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A50902 The history of Britain, that part especially now call'd England from the first traditional beginning, continu'd to the Norman conquest / collected out of the antientest and best authours thereof by John Milton. Milton, John, 1608-1674.; Faithorne, William, 1616-1691. 1670 (1670) Wing M2119; ESTC R13663 213,672 366

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impar'd they as readily hearkning to his request send Aidan a Scotch Monk and Bishop but of singular zeal and meekness with others to assist him whom at thir own desire he seated in Lindisfarne as the Episcopal Seat now Holy Iland and being the Son of Ethelfrid by the Sister of Edwin as right Heir others failing easily reduc'd both Kingdoms of Northumberland as before into one nor of Edwins Dominion lost any part but enlarg'd it rather over all the fowr British Nations Angles Britans Picts and Scots exerciseing regall Authority Of his Devotion Humility and Almes-deeds much is spok'n that he disdain'd not to be the interpreter of Aidan preaching in Scotch or bad English to his Nobles and Houshold Servants and had the poor continually serv'd at his Gate after the promiscuous manner of those times his meaning might be upright but the manner more antient of privat or of Church contribution is doubtless more Evangelical About this time the West-Saxons An. Dom. 635 antiently call'd Gevissi by the preaching of Berinus a Bishop whom Pope Honorius had sent were converted to the Faith with Kinegils thir King him Oswald receav'd out of the Font An. Dom. 636 and his Daughter in mariage The next year Cuichelm was baptiz'd in Dorchester but liv'd not to the years end The East-Angles also this year were reclaim'd to the Faith of Christ which for som years past they had thrown off But Sigbert the Brother of Eorpwald now succeeded in that Kingdom prais'd for a most Christian and Learned Man who while his Brother yet reign'd living in France an exile for some displeasure conceav'd against him by Redwald his Father lern'd there the Christian Faith and reigning soon after in the same instructed his people by the preaching of Felix a Burgundian Bishop An. Dom. 640 In the year 640. Eadbald deceasing left to Ercombert his Son by Emma the French Kings Daughter the Kingdom of Kent recorded the first of English Kings who commanded through his limits the destroying of Idols laudably if all Idols without exception and the first to have establisht Lent among us under strict penalty not worth remembring but only to inform us that no Lent was observ'd heer till his time by compulsion especially being noted by some to have fraudulently usurp'd upon his Elder Brother Ermenred whose right was precedent to the Crown An. Dom. 642 Oswald having reign'd 8 years worthy also as might seem of longer life fell into the same fate with Edwin and from the same hand in a great Battel overcom and slain by Penda at a place call'd Maserfeild now Oswestre in Shropshire miraculous as saith Beda after his Death His Brother Oswi succeeded him reigning though in much trouble 28 years oppos'd either by Penda or his own Son Alfred or his Brothers Son Ethilwald An. Dom. 643 Next year Kinegils the West-Saxon dying left his Son Kenwalk in his stead though as yet unconverted About this time Sigebert King of East-Angles having lernt in France ere his coming to Reign the manner of thir Schools with the assistance of some Teachers out of Kent instituted a School heer after the same Discipline thought to be the University of Cambridge then first founded and at length weary of his Kingly Office betook him to a Monastical life commending the care of Government to his Kinsman Egric who had sustain'd with him part of that burden before It happen'd some years after that Penda made War on the East-Angles they expecting a sharp encounter besought Sigebert whom they esteem'd an expert Leader with his presence to confirm the Souldiery and him refuseing carried by force out of the Monastery into the Camp where acting the Monk rather then the Captain with a single wand in his hand he was slain with Egric and his whole Army put to flight Anna of the Royal Stock as next in right succeeded and hath the praise of a vertuous and most Christian Prince An. Dom. 645 But Kenwalk the West-Saxon having maried the Daughter of Penda and divorc't her was by him with more appearance of a just cause vanquisht in fight and depriv'd of his Crown whence retiring to Anna King of the East-Angles after three years abode in his Court he there became Christian An. Dom. 648 and afterwards regain'd his Kingdom Oswi in the former years of his Reign had sharer with him Oswin Nephew of Edwin who rul'd in Deira 7 years commended much for his zeal in Religion and for comliness of person with other princely qualities belov'd of all Notwithstanding which dissentions growing between them it came to Armes Oswin seeing himself much exceeded in numbers thought it more prudence dismissing his Army to reserve himself for some better occasion But committing his person with one faithfull attendant to the Loyalty of Hunwald an Earl his imagin'd friend he was by him treacherously discoverd and by command of Oswi slain An. Dom. 651 After whom within 12 days and for greif of him whose death he foretold dy'd Bishop Aidan famous for his Charity meekness and labour in the Gospel The fact of Oswi was detestable to all which therfore to expiate a Monastery was built in the place where it was don and Prayers there daily offerd up for the Souls of both Kings the slain and the slayer Kenwalk by this time reinstall'd in his Kingdom kept it long but with various Fortune for Beda relates him oft-times afflicted by his Enemies with great losses An. Dom. 652 and in 652. by the Annals fought a Battel Civil War Ethelwerd calls it at Bradanford by the River Afene against whom and for what cause or who had the Victory they write not Camden names the place Bradford in Wiltshire by the River Avon and Cuthred his neer Kinsman against whom he fought but cites no Autority certain it is that Kenwalk fowr years before had giv'n large possessions to his Nephew Cuthred the more unlikely therefore now to have rebell'd An. Dom. 653 The next year Peada whom his Father Penda though a Heathen had for his Princely Vertues made Prince of Middle-Angles belonging to the Mercians was with that people converted to the Faith For coming to Oswi with request to have in mariage Alf●eda his Daughter he was deni'd her but on condition that he with all his people should receave Christianity Heering therefore not unwillingly what was preach't to him of Resurrection and Eternal life much persuaded also by Alfrid the Kings Son who had his Sister Kyniburg to Wife he easily assented for the truths sake only as he profess'd whether he obtain'd the Virgin or no and was baptiz'd with all his followers Returning he took with him fowr Presbyters to teach the people of his Province who by thir daily preaching won many Neither did Penda though himself no Beleever prohibit any in his Kingdome to heer to beleeve the Gospel but rather hated and despis'd those who professing to beleeve atested not thir Faith by good works condemning them for
puissance of Ethelfrid yeilded at length either to dispatch him or to give him into thir hands but earnestly exhorted by his Wife not to betray the Faith and inviolable Law of Hospitality and refuge giv'n preferrs his first promise as the more Religious nor only resuses to deliver him but since War was thereupon denounc't determins to be beforehand with the danger and with a sudden Army rais'd surprises Ethelfrid little dreaming an invasion and in a fight near to the East-side of the River Idle on the Mercian border now Nottinghamshire slaies him dissipating easily those few Forces which he had got to march out over-hastily with him who yet as a testimony of his Fortune not his Valour to be blam'd slew first with his own hands Reiner the Kings Son His two Sons Oswald and Oswi by Acca Edwins Sister escap'd into Scotland By this Victory Redwald became so far superior to the other Saxon Kings that Beda reck'ns him the next after Ella and Ethelbert who besides this Conquest of the North had likewise all on the hitherside Humber at his obedience He had formerly in Kent receav'd Baptism but coming home and perswaded by his Wife who still it seems was his Chief Counseller to good or bad alike relaps'd into his old Religion yet not willing to forgoe his new thought it not the worst way lest perhaps he might err in either for more assurance to keep them both and in the same Temple erected one Altar to Christ another to his Idols But Edwin as with more deliberation he undertook and with more sincerity retain'd the Christian profession so also in power and extent of dominion far exceeded all before him subdueing all saith Beda English or British eev'n to the Iles then call'd Mevanian Anglesey and Man setl'd in his Kingdome by Redwald he sought in mariage Edelburga whom others call Tate the Daughter of Ethelbert To whose Embassadors Eadbald her Brother made answer that to wed thir Daughter to a Pagan was not the Christian Law Edwin repli'd that to her Religion he would be no hindrance which with her whole Houshold she might freely exercise And moreover that if examin'd it were found the better he would imbrace it An. Dom. 625 These ingenuous offers op'ning so fair a way to the advancement of truth are accepted and Paulinus as a spiritual Guardian sent along with the Virgin He being to that purpose made Bishop by Justus omitted no occasion to plant the Gospel in those parts An. Dom. 626 but with small success till the next year Cuichelm at that time one of the two West-Saxon Kings envious of the greatness which he saw Edwin growing up to sent privily Eumerus a hir'd Sword-man to assassin him who under pretence of doing a message from his Master with a poison'd Weapon stabs at Edwin conferring with him in his House by the River Derwent in Yorkeshire on an Easter-day which Lilla one of the Kings Attendants at the instant perceaving with a loyalty that stood not then to deliberate abandon'd his whole body to the blow which notwithstanding made passage through to the Kings Person with a wound not to be slighted The murderer encompass'd now with Swords and desperate fore-revenges his own fall with the Death of another whom his Poinard reach'd home Paulinus omitting no opportunity to win the King from misbeleef obtain'd at length this promise from him that if Christ whom he so magnifi'd would give him to recover of his wound and victory of his Enemies who had thus assaulted him he would then become Christian in pledge whereof he gave his young Daughter Eanfled to be bred up in Religion who with 12 others of his Family on the day of Pentecost was baptiz'd And by that time well recover'd of his wound to punish the Authors of so foul a fact he went with an Army against the West-Saxons whom having quell'd by War and of such as had conspir'd against him put some to Death others pardon'd he return'd home victorious and from that time worship'd no more his Idols yet ventur'd not rashly into Baptism but first took care to be instructed rightly what he learnt examining and still considering with himself and others whom he held wisest though Boniface the Pope by large Letters of exhortation both to him and his Queen was not wanting to quicken his beleef But while he still deferr'd and his deferring might seem now to have past the maturity of wisedome to a faulty lingring Paulinus by Revelation as was beleev'd coming to the knowledge of a secret which befell him strangly in the time of his troubles on a certain day went in boldly to him and laying his right hand on the head of the King ask'd him if he rememberd what that sign meant the King trembling and in a maze riseing up strait fell at his Feet Behold saith Paulinus raising him from the ground God hath deliver'd you from your Enemies and giv'n you the Kingdome as you desir'd perform now what long since you promis'd him to receave his Doctrine which I now bring you and the Faith which if you accept shall to your temporal felicity add Eternal The promise claim'd of him by Paulinus how and wherefore made though savouring much of Legend is thus related Redwald as we heard before dazl'd with the gold of Ethelfrid or by his threatning over-aw'd having promis'd to yeild up Edwin one of his faithfull Companions of which he had some few with him in the Court of Redwald that never shrunk from his adversity about the first howr of night comes in hast to his Chamber and calling him forth for better secrecy reveles to him his danger offers him his aid to make escape but that course not approv'd and seeming dishonourable without more manifest cause to begin distrust towards one who had so long bin his only refuge the friend departs Edwin left alone without the Palace Gate full of sadness and perplext thoughts discerns about the dead of night a man neither by countnance nor by habit to him known approaching towards him Who after salutation ask'd him why at this howr when all others were at rest he alone so sadly sat waking on a cold Stone Edwin not a little misdoubting who he might be ask'd him again what his sitting within dores or without concern'd him to know To whom he again think not that who thou art or why sitting heer or what danger hangs over thee is to me unknown But what would you promise to that man who ever would befriend you out of all these troubles and perswade Redwald to the like All that I am able answer'd Edwin And he what if the same man should promise to make you greater then any English King hath bin before you I should not doubt quoth Edwin to be answerably gratefull And what if to all this he would inform you said the other in a way to happiness beyond what any of your Ancestors hath known would you hark'n to his Counsel Edwin without
a sickness ended his Reign And to Kenulf next in right of the same Progeny bequeath'd his Kingdome Mean while the Danish Pirats who still wasted Northumberland ventring on shoar to spoil another Monastery at the mouth of the River Don were assail'd by the English thir Cheif Captain slain on the place then returning to Sea were most of them Ship-wrack'd others driv'n again on shoar were put all to the Sword Simeon attributes this thir punishment to the power of St. Cudbert offended with them for the rifling of his Covent An. Dom. 796 Two years after this dy'd Ethelred twice King but not exempted at last from the fate of many his predecessors miserably slain by his people some say deservedly as not inconscious with them who train'd Osred to his ruin Osbald a Nobleman exalted to the Throne and in less then a month deserted and expell'd was forc'd to fly at last from Lindisfarne by Sea to the Pictish King and dy'd an Abbot Eardulf whom Ethelred six years before had commanded to be put to Death at Ripun before the Abbey-Gate dead as was suppos'd and with solemn Dirge carried into the Church after midnight found there alive I read not how then banish'd now recall'd was in Yorke created King In Kent Ethelbert or Pren whom the Annals call Eadbright so different they often are one from another both in timeing and in nameing by some means having usurp'd regal power after two years Reign contending with Kenulf the Mercian was by him tak'n Pris'ner and soon after out of pious commiseration let go but not receav'd of his own what became of him Malmsbury leaves in doubt Simeon writes that Kenulf commanded to put out his Eyes and lop off his hands but whether the sentence were executed or not is left as much in doubt by his want of expression An. Dom. 798 The second year after this they in Northumberland who had conspir'd against Ethelred now also raising War against Eardulf under Wada thir Cheif Captain after much havock on either side at Langho by Whaley in Lancashire the Conspirators at last flying Eardulf return'd with Victory The same year London with a great multitude of her Inhabitants by a sudden fire was consum'd An. Dom. 800 The year 800. made way for great alteration in England uniting her seaven Kingdoms into one by Echert the famous West-Saxon him Birthric dying Childless left next to reign the only surviver of that linage descended from Inegild the Brother of King Ina. And according to his Birth liberally bred he began early from his youth to give signal hopes of more then ordinary worth growing up in him which Birthric fearing and with all his juster title to the Crown secretly sought his life and Ecbert perceaving fled to Offa the Mercian but he having married Eadburg his Daughter to Birthric easily gave ear to his Embassadors coming to require Ecbert he again put to his shifts escap'd thence into France but after three years banishment there which perhaps contributed much to his education Charles the Great then reigning he was call'd over by the publick voice for Birthric was newly dead and with general applause created King of West-Saxons The same day Ethelmund at Kinneresford passing over with the Worcestershire men was met by Weolstan another Nobleman with those of Wiltshire between whom happ'nd a great fray wherin the Wiltshire men overcame but both Dukes were slain no reason of thir quarrel writ'n such bickerings to recount met oft'n in these our Writers what more worth is it then to Chronicle the Wars of Kites or Crows flocking and fighting in the Air An. Dom. 801 The year following Eardulf the Northumbrian leading forth an Army against Kenulf the Mercian for harboring certain of his Enemies by the diligent mediation of other Princes and Prelats Armes were laid aside and amity soon sworn between them But Eadburga the Wife of Birthric a woeman every way wicked in malice especially cruel An. Dom. 802 could not or car'd not to appease the general hatred justly conceiv'd against her accustom'd in her Husbands days to accuse any whom she spighted and not prevailing to his ruin her practice was by poison secretly to contrive his Death It fortun'd that the King her Husband lighting on a Cup which she had temperd not for him but for one of his great Favourites whom she could not harm by accuseing sip'd therof only and in a while after still pineing away ended his days the favourite drinking deeper found speedier the operation She fearing to be questiond for these facts with what treasure she had pass'd over-sea to Charles the Great whom with rich guifts coming to his presence the Emperour courtly receav'd with this pleasant proposal Choose Eadburga which of us two thou wilt me or my Son for his Son stood by him to be thy Husband She no dissembler of what she lik'd best made easie answer Were it in my choise I should choose of the two your Son rather as the younger man To whom the Emperour between jest and earnest hadst thou chosen me I had bestow'd on thee my Son but since thou hast chos'n him thou shalt have neither him nor me Nevertheless he assign'd her a rich Monastery to dwell in as Abbess for that life it may seem she chose next to profess but being a while after detected of unchastity with one of her followers she was commanded to depart thence from that time wandring poorly up and down with one Servant in Pavia a City of Italy she finish'd at last in beggery her shamefull life An. Dom. 805 In the year 805. Cuthred whom Kenuls the Mercian had instead of Pren made King in Kent having obscurely reign'd 8 years deceas'd An. Dom. 806 In Northumberland Eardulf the year following was driv'n out of his Realm by Alfwold who Reign'd two years in his room after whom Eandred Son of Eardulf 33 years An. Dom. 808 but I see not how this can stand with the sequel of story out of better Authors An. Dom. 809 Much less that which Buchanan relates the year following of Acaius King of Scots who having reign'd 32 years and dying in 809 had formerly aided but in what year of his Reign tells not Hungus King of Picts with 10000 Scots against Athelstan a Saxon or English-man then wasting the Pictish Borders that Hungus by the aid of those Scots and the help of St. Andrew thir Patron in a Vision by night and the appearance of his cross by day routed the astonisht English and slew Athelstan in fight Who this Athelstan was I believe no man knows Buchanan supposes him to have been some Danish Commander on whom King Alured or Alfred had bestow'd Northumberland but of this I find no footsteps in our antient Writers and if any such thing were done in the time of Alfred it must be little less then 100. years after this Athelstan therefore and this great overthrow seems rather to have bin the fancy of
some Legend then any warrantable Record Mean while Ecbert having with much Prudence Justice and Clemency An. Dom. 813 a work of more then one year establisht his Kingdome and himself in the affections of his people turns his first enterprise against the Britans both them of Cornwal and those beyond Seavern subdueing both In Mercia Kenulf the 6th year after having reign'd with great praise of his religious mind and vertues both in Peace and War deceas'd An. Dom. 819 His Son Kenelm a Child of seaven years was committed to the care of his Elder Sister Quendrid who with a female ambition aspiring to the Crown hir'd one who had the charge of his nurture to murder him led into a woody place upon pretence of hunting The murder as is reported was miraculously reveal'd but to tell how by a Dove droping a writt'n note on the Altar at Rome is a long story told though out of order by Malmsbury and under the year 821. by Mat. West where I leave it to be sought by such as are more credulous then I wish my Readers Only the note was to this purpose Low in a mead of Kine under a Thorn Of head bereft li'th poor Kenelm King-born An. Dom. 820 Keolwulf the Brother of Kenulf after one years Reign was driv'n out by one Bernulf an Usurper who in his third year An. Dom. 823 uncertain whether invading or invaded was by Ecbert though with great loss on both sides overthrown and put to flight at Ellandune or Wilton yet Malmsbury accounts this Battel fought in 806 a wide difference but frequently found in thir computations Bernulf thence retireing to the East-Angles as part of his Dominion by the late seisure of Offa was by them met in the field and slain but they doubting what the Mercians might do in revenge hereof forthwith yielded themselves both King and people to the Sovrantie of Ecbert As for the Kings of East-Angles our Annals mention them not since Ethelwald him succeeded his Brothers Sons as we find in Malmsbury Aldulf a good King well acquainted with Bede and Elwold who left the Kingdome to Beorn he to Ethelred the Father of Ethelbrite whom Offa perfidiously put to Death Simeon and Hoveden in the year 749. write that Elfwald King of East-Angles dying Humbeanna and Albert shar'd the Kingdom between them but where to insert this among the former successions is not easie nor much material after Ethelbrite none is nam'd of that Kingdom till thir submitting now to Ecbert he from this Victory against Bernulf sent part of his Army under Ethelwulf his Son with Alstan Bishop of Shirburn and Wulferd a Chief Commander into Kent Who finding Baldred there reigning in his 18th year overcame and drove him over the Thames whereupon all Kent Surrey Sussex and lastly Essex with her King Swithred became subject to the Dominion of Ecbert Neither were these all his exploits of this year the first in order set down in Saxon Annals being his fight against the Devonshire Welch at a place call'd Gasulford now Camelford in Cornwal An. Dom. 825 Ludiken the Mercian after two years preparing to avenge Bernulf his Kinsman on the East-Angles was by them with his five Consuls as the Annals call them surpris'd and put to the Sword and Withlaf his successor first vanquisht then upon submission with all Mercia made tributary to Ecbert Mean while the Northumbrian Kingdom of it self was fall'n to shivers thir Kings one after another so oft'n slain by the people no man dareing though never so ambitious to take up the Scepter which many had found so hot the only effectual cure of ambition that I have read for the space of 33 years after the Death of Ethelred Son of Mollo as Malmsbury writes there was no King many Noblemen and Prelats were fled the Country Which mis-rule among them the Danes having understood oft-times from thir Ships entring far into the land infested those parts with wide depopulations wasting Towns Churches and Monasteries for they were yet Heathen The Lent before whose coming on the North-side of St. Peters Church in Yorke was seen from the roof to rain blood The causes of these calamities and the ruin of that Kingdom Alcuin a learned Monk living in those days attributes in several Epistles and well may to the general ignorance and decay of lerning which crept in among them after the Death of Beda and of Ecbert the Archbishop thir neglect of breeding up youth in the Scriptures the spruce and gay apparel of thir Preists and Nuns discovering thir vain and wanton minds examples are also read eev'n in Beda's days of thir wanton deeds thence Altars defil'd with perjuries Cloisters violated with Adulteries the Land polluted with blood of thir Princes civil dissentions among the people and finally all the same vices which Gildas alledg'd of old to have ruin'd the Britans In this estate Ecbert who had now conquerd all the South finding them in the year 827. An. Dom. 827 for he was march'd thether with an Army to compleat his Conquest of the whole Iland no wonder if they submitted themselves to the yoke without resistance Eandred thir King becoming Tributary An. Dom. 828 Thence turning his forces the year following he subdu'd more throughly what remain'd of North-Wales The End of the Fourth Book THE HISTORY OF BRITAIN The Fifth Book THE sum of things in this Iland or the best part therof reduc't now under the power of one man and him one of the worthiest which as far as can be found in good Authors was by none attain'd at any time heer before unless in Fables men might with some reason have expected from such Union peace and plenty greatness and the flourishing of all Estates and Degrees but far the contrary fell out soon after Invasion Spoil Desolation slaughter of many slavery of the rest by the forcible landing of a fierce Nation Danes commonly call'd and somtimes Dacians by others the same with Normans as barbarous as the Saxons themselves were at first reputed and much more for the Saxons first invited came hither to dwell these unsent for unprovok'd came only to destroy But if the Saxons as is above related came most of them from Jutland and Anglen a part of Denmarke as Danish Writers affirm and that Danes and Normans are the same then in this invasion Danes drove out Danes thir own posterity And Normans afterwards none but antienter Normans Which invasion perhaps had the Heptarchie stood divided as it was had either not bin attempted or not uneasily resisted while each Prince and people excited by thir neerest concernments had more industriously defended thir own bounds then depending on the neglect of a deputed Governour sent oft-times from the remote residence of a secure Monarch Though as it fell out in those troubles the lesser Kingdoms revolting from the West-Saxon yoke and not aiding each other too much concern'd with thir own safety it came to no
the King who still laid at him and little expected such assassination mortally into the brest The matter was done in a moment ere men set at Table could turn them or imagin at first what the stir meant till perceaving the King deadly wounded they flew upon the murderer and hew'd him to peeces who like a wild Beast at abbay seeing himself surrounded desperatly laid about him wounding some in his fall The King was buried at Glaston wherof Dunstan was then Abbot his Laws yet remain to be seen among the Laws of other Saxon Kings Edred EDred the third Brother of Athelstan the Sons of Edmund being yet but Children next reign'd not degenerating from his worthy predecessors and Crown'd at Kingston Northumberland he throughly subdu'd the Scots without refusal swore him Allegiance yet the Northumbrians ever of doubtfull Faith soon after chose to themselves one Eric a Dane Huntingdon still haunts us with this Anlaf of whom we gladly would have bin ridd and will have him before Eric recall'd once more and reign fowr years then again put to his shifts But An. Dom. 950 Edred entring into Northumberland and with spoils returning Eric the King fell upon his rear Edred turning about both shook off the Enemy and prepar'd to make a second inroad which the Northumbrians dreading rejected Eric slew Amanous the Son of Anlaf and with many presents appeasing Edred submitted again to his Goverment nor from that time had Kings but were govern'd by Earls of whom Osulf was the first About this time Wulstan An. Dom. 953 Archbishop of York accus'd to have slain certain men of Thetford in revenge of thir Abbot whom the Townsmen had slain was committed by the King to close Custody but soon after enlarg'd was restor'd to his place Malmsbury writes that his crime was to have conniv'd at the revolt of his Countrymen but An. Dom. 955 King Edred two years after sick'ning in the flowr of his youth dy'd much lamented and was buried at Winchester Edwi EDwi the Son of Edmund now come to Age after his Uncle Edred's Death took on him the Goverment and was Crown'd at Kingston His lovely person sirnam'd him the Fair his actions are diversly reported by Huntingdon not thought illaudable But Malnisbury and such as follow him write far otherwise that he married or kept as Concubine his neer Kinswoman some say both her and her Daughter so inordinatly giv'n to his pleasure that on the very day of his Coronation he abruptly withdrew himself from the Company of his Peers whether in Banquet or Consultation to sit wantoning in the Chamber with this Algiva so was her name who had such power over him Wherat his Barons offended sent Bishop Dunstan the boldest among them to request his return he going to the Chamber not only interrupted his dalliance and rebuk'd the Lady but takeing him by the hand between force and persuasion brought him back to his Nobles The King highly displeas'd and instigated perhaps An. Dom. 956 by her who was so prevalent with him not long after sent Dunstan into banishment caus'd his Monastery to be rifl'd and became an Enemy to all Monks Wherupon Odo Archbishop of Canterbury pronounc't a separation or divorce of the King from Algiva But that which most incited William of Malmsbury against him he gave that Monastery to be dwelt in by secular Preists or to use his own phrase made it a stable of Clerks at length these affronts done to the Church were so resented by the people that the Mercians and Northumbrians revolted from him and set up Edgar his Brother leaving to Edwi the An. Dom. 957 An. Dom. 958 West-Saxons only bounded by the River Thames with greif wherof as is thought he soon after ended his daies and was buried at Winchester Mean while Elfsin Bishop of that place after the Death of Odo ascending by Simony to the Chair of Canterbury and going to Rome the same year for his Pall was froz'n to Death in the Alps. Edgar Edgar by his Brothers Death now King of all England at 16 years of Age call'd home Dunstan An. Dom. 959 out of Flanders where he liv'd in exile This King had no War all his Reign yet allways well prepar'd for War govern'd the Kingdom in great Peace Honour and Prosperity gaining thence the Sirname of Peaceable much extoll'd for Justice Clemency and all Kingly Vertues the more ye may be sure by Monks for his building so many Monasteries as some write every year one for he much favour'd the Monks against secular Preists who in the time of Edwi had got possession in most of thir Covents His care and wisdome was great in guarding the Coast round with stout ships to the number of 3600 Mat. West reck'ns them 4800 divided into fowr Squadrons to sail to and fro on the fowr quarters of the land meeting each other the first of 1200 sail from East to West the second of as many from West to East the third and fowrth between North and South himself in the Summer time with his Fleet. Thus he kept out wisely the force of Strangers and prevented Forein War but by thir too frequent resort hither in time of peace and his too much favouring them he let in thir vices unaware Thence the people saith Malmsbury learnt of the out-landish Saxons rudeness of the Flemish daintiness and softness of the Danes Drunk'ness though I doubt these vices are as naturally home-bred heer as in any of those Countries Yet in the Winter and Spring time he usually rode the Circuit as a Judge Itinerant through all his Provinces to see justice well administerd and the poor not oppress'd Theeves and Robbers he rooted almost out of the Land and wild Beasts of prey altogether enjoining Ludwal King of Wales to pay the yearly tribute of 300 Wolves which he did for two years together till the third year no more were to be found nor ever after but his Laws may be read yet extant Whatever was the cause he was not Crown'd till the 30. of his Age but then with great An. Dom. 973 An. Dom. 974 splendor and magnificence at the City of Bath in the Feast of Pentecost This year dy'd Swarling a Monk of Croyland the 142. year of his Age and another soon after him in the 115th in the Fenn and watrish air the more remarkable King Edgar the next year went to Chester and summoning to his Court there all the Kings that held of him took homage of them thir names are Kened King of Scots Malcolm of Cumberland Maccuse of the Iles five of Wales Duswal Huwal Grifith Jacob Judethil these he had in such aw that going one day into a Gally he caus'd them to take each man his Oar and row him down the River Dee while he himself sat at the Stern which might be done in meriment and easily obei'd if with a serious brow discoverd rather vain glory and insulting haughtiness then