepter and had the absolute jurisdiction over the whole Land which they continued for a long season To passe over all the Saxon Kings to the time K. Etheldred the sonne of Alfride of Ethelredus in whose dayes An Eagle from the Rock which was Swanus King of Denmarke shall rise c. The better to explain our prophet and to carry the History along this Etheldred the sonne of the most Royall King Edward by his second Wife Alfrida by some cald Estrild when he came to bee crowned by Dunstane Archbishop of Canterbury hee could not containe himselfe but with a propheticall spirit uttered those words because by the bloudy slaughter of thy brother thou hast aspired to the Kingdome The sinne of thy most wicked and mischievous mother shall never bee expiated nor any who were of her Diabolicall counsell but by the greatest effusion of the Saxon bloud that ever was shed since their first comming into Britaine and further the beginning of thy Reigne shall be cruell the middle thereof miserable and the end shamefull all which accordingly hapned His Father King Edgar of ever surviving memory Edward the eldest sonne of King Edgar made King had by his first wife called Egelsleda a noble sonne named Edward and by his second Alfrida this Etheldred Edgar being dead the Barons assembled and made Edward King in the yeere of grace eight hundred threescore and fifteene at which his stepmother greatly repined using all the means both of power proofe and friends to have inaugurated her sonne Etheldred being then a lad but of seven yeeres old which in the end most traiterously shee accomplished for the King hunting in the Forrest neere unto the Castle of Corffe in the West Country who having lost all his company bethought himselfe that his stepmother with her A wicked stepmother sonne liv'd in that Castle to whom hee would give a friendly visit who spying from her window afarre of cald to a Villaine that attended her and whispered in his eare what hee should doe by this the King was come to the gate and shee descended to meet him saluting him with a Iudas kisse and intreated him to alight and sojourne with her for that night which hee modestly refusing said hee would only drinke a horsback and so be gone which being brought as the cup was at his mouth her trayterous servant with a long Dagger strooke him quite through the body at which hee put spurs to his horse thinking to have recovered his servants but through his great losse of bloud hee fainted and falling from his horse one of his feet was fastned in the stirrop and so hurried to a place called Corisgate where his miserably mangled body was found and not being knowne at that The base murther upon King Edward present to be the King without ceremony buried whom as you have heard his brother by the Fathers side succeeded In whose reigne hapned divers prodigies pretending great disaster among which was the sterility of the earth the burning of London by an accidentall fire but the most ominous and terrible was the invasion of the Danes and their many massacres inhuman butcheries committed through all the shires and provinces of the Kingdome as more amply hereafter but by the way is to be noted that in the eighth yeere of his reigne hee was espoused to Ithelgina whom Ethelredus marriage and Issue some call Elgina daughter to Earle Edgebertus by whom in processe of time he received a sonne called Edmund after for his notable valour sirnamed Ironside and two others Edwin and Ethelstane with a daughter named Egina About the eleventh yeere of his reigne the The Invasion of the Danes Danes pierced the land in sundry places against whom the King being wholy addicted to effeminacie and cowardise durst make no hostile opposure but for the present appeased them with great summes of mony which being spent they fell to new robberies Then the King bribed them with more notwithstanding which they spoyled Northumberland and at last laid siege to London and to increase his sorrow and trouble Earle Elphricus who was Admirall of The son punisht for the the Navy fled like a Traitour to the Danes and took part with them against his naturall Liege for which the King commanded that his sonne Algarus should have his eyes torne out of his head during which time burning Fevers and the bloudy Flix destroyeth many of the Natives to which was added scarcity and penury amongst the commons in so much that they were forced to rob and steale from one another so that what by their owne pilfering and pillage Fathers treason of the Danes the land was brought to extreame misery by whose continuall invasions and the Kings pusillanimity the Tribute paid unto them was raised from ten thousand pounds to forty thousand named for the continuance thereof Dane-gelt they yet not satisfied to adde to the former the British Peeres were so hollow brested Dane-gelt amongst themselves that when they were at any time assembled and had determined any thing to the impeachment of the Danes they were warned thereof by some of the falshearted Counsell of whom were most suspected Elphricus Edricus intended by the Snake and Edricus the Snake formerly mentioned in the prophesie The Land besides other distresses continuing under this grievous Tribute the King by the The Kings second mariage advice of those familiars who were about him married Emma the daughter of Richard the third Duke of Normandy and first of that name who was for his boldnesse and valour sirnamed Richard the Hardy or without feare and she by the French Chronicles Emma the flowre of Normandy by which Match hee was greatly animated and incouraged so that presuming on the power of his Father in Law hee sent into all the Townes Cities and Villages of this Land secret and straight Commissions charging the Rulers and Magistrates upon the night succeeding the day of Saint Brice that all A generall Massacre of the Danes throughout all the Land the Danes should be murdered in their beds the execution whereof they committed to their Wives and Women which was also accordingly performed a strange wonder that so great a secret should passe generally through that sex without uttering or discovery This generall Massacre of the Danes as same reports began at a little Towne in Hertfordshire twenty foure miles from London called Wealwin from which act it tooke first name as if there the weal of their Country was first warm and the day of Saint Brice hapned that yeare upon the Monday which to this day is called Hoc or Hop-monday but wherefore I know not unlesse by Hoc this day as a remarkablenote Hoc or H●…p Monday to posterity or by Hop as that day the Danes according to
a proverbe wee retaine from Antiquity as that day hopt without their heads Now concerning the pride of the Danes and their incredible tyranny exercised throughout The pride and insolency of the Danes over the Britains the whole Kingdome which was the occasion of this their universall slaughter our English Historians have thus recorded of them they caused the Farmers and Husbandmen to plow sow and eare the ground and to doe all the servile labour that belonged to agriculture and husband●…y whilst they kept their wives and commanded their daughters and servants at their pleasure and when the Master of the house came home hee was forced to salute his superintendent Dane as his Lord and whilst the Usurper eate and fed of the best the poore oppressed owner could scarcely have his fill of the worst besides for feare and dread they called them in every house where they had rule Lord Dane which after when the English had attained to their former honour grew to a title of great opprobry and contempt for when Lord Dane turned into Lurdain any one would rebuke or revile an other hee would in scorne call him Lurdan a word in the Countrey in use euen to this day But now comes in the Eagle by which is intended Swanus K. of Denmark who surpriseth both that is subdueth the Saxons the other Almans or Germans whom they had admitted into the land and after infinite devastations depopulations and spoils with his broad wings soared over the whole Kingdome and made prey in every province thereof the particulars would aske much time and paper who in conclusion tooke from the White Dragon the Saxons after they had held the sovereignty by many successive Kings both Crown and Scepter but before this happened the unfortunate King whose onely fight was with money to impoverish his owne people and inrich the enemy for hee often bought his peace which prov'd to no purpose Edricus crea ted Duke of Mercia hee made Edricus whom Merlin calleth the Snake Duke of Mercia who was of low and base birth and parentage yet had attained to great wealth and rich possessions false of tongue subtle of brain and eloquent in speech and persidious in purpose and promise which will more at large appeare hereafter In this interim Swanus so farre prevailed The King with his Queene forc't to flye the Land that the King fearing the continuall persecution of the Danes first sent Emma his Queene with his two younger sonnes which were Alfred and Edward to Richard the second of that name and fourth Duke of Normandy who was her naturall brother and after was compeld to flie thither in person with a slender traine of followers of which when Swanus had notice he grew inflamed with greater pride and insolence and amongst other of his Tyrannies hee fired the City of Canterbury and slue nine hundred religious persons tithing them as killing nine and saving the tenth with 8000 women children and because the reverend Bishop would not or could not pay him downe three thousand pounds hee kept him prisoner seven moneths The Bishops name was Elphigus and caused him after at Greenwich foure miles from London to be stoned to death and wheresoever hee came hee reserved all the women to be vitiated and defloured aswell the religious as others robbing the Shrine of Saint Edmond not leaving any cruelty which could finde a name unperformed At length upon the day of the Purification of the blessed Virgin in the yeere one thousand and fourteen he died miserably howling and crying three dayes and nights together before his death whom succeeded The death of the Tyrant Swanus his sonne Canutus And two yeeres after at one thousand sixteen expired at London King Edelfred and was buried in the Church of Saint The death of Edelfredus Paul whom succeeded his sonne Edmund sirnamed Ironside and these two Princes were the two Lions spoken of in the former prophesie of whom you shall heare more in the ensuing Chapter CHAP. 9. Of divers bloudy battails fought betwixt Canutus and Edmund their great opposition ended in a single Duel They make peace and equally divide the Kingdome betwixt them the trayterous death of Edmund Canutus revengeth it upon the murderer with other occurences pertinent to the story c. EDmund sirnamed Ironside the sonne of Egelredus and Canutus the sonne of Swanus King of Denmarke began to rule the English Nation Anno 1016 and in the twenty ninth yeere of Robert King of France the Londoners with some of the English Nobles favouring Edmund but the greater part of the Nobility and Clergie adhering to Canutus betwixt which yong and valiant Princes were fought sundry cruell and bloudy battails too long here to reherse In which infinite both of the Natives and Strangers fell by the sword one of which was fought in Dorsetshire besides a Towne called Gillingham another in Worcestershire which continued from morning till night when they surceased In which battail Canutus was overcome by Edmund fight either for great wearinesse or for want of light when both Hoasts joyned the next morrow early and eagerly in which battaile the Traytour Edricus perceiving the fortune of the day to encline towards Edmund pitcht a The treason of Eldricus dead mans head upon a speare and calling to his Countrymen cryed out with this acclamation Fly you Englishmen and preserve your lives for behold this is the head of Edmund your King of which the Prince being warned hasted to that part of the field and plucking off his Helmet to shew that he was living so comfortably and couragiously demeaned himself among his souldiers that in the end hee had the better of the day In the preparation of another field when both the Hoasts were ready to joyne battaile upstarted This Commander was of K. Edmunds party one of the Commanders and appearing betweene the two Armies in the Front of either spake aloud as followeth You Princes both to you I declare my selfe you see how we daily perish for neither of you gaine an absolute victorie Edmund cannot bee overcome because of his great strength and courage and Canutus cannot be subdued being also much favoured by Fortune what then shall be the finall successe of this inveterate malice and contention when all your Knights souldiers are slain shall you not bee then inforced either to compound your enmity or to fight hand to hand betwixt your selves If this must bee the end why do you not one of these two For the first Is not this Kingdome now sufficient for two which before contented seven or if your spleen be so great that it cannot be reconciled by an equall division of the Land why doe not you two fight alone that strive to be Lords alone For if we all perish who shall be left either to serve you or to keepe forreigne invaders out of the Land Which words were so emphatically delivered and tooke such
others of the Clergie and Nobility who met at a place called the water of Vrme they were kept from A peace mediated betwixt the King and the Duke present hostility some endevouring peace others labouring warre as their humours and affections guided them After which the King took his way towards Ipswich in Suffolke the Duke towards Shrewsbury in which interim died and was drowned Eustace the sonne of King Stephen and was buried at Feversham in Kent in the Abbey which his Father before The death of Prince Eust●…ce had founded After which Theobald with others ceased not to bring these two Princes to an attonement which was so earnestly laboured that a peace was concluded upon the conditions following namely that the King having now no heire should continue in the sole Sovereignty during his life and immediately after the conclusion and establishing of that Edict Henrie should be proclaimed Heire apparant in all the chiefe Cities and Bor●…ughs of England and that the King should take him for his sonne by adoption as immediate Heire to the Crowne and Kingdome wherein that part of the prophesie is fulfilled which saith She failing will a Lions whelpe appeare Whose rore should make the Centaure quake with feare But when the two shap't Monster shall be tam'd By gentle means the whelpe shall be reclaim'd By the Centaure and two shap't Monster or the Sagittary which are all one meaning the King and by the Lions whelpe Henry Duke of Normandy The death of King Stephen c. and after King of England In the end of this yeere died King Stephen when hee had reign●…d eighteen yeeres and odde moneths and was buried by his sonne Eustace at Feversham This King spent his whole Reigne in great vexation and trouble which as some conjecture hapned because hee usurped the Crowne contrary to his Oath made to Henry the first that hee should maintaine the inheritance of his daughter Mawd the Empresse this Stephen Vpon what grounds Stephen pretended his title to the Crown was the sonne of Eustace Earle of Bulloigne and of Mary sister to Mawd who was married to his predecessor Henry these two are the daughters of Margaret the wife of Malcolm King of Scots which Margaret was the sister to Edgar Etheling and daughter of Edward the outlaw who was sonne to Edmund Ironside Mawd the Empresse daughter to Henry Beauclarke had by her second husband Ieffery Plantaginet this Henry the second of that name by whom the bloud of the Saxons againe returned to the Crowne partly by King Stephen but more fully by him so that consequently the bloud of the Normans continued but threescore The Norman bloud in sixty yeeres extinguished and ten yeeres accounting from the first yeere of William the Conquerour to the last of the reigne of Henry first compleating those words the prophesie And when the iron brood in the land shall fail The bloud of the red Dragon must prevail CHAP. 14. Divers remarkable passages during the Reigne of Henry the second his numerous issue and how they were affected towards him his vices and vertues his good and bad fortune all which were by this our Prophet predicted HEnry the second sonne of Ieffery Plantaginet The Coronation of King Henry the second and Mawd the Empresse began his Reigne over England in the moneth of October and the yeere of our Lord God one thousand one hundred fifty five of whom before it was thus prophesied The Eglet of the Flawde league shall behold The prophesie of his Re●…gne The Fathers of her prime bird shine in gold And in her third nest shall rejoyce but hee Who from the height of the great Rocke may see The Countries round both neer and far away Shall search amongst them where hee best can pray Some of whose numerous ayrie shall retaine The nature of the Desert Pelican The all commanding keys shall strive to wrest And force the locke that opens to his nest But break their own wards of all flowers that grow The Rose shall most delight his smell and so That least it any strangers eyes should daze Hee 'l plant it close in a Dedalian Maze Fortune at first will on his glories smile But fail him in the end alack the while The first words of this Prophesie seeme to reflect Part of the prophesie explained upon the Empresse his Mother by rejoycing her third nest may be intended that having three sonnes Henry Ieffery and William the two later failing as dying in their youth shee might rejoyce in him whose Father being King she saw to shine in gold or else being first espoused to Henry the Emperour and next to Ieffery Plantaginet shee might in her death rejoyce in her third espousall with her Saviour but againe where hee stiles her the Eglet of the Flawde or Borbon League It may bee conferd upon the Queen who being first married to the King of France and through neernesse of bloud divorced from him and sent to her Father and after married to this King being then Duke of Normandy she may be said first to have built her nest in France secondly in Normandy and thirdly and last in England This Prince as the Chronicle describes him The Kings Character to us was somewhat high-coloured but of a good aspect and pleasant countenance fat full chested and low of stature and because hee grew somewhat corpulent hee used a sparing and abstinent diet and much exercised Hunting He was well spoken and indifferently learned Noble in Knighthood and wise in counsaile bountifull to strangers but to his familiars and servants gripple-handed and where hee loved once or hated constant and hardly to be removed he had by his wife Eleanor six sonnes and three daughters The names of five of them His Issue were William Henry Richard Godfery and Iohn of which two came to succeed him in the Throne Richard and Iohn of the sixt there is small or no mention the eldest of his daughters hight Mawd and was married to the Duke of Saxony the second Eleanor to the King of Spaine the third named Iane to William King of Sicily This King was prosperous in the beginning of his Raigne but unfortunate in the end as the sequell will make apparant he was of such magnanimity and courage that hee was often heard to say that to a valiant heart not a whole World sufficeth and according to his words hee greatly augmented his Heritage and much added The Kings Dominions to his Dominions For hee wonne Ireland by strength and in the seventh yeere of his Reigne for divers affronts offered him by William King of Scotland he made such cruell warre upon him that in the end hee tooke him He taketh the Scots King prisoner prisoner and compeld him to surrender into his hands the City of Carlile the Castle of Bamburch the new Castle upon Tyne with divers other holds and a great part of Northumberland which William before had wonne from the
Borderers He likewise added the whole Kingdome to his owne and from the South Ocean to the North Islands of the Orcades hee closed all those Lands as under one principall which done and receiving fealty and homage of the said King having a certaine summe of money promist to bee payd unto him within nine moneths following hee suffered him to goe at liberty He spred his Empire so far that none of all his No King before him of such large Empire predecessours had so many Countries and Provinces under their Dominion and rule for besides the Realme of England he had at once in his possession Normandy Gascoine and Guien Anjou and Chinou with Alverne and others and by his wife as her rightfull Inheritance the Pyrene Mountaines which part France and Spaine which proves that hee Who from the height of the great rock may see The Countries round both neere and far away Shall search amongst them where hee best can prey In the seventh year of his Raigne died Theobald Tho Becket created Arch-bishop of Canterbury Arch-bishop of Canterbury and Thomas Becket who was then Chancellour of England was translated unto that See and in the ninth yeare the King cal'd a Parliament at Northampton where hee intended to abolish some privileges which the Clergie had usurped amongst which one was that no Priest or Clergie man though he had committed felony murther or treason against the Kings owne person yet had hee not power to put him to death which he purposed to have reformed in which Thomas Becket then Arch-Bishop violently opposed him and gave him very peremptory and unseemly language vilifying the Kings prerogatiue and authority The Archbishop opposeth the King to his face but when he saw he had not power to prevaile against the King hee in great heate and hast sped him to Alexander then Bishop of Rome grievously complayning on the King and suggesting what iniuries and innovations he would put upon the holy Church continuing there partly in Italy and partly in France for the space of six yeares together After which time Lewis King of France reconciled The King and the Archbishop atton'd the King and the Archbishop the King being then in Normandy and Becket returned to his See at Canterbury whither hee summond all such persons as in his absence had spoyled and rifled his moveables and goods advising them first by faire meanes to restore them but when he saw that course prevailed not he tooke The King cursed by the Archbishop a more severe and compulsory way excommunicating and denouncing all such accursed in his Anathema not sparing the Kings royall person at which the parties here in England whom it particularly concerned sailed over unto the King in Normandy and made a grievous complaint against the Archbishop at which his being extraordinarily incensed sayd in the open audience of those then about him had I any friend that tendered mine honour and safety I had ere this time beene revenged of that traiterous Archbishop At that time were present and heard these words Sir William Breton Sir Hugh Morvill Sir Richard Fitzvile and Sir William Tracy which foure Knights having communed and considered amongst themselves with an unanimous resolution took shipping and landed at Dover and road thence to Canterbury where the fift day in Christmasse weeke they slue the said Bishop in the Church as hee was going to the Altar who had before in the open pulpit The Archbishop slain going to the Altar denounced the King and divers others of his subjects accursed which answers to the former The All-commanding keys shall strive to wrest And force the lock that opens to his nest But breake their own wards c. By the All-commanding Keys is meant the power of the Keyes of Rome who striving to force the lock opening to his nest that is his principality and prerogative broke their owne wards which proved true in this Th. Becket Primate and Metropolitan who was slaine in the yeer 1170 over whose Tombe this Distich was inscribed Anno milleno centeno septuageno Anglorum primus corruit ense thronus which with small alteration may bee thus paraphrased Anno one thousand one hundred seventy dy'd Thomas the Primate in his height of pride The inscription over his Tombe Henry in the fourteenth yeere of his Reigne caused his eldest sonne Henry to bee crowned King of England at Westminster giving him full power over the Realme whilst hee himselfe was negotiated in Normandy and his many other provinces which after proved to his great Henry crowneth his sonne Henry King disadvantage and trouble In which interim he had cast his eye upon a most beautifull Lady called Rosamond on whom hee was so greatly enamoured that it grew even to dotage insomuch that hee neglected the Queenes company The faire Lady Rosamond insomuch that she incensed all his sonnes who tooke up armes against their Father in the quarrell of their mother by which the peace of the Land was turned to hostility and uprore yet the King so farre prevailed that hee surprised the Queen and kept her in close prison and withall The King imprisons the Queene was so indulgent over his new Mistresse that he built for her a rare and wondrous fabricke so curiously devised and intricate with so many turning Meanders and winding indents that none upon any occasion might have accesse unto her unlesse directed by the King or such as in that businesse hee most trusted and this edifice ●…e erected at Woodstocke not farre from Oxford and made a Labyrinth which was wrought like a knot in a Garden called a Maze in which any one might lose himselfe unlesse guided by a line or threed which as it guided him in so it directed him the way out But in processe it so hapned that the sonnes having the better of The Sonnes release their mother their Father set at liberty their Mother who when the King was absent came secretly to Woodstocke with her traine at such a time when the Knight her Guardian being out of the way not dreaming of any such accident had left the Clue carelesly and visible in the entrance of the Labyrinth Which the Queene espying slipt not that advantage but wound her selfe by that silken threed even to the very place where shee found her sitting and presenting her with a bowle of poyson shee compeld her to drinke it off in her presence after which draught shee within few minutes expired and the Queene departed thence in her revenge fully satisfied for which cruell act the King could never be drawne to reconcile Lady Rosamond poisond by the Queene himselfe unto her after and this makes good that of Merlin of all the flowers that grow The Rose shall most delight his scent and so That lest it any strangers eyes should daze He plants it close in a Dedalian Maze Rosamund being dead was buried in the Monastery of Goodstow neere unto Oxford upon whose Tombe
the fight continued the greatest part of the day at last the victory fell to the Barons so that were taken the King the King of the Romans and prince Edward The King taken prisoner with the King of the Romans and P. Edward with five and twenty Barons and Bannerets and the people slaine on both sides amounted to above twentythousand These royall prisoners being put in safe keeping a peace was after debated and at length concluded and they released but it proved to small purpose for many battailes were after fought betwixt them in which sometimes the King sometimes the Barons had the better the circumstances are too long to relate in which Prince Edward bore himselfe bravely in processe the five fiftieth yeer of this Kings Reign the King of the Romans made attonement betwixt the King his brother and Gilbert Clare Earle of Glocester who had continued the wars of the Barons upon condition that hee should take a Voyage into the Holy Land for the King for which hee should have towards his charge eight thousand Marks in hand and when hee was on shipboard foure thousand more and to bee ready the first day of May next following but this failing in him Prince Edward undertooke it in his stead and the yeere after ab●…ut the end of March dyed Richard Emperour of The death of Richard K. of the Romans Almaine King of the Romans and Earle of Cornwall being the Kings brother after hee had governed the Empire betwixt fifteen and sixteene yeeres and was buried at Hales an Abbey of white Monks which hee had before time founded and the yeere following upon the sixteenth day of November died Henry the Third King of England after he had governed the Realme fifty The death of Henry the third six yeeres and twenty seven days leaving for his Heire Prince Edward who was then in the Holy Land and another sonne called Edmund Crowch-backe His body was buried in the Abbey of Westminster and over him inscribed Tertius Henricus jacet hic pietatis amicus His Epitaph Ecclesiam stravit istam quam post renovavit Reddat ei munus qui regnat trinus unus Thus Englished Third Henry here doth rest Of Piety possest Down first this Church he threw And after did renew O grant him thy immunity Thou Trinity in Vnitie The premisses confirme the prophesie of his Reigne towards the latter end of his time which was turbulent and troublesome to the exhausting of the Kings treasure the deaths of many of his Noble Barons and almost to the destruction and desolation of the whole Realm therefore it was truly said of him The King of beasts whose rage His youth conceal'd shall rouze him in his age Against the Boare the Talbot and the Beare The Mountaine Cat and Goat with whom cohere c. By the Lion the King is personated and by the rest of the beasts and birds named the severall Crests and Emblazons in the Barons Armes and Scutchions by which they were distinguisht Prince Edward his sonne was at the time of his death in the Land of Palaestine Of whom also it was thus predicted An Occident all Dragon bright as noone The Prophesie Shal breathing flames dark the Oriental Moon The Cambrian Wolves he through their Woods shall chace Nor cease till hee have quite extirpt their race Then from the North shall fiery Meteors threat Ambitious after bloud to quench their heat The Dragons bloud at which his Crest wil rise And his scales flame and where he treads as flyes Fright all shal him oppose the Northern Dyke Passe shall hee then and set his foot in Wyke After which showers of bloud will fall upon And barren the faire fields of Caledon Then having ended what he took in hand Die in the Marches of another Land Hee in the yeere one thousand two hundred Prince Edwards expeditio●… to the Holy Land threescore and eleven and in the yeere of his fathers Reigne fifty five upon the twentieth of August tooke shipping at Dover and sailed thence to Burdeaux but because the French Army b●…und upon the same adventure was removed thence he sped after and met with them at Tunis and from the●…ce he took shipping for the Holy Land and arrived with some French forces joyned with his owne At Acris or Acon what time the Christians possessed that City only and the City of Tyre holding some few Castles to preserve them from the rage of the Soldan There he was honorably received and with great joy after whose being there the Soldan or Saladine who had wonne all the Countrey there about came thither with an Hoast of an hundred threescore thousand Sarazens and besieged the City and made many bold and bloudy assaults But the Prince so Prince Edwards valour in defending Acris valiantly demeaned himselfe that hee defended the City the Castles belonging to it and all the Territories about that notwithstanding the multitude of the Soldans Army hee was compeld to forsake the siege to his great shame and dishonour Even the French Chronicles whose custome The French Chronicles testifie of P. Edwards valour is to write boastingly of themselves and sparingly of others bestow on him a character of invincible courage and that in all his stratagems and martiall exploits hee so honourably behaved himselfe that his very name was a terrour to the Turks for many yeers after who seeing his great boldnesse and that they were not able to stand him in battaile they plotted how to take away his life by Treason and to that purpose when he was resident in Acon they sent to P. Edward traitcrously wounded him a Sarazen in the name of a Secretary who in delivering unto him a counterfeit message wounded him in the arme with an empoysoned Knife which he wresting from the Infidels hand slue with the same weapon so that he died incontinently Then hee cald for a Surgeon and with incomparable sufferance commanded him to cut out all the putrified and corrupted flesh even to the scaling of the bone without the least shrinking or alteration of countenance of which base treachery hee was after revenged upon them to their great detriment and damage and thus The Occidentall Dragon bright as noon Did breathing flames dazle the orienial moon Hee is called Occidentall as being bred in this our Westerne Island and the Soldan is figured in the Orientall Moone being a Prince in the Easterne part of the World and bearing the semicircled Moone in his Banner Prince Edward during his aboad there had by the Princesse his wife a daughter called Ioane who tooke a His wife was Isabell of Spain Ioan of Acris name from the place and was called Ioane of Acris because there born and was after married to the Earle of Glocester After his being there some two yeeres and upward his father dying hee was called home to take possession of the Crowne of England Edward the first of that name and sonne of
Westcrag Enderlaw the Pile and the Towne Broughton Chester Fell's Crawned Dudistone Stanhouse the Fiker Beverton Franent Shenstone Marcle Farpren Kirklandhill Katherwyke Belton Eastbarnes Howland Butterden Quickwoe Blackbourne Raunton Bildi and the Tower with many other Townes and Villages by the Fleet on the Sea-side as Kincorne Saint Miuers the Queens Ferry part of Petinwaines c. Which done for their brave and notable service there done hee made Forty five Knights made at Leith at Leith forty five knights And thus was the king victorious over Scotland In this interim Warres were proclaimed against France so that the king gave free liberty and licence to all his subjects to use the French king and all that depend upon him to their best advantage and commodity and the same yeare hee prepared an Army to invade King Henry in person invadeth France France and himselfe in person the fourteenth of Iuly departed from Dover towards Callais and the next day removed to Morgisen upon the twenty sixt of the same month the Campe removed to high Bulloine and there camped on The siege of Bulloine the north-east part of the Towne two dayes after the Watch Tower call'd the old man was taken and the day after base Bulloine was won and upon the thirteenth of Septemb. the Town Bulloine taken by the K. was victoriously conquered by Henry the eight king of England France and Ireland defendor of the faith who upon humble petition made by the French suffered them to depart the Towne with bagge and baggage and this year were taken by the English fleet 300 and odde ships of the French to the great enriching of this nation and the great impoverishing of theirs CAP. 33. The death of Henry the eighth Edward the sixt crowned a calculation of his reigne Musselborow field wonne by the Lord Protector The death of the two brothers the Lord High Admirall and Lord protector a Character of the Duke of Somerset the death of King Edward not without suspition of poyson His Character c. THe yeare following being the thirty seventh of the kings reigne upon the thirteenth of Iune being Whitsunday Peace concluded betwixt England and France in London was proclaimed a generall peace betwixt the two kingdomes of England and France with a solemne procession at the time of the proclamation and that night were great Bone-fires made in the City and Suburbs for the celebration of the said union and upon the one and twentieth of August came over from the French king Monsieur Denebalt high Admirall of France and brought Monsieur Denebalt Embassador fom the French King with him the Sacre of Deepe with twelve Gallyes bravely accommodated who landed at the Tower where all the great Ordinance were shot off and he received by many peeres of the Realme conveighed to the Bishop of Londons palace where hee rested two nights and on Monday the twenty third of the same month he rode towards Hampton Court where the king then lay whom the young prince Edward met with a royall traine to the number of five hundred and fourty in velvet Coats and the His entertainment by Prince Edward princes Livery were with sleeves of cloath of gold and halfe the Coats embroydered where were eight hundred Horses richly caparison'd and riders suiting to the state who brought him to the Mannor of Hampton Court The next morning the KING and hee received the Sacrament together in confirmation of the late concluded peace After that were many Masques and Showes in which the very Torch Magnificent Showes bearers were apparrelled in gold with costly feasts and banquets during the space of sixe dayes after with many great gifts given to him and his chiefe followers hee returned to his countrey The next yeare being the thirty eighth of the King upon the ninth of Ianuary by the The death of the noble Earle of Surrey Kings expresse command was beheaded on the Tower-hill that noble and valorous gentleman the Earle of Surrey who had ingaged his person in Picardy Normandy Ireland Scotland c. from whence he never came but crowned with victory and the twenty eighth of the same Month the King himselfe departed the world in the yeare one thousand five hundred forty The death of Henry the eighth seven whose body was most Royally intombed at Windsor the sixteenth of February following King Edward the sixt began his dominion The inauguration of Edward the sixt over the Realme of England the one and thirtieth of Ianuary in the yeare of grace one thousand five hundreth forty seven and upon the nineteenth of February ensuing hee rode with his Vncle Sir Edward Seymour Lord governour and Protector and Duke of Somerset with the Nobility of the Land from the Tower through the City of London and so to Westminster and was annoynted and Crowned by Doctour Thomas Cranmer Archbishop of Canterbury who after ministred unto him the Sacraments with other divine Ceremonies according to the Protestant reformed Church Of this Kings Birth and Reigne it was thus calculated By birth a Caesar and in hopes as great Shall next ascend unto th' Imperiall seat Who ' ere mature cropt in his tender bloome Shal more against then Caesar could for Rome He th' Aristocracy Monarchall makes This from the triple Crowne the Scepter takes Vpright he shall betweene two Bases stand One in the sea fixt the other on the land These shall his pupillage strongly maintaine Secure the continent and scoure the maine But these supporters will be tane away By a Northumbers Wolfe and Suffolks Gray Then fall must this faire structure built on high And th' English like the Roman Caesar dye In his first yeare Sir Thomas Seimour the Kings unkle brother to the Duke of Somerset being Lord high Admirall by the Viz-Admirall called Sir Andrew Dudley having no other Vessells but the Paunce and the Hart and these singly manned there was a great conflict at Sea with three tall Scottish ships in the narrow Victory by sea Seas doubly manned and trimmed with great Ordinance notwithstanding which hee tooke them and brought them into Orwell Haven where he had good booty and store of prisoners And the same yeare in August the Lord Protector the Duke of Somerset with the Earle of Warwicke and others marcht with a noble Army into Scotland and not farre from Edenborrough at a place called Mosselborrough Musselborough field the English and Scotch Hoasts met where betweene them was fought a sharpe and cruell battaile in which in the end the English were victors and in which were slaine of the Scots foureteene thousand and prisoners taken of Lords Knights and Gentlemen to the number of fifteene hundred This yeare also was ordained that the Communion should be received in both kinds and at that time Stephen Gardner Bishop of Winchester for opposing the same was commanded to the Tower Commandement Gardner committed to the Tower also was given to all the Curats of every
the fourth who dyed in the Tower This Countesse Of Cardinal Pool from his minority had one onely sonne called Reignold Pool who was of great familiarity with the Lady Mary in their minority and devoting himself wholly to the study of the Arts was initiated in Maudline Colledge in Oxford but being a very young man left the University and having a great desire to travaile crost the seas and went into Italy seven years he spent in the Academy of Padua where entring into great familiarity with Peter Bent chiefe Secretary to the pope then raigning hee brought him into such reputation with his holinesse that in the yeare one thousand five hundred thirty eight he was made His imploiment to the Emperor and French K. Cardinall and imployed in Embassie both to the Emperor and French King in which negotiations hee is said to have dealt perfidiously with his owne Liege Lord and Soveraigne King Henry the eighth For dangerous is an English man being once Italionated The incensed King not able to reach the Son who was the Actor yet used his power against the mother as an accessary who being questioned for sending her sonne dayly supplies of money from England into Italy was for that convicted The Countesse of Salisbury his Mother beheaded of Treason and being fourescore yeares ofage was beheaded This Cardinall Poole was of the Royall blood as lineally descended from George Duke of Clarence of singular learning and approved modesty insomuch that in the twice vacancy of the See of Rome he was in either selected and nominated as pope but refusing it as too great a charge for such was Cardinal Pool twice elected Pope his apology hee rather chused a solitaty and sequestred life and so retired himselfe into a Monastery neere Verona of which according to rumour hee was first Founder and Patron in which hee spent a great part of his age as a man extermin'd from his native Country so continuing the later part of Henry the eight and the entire Soveraignty of Edward the sixt But Queene Mary his first acquaintance being invested into the English Throne having the soveraigne power in her owne dispose she sent to call him home with purpose as it was then rumourd having the p●…pes authority Queen Mary is purposed to marry with Car dinal Poole to dispence with all his Ecclesiasticall dignities to have made him her husband Of which Charles the Emperour having notice partly by his power and partly by his policy wrought so by his Engineeres that Spanish policy hee was detained in Italy till a match was fully concluded betwixt his sonne Prince Philip and the Queene which being perfected and then past prevention the Cardinall was at liberty to dispose of himselfe and for his greater Honour was sent over by the pope with the title of Legatus alatere at which time as Doctor Thomas Cranmer was not onely suspended but Cardinal Pool made Archbishop of Canterbury dispossessed of the Archbishoprick of Canterbury in stead of whom Cardinal Poole was installed into that See where having beene three yeares Archbishop when newes was brought him of the death of his Cousen Queene hee the same houre expired the fifty eight of his age His death and lyeth buryed within Saint Thomas Chappell in Canterbury Church with this short Inscription onely Depositum Cardinalis Poli. The prophesie ayming at him where it saith From the Pontificke Sea a Poole shall runne That wide shall spread its waters and to a stood In time shal grow made red with Martyrs blood The next Chapter leads mee to the entrance of prince Philip sonne to the Emperour Charles into the Land and his marriage with Queene Mary c. CAP. 36. King Philips entertainment into the Land presented with the Garter Hee is made King of Naples and Hierusalem the great solemnity of the King and Queenes marriage at Winchester Their Titles their riding through London The Queene rumourd to bee with Child King Philips cautelous proceedings he favoureth the Lady Elizabeth He leaveth the Land Queene Maries discontent at his departure The losse of Callis The death of Queene Mary The Inauguration of the Lady Elizabeth A prophesie of her birth and reigne TO omit all the Insurrections in Her time of the discontented Commons as that of Sir Thomas Wiat in Kent to keepe King Philip out of the Land in which the Duke of Suffolke was Insurrections in the time of Queen Mary a partisan with another commotion in Devonshire by Gowen and Peter Carow Giles Champernham and others with a third about Woodhurst in Sussex w ch was soon appeased a fourth by Vdall Throgmorton Daniel Pecham Stanton c. A fift by Henry Stafford who tooke Scarborough Castle in the North. I come now to Prince Philip who after all those that interposed his landing were cut off in the yeare of grace one thousand five hundred fifty foure the twentieth of Iuly made his safe arrivall at South-hampton where he was honourably received by Prince Philip landeth at Southampton the greatest part of the Nobility and was presented with the Order of Saint George and the Garter set with rich stones fastned about his Legge who before he would enter any house Prince Philip presented with the George and Garter went first into Holy Rood Church which standeth just opposite to the Towne-Hall where he gave thanks to God for his safe and prosperous arriuall and having spent some halfe an houre in his devotion hee mounted upon a goodly I●…nnet richly caparisoned which was that morning sent him by the Queene and so rode back towards his lodging which was neare unto the Water-gate The monday following he left Southampton and attended by the Lords and Gentlemen of England rode towards Winchester but by the reason of great store of Raine that fell the same day the journey seemed something unpleasant but there about seven of Clocke towards night hee was magnificently received and rode to the Church before he would see his lodging loud Musicke entertained him at his alighting and the bishop of that Sea with Stephen Gardiner foure other met him at the Church doore attended with Priests Singing men and Quiristers all in rich Coaps who had three faire Crosses or Crucifixe s born before them In the first entrance of the Church the Priest kneeled downe to pray which done he arose and went under an Imbroydered Canopy from the west doore up to the Quire who when he saw the Hoast put off his Hat to doe it reverence and then entred into a goodly Traverse hung with costly Arras and there kneeled againe till Winchester the Chancellor began Te Deum whom all the whole Quire seconded that done hee was brought thence by Torch-light and went on foot through the Cloisters to his lodging whither the Queenes Guard attended him to a faire House belonging to the Dean Hee was at that time apparrelled in a Coat or Mantle curiously imbroydered with gold his Prince
Philips demeanour to the people Hat sutable and a white Feather in it with a rich Orient Iewell all the way as he passed he turned himselfe to the people on both sides with a pleasant Countenance and after supper which was about ten of Clocke certaine of the Counsaile by a private way brought him to the Queene who entertained him graciously His first meeting with the Queene and lovingly they had conference together abouthalfean houre in the Spanish tongue w ch ended he tooke his leave and was conducted backe to his lodging Upon the Tuesday following about three of clocke in the afternoon he came from his lodging on foote attended by the Lord Steward the Earle of Darby the Earle of Pembrook and other Lords and Gentlemen as well strangers as English and that day he was attired in a cloake of blacke Spanish cloth imbroydered about with Silver a paire of white silke stockings and the Garter of the Order about his legge where he shewed himselfe His apparrell freely and openly to all men at his entrance into the Court loud Musicke was heard and in the great Hall the Queen met and kissed him before all the people then she taking the right hand they went together in the presence Chamber and talked under the cloth of state about a quarter of an houre He then took leave of her Majesty and comming into the open Court the Pensioners and Yeomen of the Guard stood on both sides as farre as the Gate from whence the Lords conducted him to the Cathedrall where hee heard Evensong which ended they brought Him backe to His lodging with Torch-light and so left him The same night the Emperor sent a Message to the Queene to give her to understand that P. Philip made K. of Naples and Hierusalem his sonne was not a Prince onely but a King of Hierusalem and Naples with other dominions after mentioned in his style Upon Saint Iames his day being the five and twentieth of Iuly about eleven of clocke in the morning the King and Queene came from their lodgings towards the Church on foot both richly attyred in Gownes of cloath of Gold set with pearle stones and jemmes he with his Guard and the with hers either having a Sword born before them before her by the Earle of The Ceremonies before the marriage Darby before him by the Earle of Pembrooke being c●…me unto the Church he went to one Altar and she to another hanged with Curtaines of Cloth of gold which being after drawne it was imagined that they were there shriven after they came from their places and meeting they very lovingly saluted each other hee also being at that time bare-headed Then sixe Bishops went to the place prepared for the Nuptiall Ceremony the King standing on the left hand and she on the right Then the Lord Chancellour asked the Banes betwixt them first in Latin and then in English The Ring was a plaine hoope of gold without any The solemnization of the marriage betwixt king Philip and Queen Mary stone For she desired to be marryed as Maids used to bee of old the Nuptialls being ended the King and Queene went hand in hand under a sumptuous Canopy by sixe Knights borne over them and two swords carryed before them comming before the Altar they kneeled down with either of them a lighted Tapor in their hands then they arose and withdrew she into a Traverse on the right side He into another on the left After the Gospell read they again appeared and kneeled before the Altar all the time of Masse which being ended the King of Heraulds openly proclaimed their Majesties King and Queene with these Titles following Philip and Mary by the Grace of God King Their Royall titles and Queene of England France Naples Hierusalem and Ireland defenders of the Faith King and Queene of Spaine Sicilia Leon and Arragon Arch-Dukes of Austria Dukes of Millaine Burgundy and Brabant Counties of Husburgh Flanders and Tyroll Lords of the Islands of Sardinia Majorcha Minorcha of the Firme land and the great Ocean Sea Palatines of Henault and the holy Empire Lords of Freezeland and of the Isles and governours of all Asia and Affrica The Trumpets ceasing the King and Queen came forth hand in hand royally attended and so went on foote to the Court and dyned together openly in the Hall at one Table Thus you see The Lionesse hath matcht with Caesars sonne I have beene the longer in this Relation to shew the magnificent solemnities of Princely Nuptialls in those times used The eighteenth of August the King and Queene went to Suffolke place in Southwarke and there dyned after Dinner they rode together over London Bridge and so past through the City the streets Their entertainment into the City of London being hanged sumptuously and divers pageants and Showes presented unto them having relation to their persons and the great joy of the people conceived at their Royall Marriage and unity of the Nations being after received by the Bishop of London into the Cathedrall Church of St. Paul with Procession where having done their devotion they rode on in great state towards their palace at Westminster Then came divers Embassadours from severall Countries from Russia Poland Denmarke Hungary Naples c. to gratulate the Nuptialls of these two potent princes After it was bruited that the Queene was with Child for which there was great thanksgiving The Queen rumoured to be with child and prayers through all the Churches of London for her safe delivery to come and King Philip chosen to bee protector of the Infant Male or female by a decree in parliament in case the Queene should miscarry in Childe-birth But some having whispered in his head that hee should be deluded by a supposititious infant prepared for that purpose and loath that a conterfeit should bee heire to all his Realmes and dominions hee would not depart the Chamber at the time of her delivery by which the plot tooke no effect and bred some distaste betwixt the King and the Queene Againe to King Philip favoured the Lady Elizab. second this the King greatly favoured the Lady Elizabeth and observing what Tyranny was used against the dejected princesse hee began to be somewhat jealous of the English Nation and their proceeding in state apprehending that if they insidiated the life of a Native being their Queene and Soveraignes sister with what small scruple of Conscience might they ayme to supplant him or any of his followers who were aliens and strangers which made him so suddainly to forsake the Queene and the Land his excuse being to visit his Father the King Philip leaveth the Land Emperour and to take possession of the Low Countries to the great sorrow of her Majesty of whom hee tooke his leave the fourth day of September In her dayes Calais was lost by the English Callis lost by the English and taken by the French by the ill management of the State
hee had hazarded his person for the fruition of her love hee invited her to her Lords Funerall at which the King and she both mourned but after the celebration thereof ended he the second time courted her and in few The King espouseth the Duchesse dayes made her his Queene of a Duchesse by whom hee had Arthur and Anna by which match the fame of Merlin spread farre abroad the explanation of whose former prophesie I leave to the following Chapter CHAP. 6. Merlins former prophesie made plaine concerning King Arthur with sundry other occurrences pertinent to the English History ARthur the sonne of Vter-Pendragon and Igerna succeeded his Father A summary of King Arthurs noble conquests in the Principality therefore called the Bore of Cornwall because begot and borne in that Country and of a Cornish Duchesse Hee was a great planter and supporter of Religion and the Christian Faith for so all our British Chronologers report of him His Conquests were many and some of them miraculous By the Islands of the Ocean are meant Ireland Island Scotland and the Orcades Gotland Norway and Dacia all which are called Provinciall Islands which he brought under the obedience of his Scepter By the planting of the Flowre de Lyces in his owne Garden is likewise intended his conquest of France with sundry other appendant Provinces as Flanders Poland Burgundy Aquitaine Andegavia and Normandie all which with divers others paid him an Annuall Tribute and of which Countries for their long and faithfull services hee gave the Earldome of Andegavia to Gaius his Taster and the Dukedome of Normandy to Bedverus his Cupbearer in memory of whose Regall bounty it grew to a custome A custome derived from K. Arthur for the Kings of France to make their Tasters and Cupbearers Earles and Dukes of Andegavia and Normandy By his pluming and shaking off the Eagles feathers was his great victory over the Romans foretold who when their Prince Lucius with ten other Kings invaded this his Land of Britaine with a numberlesse Army of Souldiers the most of them hee slue acquitting the Tribute payed to Rome since the time of Iulius Caesar and those who survived hee made his Feodors and Vassals by which he got the sovereignty over many Provinces before subjugate to the Roman Empire sending the dead body Lucius the Roman Emperour slain by Arthur of their Emperour back to Rome there to bee interred next where it is said his name shall be as meat to all those mouthes that shall speake of his notable and noble atchievements by which no other thing is meant but that the very relation of his brave Gests shall be a refreshing and delight to all such as shall either reade them or heare them with much pleasure by others reported whose very begetting conception and birth carry with them the novelty of a Miracle And where it is further said that his end shall be doubtfull hee that shall make question of the truth of Merlins prophesie in that point let him to this day but travell into Armorica or Little Britain and in any of their Citties proclame in their streets that Arthur expired after the common Of Arthurs death and ordinary manner of men most sure he shal be to have bitter and railing language asperst upon him If he escape a tempestuous shower of stones and brick-bats The sixe Kings that succeeded him in order The s●… Kings that ord●…rly succeeded King Arthur were Constantinus the eldest sonne of Cador Duke of Cornwall and Arthurs Cousin German the second was Constantinus brother the third Conanus Aurelius their Nephew the fourth Vortiporius the fift Malgo the sixt Caretius for when Arthur in that great battaile which he fought against his Cousin the Arch-traytor Mordred whom he slue himselfe being mortally wounded and therefore had retired Mordred slain by Arthur himselfe into the vale of Avalan in hope to be cured of his hurts before his death and the manner of which is uncertaine hee sent for his Cousin Constantine before named a man of approved vertue and expert in all Martiall Discipline and made him King against whom the Saxons assisted by the two sonnes of Mordred assembled themselves who having defeated Constantinus noble victories them in sundry battails The elder sonne of Mordred who had for his refuge fortified Winchester he took in the Church of Saint Amphibalus whither hee had fled for Sanctuary and slue him before the Altar the younger he found hid in a Monastery in London whom he caused likewise to be slaine and this happened in the yeere after the Incarnation of our blessed Saviour 543. but in the third yeere after he was perfidiously betraid to death by the practice of his Nephew Conanus Aurelius and his body royally interred in the Mount Ambria neere unto Vter-Pendragon Then reigned his brother whom Conanus suffered not to rest one houre in peace till hee had incarcerated him and in the same yeere usurped the Diademe a young man of excellent parts Conanus and his conditions and noble carriage had hee not beene tainted with ambition the love of Civill Warres and Parricidiall Impiety having slaine one of his Uncles imprisoned the other and kild his two sonnes to attaine to the Regall Sovereignty which not long he enjoyed for the next yeere after he expired whom succeeded Vortiporius against whom the Saxons made a new Insurrection Vortiporus his victories and by whom they were utterly subverted by which hee became absolute Monarch of this Island but after foure yeeres yielded his body to the earth and left his Crowne to Malgo who was invested in the yeere of Grace after some Authours 581. This Prince was strong in body fortunate in Malgo's description and character Arms and of larger size and stature then any of his Antecessours who was a great suppressor of Usurpers and Tyrants for hee not only enjoy'd this Kingdome entire but conquered by his sword all the six provinciall Islands of whom it is reported that hee was the fairest of all the British Nation but those excellent gifts of Nature he shamefully abused as being much addicted to Sodomitry and as hee was a proditor of others Chastities hee was also prodigall of his owne after whose death in the yeere 586 Caretius a most wicked King Caretius was instituted in the Throne a Prince hatefull to good men an incendiary of Civill and Domesticke combustions an exiler of his Nobles a slayer of his Citizens a robber of the rich a suppresser of the poore and indeed subject to all the vices can be named By the German Worme and the Sea Wolfe What was ment by the German worm and the Seawoolfe waited on by woods brought from Africa through Saint Georges Chanell which shall support him our Prophet would have us to know that the Saxons are comprehended in the Worme and in the Wolfe Gormondus King of Africa who in the time of this Caretius came with a mighty