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A59088 Of the dominion or ownership of the sea two books : in the first is shew'd that the sea, by the lavv of nature or nations, is not common to all men, but capable of private dominion or proprietie, as well as the land : in the second is proved that the dominion of the British sea, or that which incompasseth the isle of Great Britain is, and ever hath been, a part or appendant of the empire of that island writen at first in Latin, and entituled, Mare clausum, seu, De dominio maris, by John Selden, Esquire ; translated into English and set forth with som additional evidences and discourses, by Marchamont Nedham.; Mare clausum. English Selden, John, 1584-1654.; Nedham, Marchamont, 1620-1678. 1652 (1652) Wing S2432; ESTC R15125 334,213 600

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Liberties and made you the happie Instruments of freeing us from the yoke of Kings When I call to minde how nobly you asserted the Rights of England against Domestick Tyrannie upon the neck of the late King and laid the foundation of our Freedom upon the highest Act of Justice when Justice sat more gloriously inthroned than ever it did before on any earthly Tribunal I am raised with more than ordinarie confidence that the same Spirit of Justice which acted you in your former atchievments for our establishment by Land against him and his posteritie will carrie you on as you have begun with the like zeal and magnanimitie to vindicate those Rights by Sea against all Forein violations and invasions It is your honor that God hath made you Founders of the most famous and potent Republick this day in the world and your felicitie that all your Enemies have no other Ground of quarrel but that you are a Republick For though these Netherlanders speak it not out in words yet they have often told you so in behaviour not onely as they saw a barbarous stab given you in the person of D r Dorisla yet let slip the● Murtherers by delaie the States-General not having issued out so much as a warrant for their apprehension but after in neglecting slighting and slender protecting to say no more of your two Ambassadors and at length in the louder language of the Cannon during a Treatie of Peace for a more strict League and Union when Tromp proclaimed to all the world that their infamous design was by Treacherie to surprise and destroy our Fleets at Sea which to use your own language are under God the Walls and Bulwarks of this Nation It is not my business here to recite their many unkindnesses throughout the late wars their designed protracting them by a mischievous underhand-siding and supplying the publick Enemie together with the many indignities affronts injuries and intolerable provocations both before and since your settling in a State of Freedom That egregious attempt upon your Shipping under pretence of a friendly salutation consider'd in all its Circumstances may serv in stead of all it beeing indeed such a Barbarism that the world cannot parallel and none but themselvs would have acted And therefore wee may the less wonder at their denying it when don since the owning must have rendred them and their present enterprise detestable to the Nations Nor is it any great marvel that after the many matchless affronts given you when your Honors out of a Christian inclination to Peace were pleased to over-pass them all and in your Answer of the 25 of June to their Ambassadors to declare notwithstanding that if you might have satisfaction for the Charges they put you to in that Summer's Preparations and Securitie for time to com by both States contracting a firm Alliance you were readie to set an end to the present differences it is no marvel I say after so great condescension on your part they should chuse War rather than Peace since it now appear's they had War in their hearts from the very begining and stood resolved to propagate their ambitious ends by waies of violence and becom yet more unjust rather than do any thing though never so reasonable that might seem to import an acknowledgment of their late injustice And to the end that England may have a true taste of their intentions it is well worthie consideration that as they have refused to give any reasonable satisfaction or securitie and with a brazen-front out-face the matter in their publick Manifest declaring therein That they will never lay down arms so long as you steer the cours you are now in so by consequence they seem resolved never to admit Peace but upon such terms as are inconsistent with your Honor and Interest and ●ix themselvs as long as they so continue in an irreconcileable enmitie to the Good of our Nation In Cases of this nature when Adversaries place themselvs at an unreasonable distance there is no securitie for a State but in a strict Bent to its own Interest nor any thing more dangerous than Middle-Counsels while an Enemie stand's out upon extremities And what greater extremitie than to invade a Neighbor's Territorie and prosecute the Invasion by a design of Conquest The Sea is indeed your Territorie no less than the Land It hath been held so by all Nations as unquestionably subject under every Alteration of Government to them that have enjoied the Dominion by Land so that the Netherlanders having enter'd your Seas in defiance of your Power are as absolute Invaders as if they had enter'd the Island it self It is just as if Hannibal were again in Italy or Charls Stuart at Worcester and the late affront given near Dover was like the one's braving it before the walls of Rome and as if the other had com and knockt at the gates of London or rather at your very Chamber-door for that insolent Act was don in that place which our Kings heretofore were wont to call and account their Chamber How nearly these things touch the honor of your Selvs and the Nation is well apprehended by your faithful friends who have been very amply instructed and quickned by your publick Declaration And it is their exceeding Joie while they see you acting and engaging upon just and honorable Grounds to make good that Right and Reputation which you have received as inviolable from our Ancestors For it hath been their great satisfaction to observ with what excellent expressions you acquit your selvs when stating the case of this Quarrel you make it known with what affection and constancie you have labor'd for the friendship of the United Provinces how carefully you have avoided all differences and occasions of a warr between the Nations yet that all Overtures of Amitie and nearest Alliance have been rejected and how that in stead of giving satisfaction for all the injuries they have don you nothing would satisfie them unless you should quietly and tamely have laid your selvs down at the feet of those who have thus endeavored to ruine you or unless you should have betraied into those hands the Rights and Safetie of the People of this Nation So that be●ing compelled and necessitated into a most unwelcom wa● begun upon you you resolv to use such waies and means wherewith God shall inable you to defend your selvs and thereby to gain that just satisfaction and securitie which cannot otherwise bee had May you ever persist in this heroïck Resolution as to do no wrong to any so to defend your own Rights against all that shall dare to ravish them May you alwaies have an ear open to receiv full Satisfaction and Securitie when offer'd and a heart nobly enkindled with a magnanimous indignation to retort violence in the faces of bold Usurpers and Invaders Had the Netherlanders been content to keep within their proper Bounds it had been still our Interest as of old to have had Peace with
the Southern and Eastern part of it as Lords thereof together with the Island before they were brought under the Roman power p. 188 CHAP. III. That the Britains were Lords of the Northern Sea before they were subdued by the Romanes And that the Sea and the Land made one entire Bodie of the British Empire pag. 201 CHAP. IV. That the Dominion of the British Sea followed the Conquest of great Britain it self under the Emperors Claudius and Domitian pag. 205 CHAP. V. Touching the Dominion of the Romanes in the British Sea as an appendant of the Island from the time of Domitian to the Emperor Constantius Chlorus or Diocletian pag. 211 CHAP. VI. Touching the Dominion of the Southern and Eastern Sea as an appendant of the British Empire from the time of Constantine the Great till the Romanes quitted the Island That it was all under the Command of the Count of the Saxon Shore throughout Britain Also concerning the British Navie under the Romanes pag. 217 CHAP. VII An Examination of the Opinion of som learned men who would have the Saxon Shore from whence that Count or Commander of the Sea throughout Britain had his Title to bee the British Shore on this side of the Sea which is plainly proved to bee fals pag. 231 CHAP. VIII Som Evidences concerning the Soveraigntie and inseparable Dominion of the Isle of Britain and the Sea belonging thereto out of Claudian and certain Coins of the Emperor Antoninus Pius pag. 242 CHAP. IX Touching the Dominion of the British Sea after that the Inhabitants had freed themselvs from the Romane power pag. 247 CHAP. X. It is proved both from the very beginning of the Saxon's Reign as also from their Forces and Victories by Sea that the English-Saxons and Danes who ruled the South part of Britain had Dominion over the Sea pag. 251 CHAP. XI The Sea-Dominion of the English-Saxons and Danes during their Reigns in Britain observed in like manner from such Tributes and Duties of their Fiduciarie Clients or Vassals as concerned the maintenance of the Navie Also concerning the Tribute or Paiment called Danegeld which was wont to beelevied for the Guard of the Sea pag. 259 CHAP. XII The Testimonies of Edgar and Canutus Kings of England with others expressly declaring the Dominion which they and their predecessors had over the Sea Together with an observation touching the Nations which in that Age were seated upon the opposite Shore pag. 273 CHAP. XIII Several Testimonies concerning the Sea-Dominion of the Kings of England since the Norman Conquests set forth in general heads pag. 284 CHAP. XIV That the Kings of England since the coming in of the Normans have perpetually enjoied the Dominion of the Sea flowing about them is in the first place proved from the Guard or Government thereof as of a Province or Territorie that is to say from the verie Law of the English Admiraltie pag. 287 CHAP. XV. The Dominion of the English Sea asserted from those Tributes or Customs that were wont to bee imposed paid and demanded for the Guard or Protection thereof after the Norman Conquest pag. 295 CHAP. XVI Observations touching the Dominion of the English and Irish Sea from the tenor and varietie of those Letters Patents or Commission Roial whereby the Admirals of England were wont to bee put in Autoritie pag. 305 CHAP. XVII It is proved by words plain enough in the form of the Commissions for the Government or command of the high Admiral of England from antient to the present time that the Sea for whose guard or defence hee was appointed by the King of England as Lord and Soveraign was ever bounded towards the South by the shore of Aquitain Normandie and Picardie pag. 312 CHAP. XVIII Touching the Admirals of the Kingdom of France or those constituted upon the opposite Shore their Original nature and varietie That the Sea it self flowing between Britain and France is not conteined in that command of his as of one that is Governor of a Territorie or Province nor is there any thing in it that may oppose the Dominion of the King of England by Sea pag. 321. CHAP. XIX That in the Dominion of those Islands lying before the shore of France which hath ever been enjoied by the Kings of England it appear's that the possession of the Sea wherein they are situate is derived from their Predecessors pag. 333 CHAP. XX. The Dominion and possession of the Sea asserted on the behalf of the Kings of England from that leav of preter-Navigation or passage which hath been usually either granted by them to Foreiners or desired from them pag. 344 CHAP. XXI That Licence hath been usually granted to Foreiners by the Kings of England to fish in the Sea Also that the Protection given to Fisher-men by them as in their own Territorie is an antient and manifest Evidence of their Dominion by Sea pag. 355 CHAP. XXII The Dominion of England made evident from the Laws and Limits usually set by our Kings in the Sea to such Foreiners as were at enmitie with each other but in amitie with the English And concerning the King's Closets or Chambers in the Sea Also touching that singular privelege of perpetual truce or exemption from hostilitie in the Sea about those Isles which lie before the shore of Normandie pag. 363 CHAP. XXIII Certain publick Records wherein of old the Dominion of the Sea is by the way asscribed to the Kings of England both by the King himself and also by the Estates of Parlament debating of other matters and that in express words and with verie great deliberation as a known and most undoubted Right pag. 375 CHAP. XXIV Of divers Testimonies in our own Law-books and the most received Customs whereby the Sea-Dominion of the King of England is either asserted or admitted pag. 382 CHAP. XXV Son antient Testimonies of less account touching the Sea-Dominion whereof wee treat pag. 394 CHAP. XXVI That the Sea-Dominion of the Kings of England is acknowledged by Foreiners whom it most concerns by their usual striking of Sails according to antient Custom Also concerning two Edicts or Ordinances that were set forth about this thing by the Kings of France pag. 398 CHAP. XXVII A Recognition or Acknowledgment of the Sea-Dominion of the King of England made by very many of the Neighbor-Nations round about in an antient Libel publickly exhibited or in a Bill of Complaint instituted by them together with the English against Reyner Grimbald Governor of the French Navie Also touching a Recognition of this kinde implied in his defence pag. 403 CHAP. XXVIII A Copie or Transcript of the Libel or Bill of Complaint mentioned in the former Chapter pag. 415. CHAP. XXIX A Recognition or acknowledgment of the Sea-Dominion of the Kings of England made by the Flemings in an Ambassy to Edward the Second pag. 429 CHAP. XXX Of the Dominion of the King of Great Britain in the Irish and Western Sea considered singly and apart by it self pag. 433.
Kingdom the ground whereof is this becaus the Universal right of all those things which were common either by the Law of nature or Nations is transferred into his Dominion And other passages hee hath much to the same purpose as also Stephanus Paschasius Ludovicus Servinus somtime Sollicitor general for the King Popellinerius and others If they speak of the Sea of Ma●seille or Narbon wee shall not oppose them But as to what concern's the bodie of the Sea which lie's Northward or Westward of the French or that flow's between France and the Islands of great Britain for that which lie's Westward from them upon that crooked Shore or the gulf of Aquitaine doth indeed flow between the more Westerly Coasts of our British Isles and of France as well as that which lie's Northward from them flow's between England and Normandie they neither produce any Testimonies of Antiquitie nor indeed can they if they would Unless you will have that admitted which hath been cited out of Caesar concerning the Veneti of Aremoriça and that which wee said before of the Sea bordering upon that shore Both which indeed do rather import som service called heretofore Nobilitates super navibus then any kinde of Dominion But the soveraigntie of this Sea which flow's between them and us became absolutely appropriate to the Kings of England as wee shall make it appear in the next Book And the truth is if wee look upon the Customs most in use among the French or the Civil Law of that Nation there is nothing in it that derogate's from the antient communitie of the Sea but as to them it remaine's as yet not possessed but common to all men and therefore not to bee reckoned among the Revenues or Patrimonie of their Kings if so bee credit may bee given to that Treatise lately published of the Civil Romane and French Law by Thomas Cormerius Counsellor to Francis Duke of Anjou in his Parlament of Alençon The matter that it pretend's to treat of is the Romane Gallick Law There are in it the Customs of France decrees of Princes and Privileges often ●ntermingled But under the Title of things common ●o all hee make's the Sea and Shores common to all according to the antient Law of the Romanes as if in this matter it did exactly agree with the Law of France which certainly is an argument that the French have no Dominion over the Sea Nor must wee let it pass that somwhile since there were two Constitutions pretended to in France one of Henrie the Second the other of Henrie the Third wherein they required that the Ships of Forraigners which sailed through the Sea bordering upon France should strike their top-sail forsooth in acknowledgment of that Dominion the French had over the Sea But neither of them were autorized or as they speak simply verified by the Estates in Parlament yea nor so much as admitted into Custom Nay the later of them was plainly rejected as to any effect in Law And this the French Lawyers themselvs confess in a notable case between som Merchants of Hamburgh that were Plaintiffs and Michaël Butardus and others Defendants in a Parlament held at Tours in the time of Henry the Fourth But that cerimonie hath by most ancient right and custom been observed and paid to the ships of the Kings of England out of respect and in acknowledgement of their Dominion as is shewn in the following Book where wee treat of this particular more at large I know very well it was ordained by an Edict of the French King that one third part of all goods recovered out of the Sea should belong to the King another to the Admiral and the remainder to the Sea-men that found them And that the French do reckon very many Commanders in Chief at Sea or Admirals in a line somtime continued and somtime interrupted which for the most part they begin from the time of Philip the son of St. Lewis that is from the year MCCLXXXIV as is to be seen in Joannes Feronius Stephanus Paschasius and others But that division of goods recovered out of the Sea beeing simply considered doth prove any Dominion over the Sea no more then the Tenths of any Prizes taken from an Enemie at Sea which by the grant of the King also were allotted to the Admiral of the Navie Rights of this nature are grounded upon the consent of persons to wit subjects transferr'd unto the King not upon any title of Dominion whereby any Pretence may bee made to an acquiring of the Sea it self and they are paid no otherwise then Imposts or Customs in the importation or exportation of Merchandise But no man I suppose will imagin that from such Imposts or Customs upon Merchandise any proof may bee made of a Dominion over those passages through which the Merchants sail before they arrive Neither indeed was there any such custom as this in use among the French before the time of Francis the first that is to say plainly not beeing Lord of the Sea hee desired to bee and was made a Sharer of those goods which should bee drawn by his subjects out of any Sea whatsoëver Whereas the King of Great Britain by virtue of his Dominion over the Sea is wont to take as his own whatsoëver is left or lost in the sea besides other emoluments of the like nature and that by so ancient a right as for ought wee know bear 's a date no less ancient then the Kingdom it self And as for those Admirals of France they were no other then Chief Commanders of Navies and Persons and of the Forces by sea and Judicatories at home but not qualified as Presidents of a Sea-Province or Territorie as the Custodes ipsius Maris the Guardians of the sea among the English and the Admirals of England But more of this in the Second Book Nevertheless from what hath been alleged concerning the Customs Opinions or Constitutions among the French I suppose it sufficiently appear's that they do also acknowledg that private Dominion over the sea is not repugnant to the Law either of Nature or Nations which serve 's fully for the clearing of the point in question The private Dominion of the Sea according to the received Customs of the Danes the People of Norway the Swedes Polanders and Turks CHAP. XIX WEE finde clear Testimonies in the Customs of other Nations also of Europe touching private Dominion of the sea as the Danes the people of Norway the Polanders to whom may bee added also the Turks Wee have observed by the Tolls or Customs of Denmark and Norway what Revenue the King of Denmark raiseth out of the very Navigation of the Baltick Sea as is commonly known and what is paid out of the Roialtie of the Norwegian sea to the King of Norway who at this time is also King of Denmark For in the year MDLXXXIII Frederick the second King of Denmark and Norway made a
defence of his Kingdom against Foreiners and the training up of himself and his people for warlike emploiments Thus the Guardianship or maintenance of the Dominion by Sea is evident But as concerning the Fleets aforementioned they each of them consisted of MCC ships and these as Writers say expressly very stout ones so that in the time of his Reign the British Navie consisted of such ships to the number of Three thousand six hundred Sail as Florentius and Hoveden speak expressly But others write that these Fleets amounted to Four thousand ships as John Bramton Abbot of Jorvaux others adding to these Three a Fourth Fleet whereby the number is increased to Four Thousand Eight hundred Sail as you may see in Florilegus So as Florentius also saith Hee by the help of God governed and secured the bounds of his Kingdom with Prudence Fortitude Justice and Temperance as long as hee lived and having the courage of a fierce Lion hee kept all the Princes and Lords of the Isles in aw Wee read also in Ordericus Vitalis of King Harold or Herald that hee so guarded the Sea with a force of soldierie and shipping that none of his Enemies could without a sore conflict invade the Kingdom So that wee cannot otherwise conceiv but that these Naval Forces were at that time disposed and the Sea-Fights undertaken for the defence and guard of the Sea as an Appendant of the English-Saxon Dominion in this Island Especially if wee duly compare these things alreadie manifest with those which are added by and by to this particular touching the same age The Sea-Dominion of the English-Saxons and Danes during their Reigns in Britain observed in like manner from such Tributes and Duties of their Fiduciarie Clients or Vassals as concerned the maintenance of the Navie Also concerning the Tribute or Paiment called Danegeld which was wont to bee levied for the Guard of the Sea CHAP. XI HEre follow next the Tributes and Duties of Vassals concerning the maintenance of the Navie or Guard of the Sea which are evidences also of that Sea-Dominion which was in the time of the English-Saxons I call those Tributes which were wont to bee levied for the re-inforcing of the Navie and for provision of Victuals for the Sea-men Of which kinde were those that were levied according to the value of men's estates in Land for the setting forth of ships in the time of King Ethelred For at that time whosoever possessed CCCX Cassatos or Hides of Land was charged with the building of one ship And they were all rated proportionably after this manner who were owners of more or less Hides or of part of an Hide as Marianus Scotus Hoveden and Florentius do all tell us in the very same words Ethelred King of England say they gave strict command that one Gallie should bee charged upon CCCX Cassati but a Coat of Armor and an Helmet upon nine and that ships should bee built throughout all England which beeing made readie hee victualled and manned them with choice souldiers and appointed their Rendezvous at the Port of Sandwich to secure the Bounds of his Kingdom from the irruptions of Foreiners But Henrie of Huntingdon as also Matthew Paris and Florilegus speaking of the same thing say The King charged one ship upon three hundred and ten Hides of Land through all England also a Coat-Armor and Helmet upon eight Hides Then Huntingdon tell 's what an Hide doth signifie But an Hide in English saith hee is so much Land as a man can till with one Plow for a year Others there are that determine otherwise touching the quantitie of an Hide And most certain it is that it was very various according to the different Custom of Countries but the same with Cassata and Carucata Indeed the English-Saxon Chronicles of the Abbie of Abingdon do likewise mention Hides here expressly In the year MVIII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 say they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hund 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tynumaenne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 helm 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is to say the King gave command for the building of Ships carefully throughout all England to wit that one Gallie should bee charged upon CCCX Hides of Land but a Coat-Armor and Helmet upon eight Hides And it was usual according to the Laws of that Age that the richer sort should bee taxed by the number of Hides as wee see also throughout that Breviarie of England or the Book of Rates called Domesday which was first written in the time of King William Huntingdon add's also that there never had been so great a number of Ships in the time of any one in Britain which is testified in like manner by the Saxon Chronicles before cited So that that most numerous Navie of King Edgar mentioned in the former chapter was not to bee compared with this But yet that most learned man and great Light of our Island M r Camden hath so cast up the number of Hides throughout England out of the antient Records of that Age that they do not exceed 243600. If this had been so then they could have set forth no more then 785 Ships by this Tribute which is a lesser number then that of King Edgar by som thousands So that som other account is to bee made concerning Hides which is not to bee handled in this place Hereunto belong's that of Huntingdon touching King Canutus and his Son Harald In the daies of Harald saith hee as also in the time of his Father eight Marks were paid by everie Port for XVI Ships In the like manner Hoveden saith there was a Tax imposed which was paid for the maintenance of the Navie when King Canutus and King Edmond made an agreement in an Isle in the midst of Severn called Oleney Moreover Huntingdon write's that 11048 pounds were raised by Hardecanute King of England before hee had reigned two years for thirtie two Ships that is to say for the building of two and thirtie Ships Hee gave Command also as Matthew Westminster saith that eight marks should bee paid to everie Rower of his Navie and ten marks to each Commander out of all England Hee saith again also of the same King that hee appointed Officers through all parts of the Kingdom to collect the Tax imposed without favouring any and therewith to provide all things necessarie for his Forces at Sea And Florentius saith Hee gave command for the paying of eight marks to every Rower of his Navie and twelve so wee read it in that Autor to everie Commander out of all England a Tax indeed so grievous that scarce any man was able to pay it But these things spoken of Canutus his son Harald and Hardecanute relate perhaps unto that Tribute or Tax called Danegeld which was paid yearly for the maintenance of the Navie and guarding the Territorie or Dominion by
Sea Among the old Laws of England it appear's that the paiment of Danegeld was first imposed becaus of Pirates either Robbers or others invading the Sea For they infesting the Countrie wasted it as far as they were able Therefore for the repressing of their insolence it was determined that an yearly paiment should bee made of Danegeld that is to say twelve pence upon every hide through the whole Land for the pay of those that should bee imploied to hinder the eruption of Pirates So wee read it in som Copies others render it Irruption But the other reading seem's to signifie that this Tax was imposed for the raising and mainteining of Naval Forces so to guard the Sea that Pirates or Enemies might not bee able to make any eruption from the Shore on the other side of the Sea Nor can the word Eruption otherwise bee well put in that place So that even that antient Dignitie of the Count of the Saxon shore whereof wee have alreadie spoken is therefore not obscurely represented by him who commanded as Admiral over the Fleets of that Age. This Tribute or Tax had its beginning under King Ethelred For hee beeing brought into miserable streights by Swane King of Denmark beeing forced to buy a Peace of him hired XLV Danish Ships also by Agreement for the guarding and securing of his Dominion in the Sea who were to receiv their pay yearly out of this Tribute for their maintenance For the right understanding whereof it is to bee observed out of the English Saxon Storie that the Tribute or Tax usually paid at that time to the Danes was of more kindes then one There was one Tribute or sum of Monie wherewith the English-Saxons were forced somtimes to buy Peace of such as grievously infested the Island But another was levied to pay the Danish Navie which was hired to guard the Sea and defend the Sea-Coasts The first kinde of Tribute appear's by that of Florentius and Hoveden in the year MVII Ethelred King of England by the advice of his Lords sending Embassadors to the Danes gave them Commission to declare that hee was willing to defray their Charges and pay them a Tribute upon this condition that they would desist from rapine and establish a firm Peace with him To which demand of his they yielded And from that time their charge was defraied by all England and a Tribute paid which amounted to 36000 pounds That is hee effected this onely for the present that hee obteined a peace for a time by monie which hee could not by Arms as Florilegus saith well Four years after also all the great Lords of England of both Orders met together at London before Easter and there they staid so long till paiment was made of the Tribute promised to the Danes amounting to fourtie eight thousand pounds which wee reade of likewise both in Florentius and Hoveden But this was paid to the intent that all Danes which were in the Kingdom should in every place dwell peaceably by the English and that both People should have as it were one heart and one soul as it is expressed by Florilegus Other passages of the same kinde there are in the storie of that Age yea and som of an elder date Yet this first kinde of Tribute was not wont to bee paid yearly but levied now and then as occasion required Notwithstanding it may bee true perhaps which som write that Ethelred in the aforesaid agreement of the year MVII yielded to pay every year a Tribute of Thirtie six Thousand pounds to the Danes for a longer continuation of the peace Wee read here that hee yielded or granted but no where likewise that hee paid it But as for the second kinde of Tribute which was to bee paid as wee have told you for hire of the Danish Navie it was a yearly Tribute and levied at the same time at least in the same year to wit of our Lord MXII wherein these fourtie eight thousand pounds were paid to procure a peace Nor was it limited by any set-summe of monie but so much as would serv for victualling and clothing the Forces at Sea Florentius and Hoveden in the aforesaid year say After these things upon paiment of the Tribute meaning that of fourtie eight thousand pounds and a confirmation of the peace by Oaths the Danish Navie which was before in a Bodie was disposed and dispersed abroad afar off But XLV ships remained with the King and sware fidelitie to him and promised to bee readie to defend England against Foreiners upon condition that hee would provide them Victuals and Clothing This is related likewise in the English-Saxon Chronicles of the Abbie of Abingdon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is the Tribute beeing paid and Oaths of Amitie taken the Armie or Navie which was before in a Bodie was dispersed abroad But fourtie five ships of that Navie remained with the King and promised upon Oath to be readie for the defence of this Land upon condition the King did finde them Victuals and Cloathing Swane was at that time King of Denmark with whom Ethelred made this agreement But both the kindes of paiment aforementioned were called Danegelo Danegeld or Danageld that is to say Danish Tribute The first kinde is expressly intimated by this name in Joannes Sarisburiensis where hee saith Swane wasted and spoiled the Island of Britain the greatest part whereof hee had in his possession and afflicted the Members of Christ with many persecutions by an imposition of Tribute which in the English Tongue they call Danageld But the second kinde which was paid for the maintenance of the Forces by Sea was called likewise by the same name both becaus it was occasioned by the agreement with the Danes as also becaus it was wont to bee paid to the Danish Fleet that was hired to guard the Territorie by Sea For which caus also it reteined the same name not onely under these Danish Kings Canutus Harold the first and Hardecanutus but also under the English-Saxon or English And that this which wee have spoken was the Original hereof is affirm'd also by Ingulphus the Abbot of Crowland a witness beyond all exception who lived at that time Hee speaking of the affairs of Edward the Confessor saith In the year MLI which was the tenth of King Edward in regard the Earth did not bring forth its Fruits in such plentie as it was wont but devoured very many people by famine insomuch that many Thousands of men died through the scarcitie of Corn and want of Bread therefore the most pious King Edward beeing moved with compassion towards the people released that most grievous Tribute called Danigeld to all England for ever It is reported by som that this most Religious King beeing brought by his Officers into the Exchequer to see the Danigeld that was collected and to take a view of so vast an heap of treasure stood amazed at the first sight
before been made Commander of the Fleets And hee was the first for ought wee know that was created in this manner But in the next Form of Commission the name of Picardie was left out So indeed in the fourth year of Henrie the Sixth or Anno Dom. MCDXXVI John Duke of Bedford was by Commission made Admiral of England Ireland and Aquitain That Form continued about 88. years or throughout the Reigns of Henrie VI Edward IV Richard III Henrie VII and the three first years of Henrie VIII And about that time ten others were in like manner made Admirals for the most part perpetual of England Ireland and Aquitain the last of which was John Earl of Oxon who was Commissionated in that Form in the first year of Henrie the Eight But there followed another alteration or addition of Titles in the fourth year of that King Anno Dom. MDXIII At that time Sir Edward Howard Knight son of Thomas Earl of Su●●ie afterwards Duke of Norfolk was made Admiral of England Wales Ireland Normandie Gascoign and Aquaitain To which words Calais and the Marches thereof are added in the Commission of William Fitzwilliams who also was Earl of Southampton beeing appointed Admiral in the twentie eight year of King Henrie the Eight This Form of Commissions held in use afterward through the whole Reign of that Henry adding according to antient Custom the clauses touching Jurisdiction But in the beginning of Edward the Sixt Thomas Baron Seymour of Sudeley brother to Edward Duke of Somerset was made Admiral almost in the same words as that William Earl of Southampton inserting after the name of Calais Boloign and the Marches of the same After him followed John Earl of Warwick who was created by Edward the Sixt in the third year of his Reign our Admiral of England Ireland Wales Calais and Boloign and our Marches of the same of Normandie Gascoign and Aquitain as also Governor general over all our Fleets and Seas And in the same Commission hee is styled afterwards Great Admiral of England and Governor of our Fleets and Seas But after a while the name of Boloign being omitted the next high Admiral of England was created in the very same Form of words as is mentioned before in the beginning of the Chapter For in the same Form was William Baron Howard of Effingham Son of Thomas Duke of Norfolk made Admiral in the beginning of Queen Marie or Anno Dom. MDLIII And the Command or Government of those Seas as the principal charge of that Office or Dignitie is more notably expressed there as you may see than in the Commission of the Earl of Warwick From that time forwards the very same Form was kept alwaies as in the Commission of the high Admiralship granted to Edward Baron Clinton afterwards Earl of Lincoln in the Reign of Philip and Marie also in the Commission of Charls Baron of Effingham afterwards Earl of Nottingham in the time of Q. Elizabeth and of Charls Duke of York in the time of King James besides George Duke of Buckingham who enjoied the same Office or Command in the same words in the Reigns of James and Charls So that for above eightie years or thereabout that is from the beginning of Q. Marie the whole form as it is set down in the beginning of this Chapter was ever expressly reteined in the Commissions of the high Admiralship of England so far as they denote either the Countries or the Seas or the Dominion of the same But therein the Admiral is styled Governor General over all our Fleets and Seas just as John Earl of Warwick was likewise expressly appointed in general tearms under Edward the sixt or over our Seas aforesaid But what were those Seas or the Seas aforesaid They are in the fore-going words expressly called the Seas of our said Kingdoms of England and Ireland our Dominions and Islands of the same That is in plain tearms Mer d' Engleterre d' Ireland Gales or the Sea of England Ireland and Wales after which manner the Seas belonging to the Dominion of England are sometimes also described in our Laws which are called likewise now and then by our Lawyers Les quatre Miers d'Engleterre or the four Seas of England divided according to the four Quarters of the World So that in the most received form of this Commission after the beginning of Queen Marie's Reign out of which also the sens and meaning of former Commissions is to bee collected wee have a continual possession or Dominion of the King of England by Sea pointed out in express words for very many years And what wee have alreadie spoken by way of Collection out of these that followed the beginning of Marie touching the sens or meaning of former Commissions wherein a positive Command of the Sea is not expressed is truly to omit the thing it self which sufficiently intimate's as much of its own nature not a little confirmed upon this ground that hee also who before any express mention of our Seas took place in the form of the Commission of the high Admiralship was next preferr'd to the same dignitie was immediately after his Creâtion according to the whole Title of his Office as beeing the same title which indeed alwaies belonged to the Admirals of England styled Great Admiral of England and Governor General of the Navie and our Seas So verily Thomas Baron Seymour whom I mentioned before is styled Admiral of England in the Patent Roll granted to him by Edward the sixt It is proved by words plain enough in the form of the Commissions for the Government or command of the high Admiral of England from antient to the present time that the Sea for whose guard or defence hee was appointed by the King of England as Lord and Soveraign was ever bounded towards the South by the shore of Aquitain Normandie and Picardie CHAP. XVII BUT in the Form alreadie shewn which hath continued in use for so many years you see mention is made onely of the Seas of our Kingdoms of England and Ireland our Dominions and Islands belonging to the same as the Province for whose guard or defence the Admiral was appointed that is as wee have told you the English Irish and Welch Sea all which is conteined under the name of the British as it hath been observéd at the beginning of this Book Yet the names of Normandie Gascoign and Aquitain besides Calais are added which are Provinces seated upon the shore over against us As to what concern's them in this place they are either to bee considered in the same manner as if they had been alwaies held in subjection by the English from the time of the first mention of them in the Commission or as they have alreadie for som Ages past been out of their Jurisdiction But suppose in the first place that they had alwaies remained in the Jurisdiction and Possession of the English Questionless
There are saith hee four Governors of the French Sea who bear an equal command under a different title and upon several Coasts of the Sea For in antient time Aquitain was possessed by the English Bretaign by its Dukes Provence by Hereditarie Earls not by the Kings of France And therefore at that time the Admiral of France had command onely over the Belgick Sea of Picardie and Normandie as far as the Coast of Bretaign But then all the other bordering Princes chose Governors of the Sea or Admirals peculiarly for themselvs And therefore the English beeing driven out of Aquitain and the Countries of Provence and Bretaign beeing brought into subjection to the Crown of France the King supposing it not fit to innovate any thing appointed a Lievtenant and Admiral of Aquitain likewise a Governor of Bretaign with the government of the Sea as also in the Prouince of Gallia Narbonensis in a manner distinct and apart from the rest But the chief Courts of Judicature belonging to the French Admiral are setled at Paris and Roan So hee And a little after hee write's that there were Princes not a few who held the Sea-Coasts as Beneficiaries that enjoied the power of Admiral in their Territories But wee have Edicts and Decrees concerning the Admiral 's Jurisdiction over the Maritim Forces Affairs and Persons in the times of Charls the fift and sixt Lewis the 12 th Francis the first Henrie the 2 d 3 d and other Kings of France as also touching the Tenths of Spoils taken from Enemies and other things of that kinde which relate unto the Goods and Persons of such as are subject to the Crown of France upon the account of any manner of Navigation whatsoêver And in these Edicts hee is somtimes called by the King Nostre Lieutenant general per la mer greves d'icelle that is our Lieutenant general throughout the Sea and the shores thereof But this Lieutenant or Governor as they pleas to call him of the Sea was never at all in command over any part of the Sea flowing between France and Britain as over a Province or Territorie to bee defended for the King of France after the same manner as the Admiral of England but in the Sea onely over the Naval Forces Persons and Affairs belonging to the French Jurisdiction much after the same manner as a Soveraign Prince take's cognizance of Offendors of his own Retinue in a Forein Territorie and rule 's them as at home but without any pretence of his to a right of Dominion in that Territorie Which truly there is no man but will conceiv that shall in the first place observ the defect and deep silence of antient Testimonies touching such a kinde of Dominion among the French besides the Qualitie of that Government among them and at length the entire and most ample Power alwaies exercised throughout the Sea and the shore lying about it under the sole command of the English and will but compare it for so many Revolutions of years with those so long broken and divided Dominions upon the opposite shore of France and with the late addition of the Sea-Coast to the Kingdom of France according to those things which have been alreadie spoken about it It is clear that there are no Testimonies before our time concerning any Dominion of this sea belonging to the King of France Nor are there any in our time except certain Lawyers who speak of it either by the By or in a Rhetorical flourish onely not in a way of asserting it by strength of Arguments Of these things I have spoken alreadie in the former Book where also other matters are alleged of special observation which confirm what is handled in this particular But now let us add hereunto that the very French Historians both of the past and present Age do affirm that in antient times the Kings of France therefore either had no Admirals at all or els that they were constituted now and then onely as occasion required becaus they had no Empire over the Sea as Tilius saith expresly in the place above-mentioned In vain therefore doth Popellinerius reprehend those Historians in saying it is fals becaus Normandie Picardie and Flanders were heretofore under the French Dominion For not to mention this that the Kings of France reigned a long time without the possession of Normandie and Flanders and reteined not any other shore besides that of Picardie as appear's by what hath been alreadie shewn and by the frequent Testimonie of Historians and the consequence doth not appear to bee good that they had any command over the Sea becaus they were in possession of som Sea-Coast no more truly than it may bee concluded that a man is Lord of a River in France becaus hee hath Lands lying by it whereas by received Custom according to the Law of France the King is Owner of all Rivers that are Navigable where they belong not to som subject by a particular prescription of possession or som other title besides the possession of the adjacent Land as the Custom is not unusual also in other places But as to what concern's the Qualitie of this Maritim Government among the French it is to bee considered that as every one of the more eminent Offices or Governments hath a peculiar place in their high Court of Parlament and that according to the nature of the Government as it chiefly respect's any Province or Government within the limits of the French Dominion as the Constable the Grand Escuyer or Master of the Hors the Grand Master and others yet the Admiral of France hath no place at all upon that account As it was determined in the time of Henrie the second when such a place was plainly denied to Gaspar Collignie Admiral of France as hee was Admiral or had the Maritim Government but it was granted him as Governor of the Isle of France as they call it under the King For by the title of Admiral hee had no Government in Chief within the limits of the Kingdom but becaus beeing Admiral of the Fleets and Sea in the aforesaid sens which is out of the King's Dominion hee exercised Jurisdiction over Persons and Affairs onely upon the Accompt of the Sea therefore in this respect hee was to bee denied any place For which caus likewise it came to pass as it seem's that those four distinct Admirals before-mentioned have in like manner also a Government of Provinces from which they are wont to bee denominated as wee understand by these passages alreadie cited out of Choppinus and others that write of this matter So they that have any principal command within the limits of the Kingdom that is within the shores of France do enjoie an equal privilege with the other more eminent dignities of the Realm Moreover also the Regulation of those Rivers whereof the King of France is Lord are not under the Admiral 's Government but under the special charge of those
our Isles of Gernesey Jersey Serk and Aureney in the Sea between Easter and Michaelmas is according to the Custom of those places acknowledged to belong unto Us at a reasonable rate to bee paid therefore and that the said Fishermen are bound to carrie all the Fish by them taken between the Times aforesaid unto certain places in those Isles appointed that the Officers under our Governor of the aforesaid Isles may take thence for our use at what price they shall think fit and reasonable Nor is that to bee slighted which wee finde in the Chronicles of the Abbie or Monasterie of Teuxburie concerning Henrie Beauchamp Duke of Warwick who was invested by Henrie the sixt with the Title and Dignitie of King not onely of the Isle of Wight but also of Gernesey and Jersey whereunto the other Isles in this Tract do in a civil sens belong The same thing is recorded of the Isle of Wight by that Learned man William Camden and that out of the same Book The Book it self speak's after this manner But the noble Lord Henrie Duke of Warwick and first Earl of England Lord Le Dispenser and de Abergeveney King of the Isles of Wight and Gardsey and Jardsey Lord also of the Castle of Bristol with the appurtenances thereunto belonging died 3 Idus Junii Anno Dom. 1446. in the twentie second year of his Age at the Castle of Hanley and was buried in the middle of the Quire at Teuxburie And a little before it is said of the same man that hee was Crowned King of Wight by the King 's own hand no express mention beeing made in that place of the other islands but they reckoned in the same condition with this as they were part of the patrimonie of the Kings of England But it is not to bee believed that those Isles which lie before the shore of Normandie had been so turned into a Kingdom though subject to the Crown of England unless even they also who made them a Kingdom had conceived that they possessed them before by a Title superior to that of the Dutchie that is to say by a Kingly Title As King Richard the second when hee had determined that Robert Earl of Oxford who also was Marquiss of Dublin and Duke of Ireland should bee creâted King of Ireland questionless did not doubt but that hee himself in the mean time possessed that Island by no less a Title and Dignitie than of King although the name of Lord was wholly used there at that time in stead of King as also until the latter end of the Reign of Henrie the eight So it is conceived upon good ground that those Isles and the Sea lying about them did though they used different Customs constitute one entire Bodie of Empire with the Kingdom of England Whereunto also that special privilege of theirs doth relate whereby through the favor of the Kings of England they enjoie the benefit of freedom from hostilitie by Sea though there bee a Warr on foot between the Neighbor-Nations round about but of this more hereafter And in their Court-Records which contain the Acts or Decrees of the aforesaid Justices Itinerant wee very often finde Pleas of the Crown which phrase is an Evidence of the English Government Also in their Trials those Forms In contempt of our Lord the King his Crown and Dignitie and Our Lord the King was seised of the aforescid Advousen in time of Peace as of his Fee and in Right of his Crown and others not a few of that kinde wee meet with which savor not of any Right of the Dutchie Add moreover that the King of England so held the Right heretofore not onely of the Isles over against the shore of Normandie but of those also which are opposite to Aquitain as a pledg or concomitant of his possession of that Sea so far as it belong'd to the patrimonie of the Kingdom of England that though our Henrie the third renounced his claim to no small part of Aquitain yet that Isle lying before it called Oleron no less famous in the West for Naval Laws than Rhodes was of old hee granted to his eldest son Edward to bee held in time to com as a perpetual Appendant of the English Crown For this Claus was added to the Grant so that the said Isle may alwaies remain to the Crown of England and never bee alienated from the same Also in his Letters granted to the Inhabitants of Oleron hee saith Wee will not in any wise sever you from the Crown of England Som years before also hee in like manner made a Grant of Gascoign or those parts which lie upon the shore of Aquitain near the Sea to Prince Edward upon condition it should remain entirely and for ever to the Crown of England So without doubt his intent was that both the Sea-Coasts and this Isle should in a special manner bee possest by the said Prince but by no means bee disjoined from the English Empire any more than the Sea its self which washt their shores And although after a while both this and som other neighboring Isles did many Ages since for divers reasons follow the fate of those French shores which lie next to them yet in the mean time the Dominion of the Sea remained entire as it did before to the Kings of England as it sufficiently appear's by those other passages which wee have shewn The Dominion and possession of the Sea asserted on the behalf of the Kings of England from that leav of praeter-Navigation or passage which hath been usually either granted by them to Foreiners or desired from them CHAP. XX. THose things which wee have hitherto alleged concerning this possession and dominion are confirmed by several Passports that have been obteined from the Kings of England for leav to pass through this Sea whereof wee have clear Testimonies in Records that is to say granted at the intreatie of Foreiners Our Henrie the fourth granted leav to Ferrando Urtis de Sarachione a Spaniard to fail freely from the Port of London through our Kingdoms Dominions and Jurisdiction to the Town of Rochel It is manifest that in this place our Dominions and Jurisdiction do relate to the Sea flowing between And when Charls the sixt King of France sent Ambassadors to Robert the third King of Scots to treat about the making of a League they upon request made to the same Henrie obteined Passports for their safe passage par touz noz povoirs destrois Seigniories par Mer par Terre that is through all places under our Power Territories and Dominions as well by Sea as by Land There are innumerable other Letters of Passport called safe Conducts in the Records especially of Henrie the fift and sixt whereby safe Port and Passage was usually granted as well by Sea as by Land and Rivers that is to say throughout the whole Dominion of him that made the Grant And it is
and others as well Strangers as Natives Enemies as well as Friends may freely lawfully and without peril go unto pass to and fro and frequent the said Isle and the places upon the Coasts thereof with their Shipping Merchandise and Goods as well for shelter from foul weather as upon any other their lawful occasions and there to use free Commerce and Traffick and to abide with safetie and securitie and to com away thence and return at pleasure without any damage trouble or hostilitie whatsoëver in their Affairs Merchandise Goods or Bodies and that not onely near the Island and places aforesaid upon the Coasts and their Precinct but also within the spaces distant from them as far as a man may ken that is so far as the sight of the eie can attain And this is called a privilege which you see extend's so far into the Sea it self as the sight of the eie can pierce from the shore And if so bee this privilege did not proceed from the Kings of England as they are Lords both of the Sea and the Isles and by the same right that the Isles themselvs belong to them as hath been said before it cannot in reason bee imagined from whence it had its original There is not so far as wee know so much as a pretence of a Grant made by any other Princes But onely by the Kings of England who unless themselvs were Lords of the whole Sea flowing about by what Title and Autoritie did they ordein such a Truce so far within the Sea on every side between enemies of all Nations whatsoëver that came unto those Islands But as our Kings have very often commanded that all manner of persons should ceas from hostilitie not onely within the aforesaid Creeks but also throughout the spaces extended thence at pleasure into their Territorie by Sea so in like manner they indulged the like kinde of privilege for ever throughout these Coasts of the French shore that all manner of persons though enemies to one another might securely sail to and fro as it were under the wings of an Arbiter or Moderator of the Sea and also freely use the Sea according to such spaces or limits as they were pleased at first to appoint Which without doubt is a clear evidence of Dominion Certain publick Records wherein of old the Dominion of the Sea is by the way asscribed to the Kings of England both by the King himself and also by the Estates of Parlament debating of other matters and that in express words and with verie great deliberation as a known and most undoubted Right CHAP. XXIII I Shall next of all cite several publick Records which are kept in the Tower of London wherein the Dominion and possession of the Sea is by the way expressly asserted as belonging to the King of England and that both by the King himself as also by the Estates of the Parlament of England as they were debating about other matters For that is the sixt head of the former Division King Edward the third intitle's himself and his Predecessors Lords of the whole Sea flowing round about in the several Commissions given to Geoffry de Say Governor or Commander of the Southern and Western Sea and John de Norwich of the Northern the limit of distinction beginning as it was usual at the Mouth of the Thames out of which Records wee here set down theform which is especially to bee consider'd so far as it make's to this purpose The KING to his Beloved and Trustie Geoffry de Say Admiral of his Fleet of Ships from the Mouth of the River Thames toward the Western parts greeting Whereas Wee have of late commanded you by Our Letters that you together with certain Ships out of the Cinque-ports which wee have order'd to bee furnished and made readie for war according to our Command should set forth to Sea to oppose and resist certain Gallies provided and inforced with men of war in divers forein Parts which as Wee were inform'd were set out towards the parts of our Dominion to aggriev Us and Our people or els to turn their cours toward the Coasts of Scotland for the relief and succor of our Enemies there And in regard it hath been related by som that Gallies of that kinde to the number of XXVI are newly com to the Coasts of Bretaign and Normandie and do still abide there as it is supposed to do what mischief they can against Us and Ours or to succor Our said Enemies as is aforesaid Wee calling to minde that OUR PROGENITORS THE KINGS OF ENGLAND have before these times been LORDS OF THE ENGLISH SEA ON EVERIE SIDE yea and defenders thereof against the Invasions of Enemies and seeing it would very much grieve Us if our Kingly honor in this kinde of defens should which God forbid bee lost in our time or in any sort diminished and desiring with God's help to prevent dangers of this nature and provide for the safeguard and defens of the Realm and our Subjects and to restrain the malice of our Eenemies Wee do therefore strictly require and charge you by the duty and Allegeance wherein you stand bound according to the special trust reposed in you that immediately upon sight of these presents and without any farther delay you do set forth to Sea with the Ships of the Ports aforesaid and the other Ships which are now readie and that you arrest the other Ships in obedience to our command which Wee lately requir'd you to arrest But so that they might bee readie and provided to set forth according to Our aforesaid Command seeing Wee caused the Masters and Marriners of the same Ships to bee prepared and gather'd together whether they were within your Liberties or without and to caus them beeing well provided of men of war and other necessaries to hasten out to Sea with the aforesaid Ships and that with all diligence you make search after the aforesaid Gallies and other Ships of War abroad against us and stoutly and manfully set upon them if they shall presume to bend their cours for the end aforesaid toward the parts of Our Dominion or the Coasts of Scotland And if they steal away from you so that you cannot meet with them then you are with the aforesaid Ships of our Fleet without any delay to follow after the same Gallies and Ships of War set out against Us if they shall make towards our Kingdom or the Coasts ●f Scotland aforesaid and courageously to destroy them for the conservation of our Royal honor But yet Wee will not that you occasion any hurt or hindrance to Merchants or others passing by Sea who have no intention to offend Us and our Subjects or to succour our Enemies Then follow 's a power to press Seamen and som other matters of that kinde The day also and Autoritie is subscribed after this manner Witness the King at the Town of S t John the sixteenth day of August By the King himself and
to bee presented touching that business unto the King as hee was at that time King of France but onely as King of England that is as Lord of the whole Sea flowing between And it is very improbable and not in reason to bee admitted that they would so upon deliberation for both Lords and Commons use to debate such matters a long time before they pass a Bill that they would I say so upon deliberation require an imposing of Customs by the Act of an English Parlament in a place that was not subject as a part of the Roial patrimonie to the King of England as King of England From hence it was also that our present King Charls did this last year declare that himself and his progenitors the Kings of England have in all times hitherto by an antient and most just title been Lords of this Sea to wit in his Letters Patents sent to the Maritim Counties of England whereby ship-monie was imposed for the defence of his Dominion by Sea Add moreover hereunto that in the agreement made betwixt our Edward the first and Guie Earl of Flanders about the wearing of Colors or Flags in every ship and punishing offendors by Sea William de Leyburn is called Admiral de la mier du dict Roy d Engleterre or Admiral of the Sea of the said King of England Other Testimonies of the same kinde there are in Records touching the Dominion of the Sea as it hath been received and acknowledged according to the Common Law and Custom of our Countrie which I shall discours of in the next place and after that concerning the Testimonie of Foreiners Of divers Testimonies in our own Law-Books and the most received Customs whereby the Sea-Dominion of the King of England is either asserted or admitted CHAP. XXIV THE seventh of those Heads according to the former Division which manifest the aforesaid Dominion of the Kings of England relate's to our Law-Book's and the received Customs therein which prove it from the most antient times There are also in them many Particulars that may relate hereunto which are explained now and then touching the Guard of the Sea the English Admiraltie and other things alreadie handled But in this Chapter wee shall use either the determinations and Commentaries of our own Lawyers or chiefly such Court-Records as explain their opinions I confess indeed in som of the Authors of our Law who wrote above CCCL years ago or thereabout after they had as the manner then was read through the Civil Law also they were so strict in following those determinations word for word which they found concerning the Sea in that Law that when they treated de acquirendo Rerum Dominio of the manner of acquiring the Dominion of things they tranferr'd them into their own writings From thence it is that Henry Bracton who was a very famous Lawyer at the later end of the reign of Henrie the Third saith Naturali jure communia sunt omnia haec aqua Profluens aër Mare litora Maris quasi Maris accessoria By the Law of Nature all these things are common running water the Aër and the Sea and the shores of the Sea as accessories or dependants of the Sea Also aedificia si in mari five in litore posita fuerint aedificantium sunt de Jure gentium If Buildings bee raised in the Sea or upon the shore they becom theirs that build them by the Law of Nations And a little after Jus piscandi omnibus commune est in portu in fluminibus a Right of fishing is common to all in a Haven and in Rivers Which wee finde likewise in som other of our Law-Books of that Age as a passage that fell from som Writers of whom I spake at large in the former Book that were more affected than was meet with the words of Ulpian and Justinian in the general division of things But these very men in other places shewing the Customs of our Countrie do sufficiently admit the King's Dominion by Sea For Bracton himself afterward speak's of them that by the King's grace and favor quieti sint de Theolonio consuetudinibus Dandis per totum regnum Angliae in terrâ mari per totum Regnum tam per terram quàm per mare Were exempted from paying Tolls and Customs throughout the whole Kingdom of England in the Land and in the Sea and throughout the whole Kingdom both by Land and by Sea And in the same King's time a freedom from som paiments was granted to the Citizens of London per totum Regnum tam per mare quàm per terram throughout the whole Kingdom as well by Sea as by Land And so Bracton when hee return's to speak of the Customs of our Countrie acknowledged that the Dominion of the Sea belong'd to his King no less then the Land And hence it came to pass also that inter Capitula Coronae as they call them that is to say those Articles or chief Heads whereof enquirie was to bee made according to the usual custom by Judges delegated throughout England for the conservation of the publick peace wee finde this also de Purpresturis factis super Dominum Regem sive in Terrâ sive in Mari c. Of Pourprestures made upon our Lord the King either on Land or in the Sea or in sweet waters either within the Libertie or without or in any other place whatsoëver And it is placed among the Articles of this kinde recited by Bracton himself and in the Autor of the Book called Fleta But in the language of the Law wee call those things Pourprestures whereby detriment is don to any publick place belonging to the Patrimonie of the Crown as a publick thorow-fare a River and the like So that according to the nature of this ordinarie Article touching Pourprestures in the general form of enquirie the Dominion or Ownership of the Sea is ascribed to the King no less than of the Land or of publick Road or thorow-fare and River agreeable hereto is that Article about any kinde of salt-waters beeing inclosed by any subject or possessed in any other manner which in the antient Records of our Court of Admiraltie is said to bee don to the disherison of the King The words are there Item soit enquis de ceulx qui acrochent à eulx eaves salees en desheretison du Roy. And at this day enquirie is wont to bee made about that business by Autoritie of the high Admiral Robert Belknap also an eminent Judg in the time of Richard the Second saith that the Sea is subject to the King as a part of his English Kingdom or of the Patrimonie of the Crown His words in the Norman tongue run thus Le Mere est del ligeans del Roy come de son corone d' Angleterre Hee added to his words in a remarkable way as belonging to the Crown of England or as belonging
to the Royal Patrimonie of England to the end that no man might question whether the Sea belong'd to his King by the Right of the Kingdom of England or of the Dutchie of Normandie or of any other Province in France Another also who wrote in the time of Henrie the Eighth saith it hath been received by antient custom that it is a dutie lying upon the King of England as Lord of the British Sea to scour the Sea of Pirates and to render the use thereof as of a publick Road or Thorow-fare whose soil is within his Patrimonie safe for Shipping For hee expresseth himself in English thus The King of the ould Custome of the Realme as the Lord of the narrow Sea is bound as it is said to scoure the Sea of the Pirates and petit robbers of the Sea So much also as to what concern's Dominion is without controversie admitted by our Lawyers of later time And it appear's by publick Records conteining divers main points touching which the Judges were to bee consulted for the good of the Common-weal in the time of King Edward the Third that the King's Sea-Dominion which they called the antient superioritie of the Sea was a matter out of question among our Lawyers of that Age. But consultation was had for the more convenient guarding of it For the whole Bench of Judges were advised with to the end so wee read it in the Records and that is especially to bee observed which wee finde here about the first beginning of the Naval Laws of the Isle of Oleron seated in the Creek of Aquitain at the mouth of the River Charente that the form of proceeding heretofore ordained and begun by Edward the first grandfather of our Lord the King and his Council at the prosecution of his Subjects may bee resumed and continued for the reteining and conserving of the antient superioritie of the Sea of England and the Autoritie of the Office of Admiraltie in the same as to the correcting expounding declaring and conserving the Laws and Statutes long since made by his Predecessors Kings of England for the mainteining of Peace and Justice among all people of what Nation soëver passing through the Sea of England and to take cognisance of all attempt to the contrarie in the same and to punish Offenders and award satisfaction to such as suffer wrong and damage Which Laws and Statutes were by the Lord Richard heretofore King of England at his return from the holy Land interpreted declared and published in the Isle of Oleron and named in French le ley Olyroun Here you have it declared as a thing most received and certain that the King of England hath by antient right been Lord of the Sea of the same name or that which flow's about it But that whereof the Bench of Judges were to consult was onely about the orderly maintenance of this right Nor is it truly a small sign of this Dominion that Richard the First King of England beeing in the Isle of Oleron which hee possessed as seated in his own Sea not so much for that hee was Duke of Aquitain as King of England whereof wee have alreadie spoken did as sole Ruler and Moderator of Sea-affairs first publish those Naval or Sea-Laws in that his Island which hold in force to this day and from that time gave them so large and perpetual an Autoritie by that name that as the Rhodian Naval Laws as the case stand's do prove that the Rhodians in antient time were Lords of the Grecian Sea so the Laws of Oleron having obteined such a kinde of Autoritie by Sea from their first Institution must ever declare the King of England as the Autor to bee Lord of the neighboring Sea round about But som printed Copies of these Laws make them about sixtie years later than the Reign of that Richard by what autoritie I cannot tell For they relate them to have been made in the year MCCLXVI which is the fiftieth year of our Henrie the third Also in the Law of the Land it is reckoned among the Privileges of such as are absent that they who shall bee out of the Realm of England at the levying of a Fine of any Land and making Proclamations thereupon are not so bound either by a yearly prescription as heretofore or by a five years prescription as is usual of later time but that their Right remain's entire to them upon their return home if they make their claim within the like spaces of time But intra regnum within the Kingdom is by the same Law taken and that in the usual phrase for that which is intra or as it is wont to bee barbarously render'd infra Quatuor Maria within the four Seas to wit the Southern Western Eastern and that Northen Sea which washeth both the sides of that neck of Land whereby Scotland is united to England That is to say within the outmost bounds of the English Empire in those four Seas or within the opposite Shores of the Eastern and Southern Sea or Ports belonging to other Princes and within the bounds of the Northern and Western Sea which indeed are to bee bounded after another manner but yet to bee bounded that is accordirng to the extent of possession West-ward beyond the Western Shores of Ireland and by the first beginning of that Sea which is of the Scotish name and jurisdiction But that which is opposed to this Particle intra quatuor maria within the four seas is that extra quatuor Maria without the four seas or to bee in the parts so beyond the Seas that they bee beyond the bounds of the Sea-Dominion of the King of England from whence wee are to determine of the bounds or exterior limit of the Seas And although the Land of England bee somtimes used for that which is the whole Realm or English Empire as signifying the same a more ordinarie and indeed more brief expression beeing applied as is usual in stead of a more large yet it certainly appear's that extra quatuor maria without the four seas and extra Regnum without the Realm do in our Law-Books signifie the very same thing that is to say so far as the extent and latitude of the whole English Empire is comprehended in the name of Realm not as the Realm of England is now and then distinguished in our Law from Ireland which also is a distinct Dominion of the same Empire or from the other Islands which are reckoned in the Roial patrimonie of the Kings of England For it is usual in the Language of the Law so to describe him who in that sens shall bee out of the Realm And whereas in the Reign of Richard the second to an objection made against one that would avoid the yearly prescription as not bound by it for that hee was not in England it was excepted that hee was in Scotland and so within the four Seas It was thereupon answer'd and rul'd
by the Court that the Exception was of no force for that Scotland was not within the Bounds and Limits of England So that within the four Seas and within the Realm signified one and the same thing from whence these terms out of the Realm and without the four Seas becom one and the same also To bee out of the Realm is very often repeated in this ●en● also by Littleton the most excellent of all our Law-Writers signifying no other thing than what hee renders it in another place by one who ala oustere le mere crossed the Sea or went beyond sea ●rom thence also it seem's to have proceeded that whereas with us among the several temporal excuses of Defendants who are summoned to appear in Court in our Law wee call them Essoins there are two alleged whereof the one is intitled de ultra Mare the other De Malo veniendi and this latter is allowed to him that is hindred by any kinde of misfortune whatsoever within the Seas or on this side of the more remote bounds of those Seas which belong to England but the former to him who live's without or beyond the Seas belonging to the English Empire From thence it seem's I say to have proceeded that in former times when there was a more frequent use in Court of this kinde of excuses a Defendant beeing absent in Ireland might lawfully make use of the latter form of Essoin but not of the former Nevertheless if through ignorance hee did make use of this it took on the nature of the latter that is wholly quitting all its own nature it depended upon this that the Defendant according to the more vulgar sens● or acception lived beyond-Sea For according to received Custom the nature of them both was such that when any one might lawfully use the former hee might also after a while likewise enjoy the benefit of the latter But in the said kinde of Essoins or Excuses the former not beeing lawfully made use of but yet turned into the latter by construction of Law lest it should becom of no use there was no place for the latter to the end it might not bee iterated contrarie to Custom The matter it self was thus decided in the time of K. Henrie the third as it is described by Henrie Bracton after this manner Esto saith hee quòd quis se Essoniaverit de Ibernia quasi de ultra Mare attornatur Essonium illud ad simplex Essonium de Malo veniendi ut coram Martino de Patteshul in Banco anno Regis Henrici Sexto de Gilberto Mariscallo Ceciliâ uxore ejus Allano de Hyda qui vocavit ad Warrantum Willielmum Mariscallum in Comitatu Pembroke qui se essoniavit de Ibernia non fuit allocatum postea fecit de hoc quòd aliud essonium de malo veniendi ad alium diem non fuit allocatum So much wee finde also in the antient Autor of that Book entitled Fleta Doubtless Ireland is no less seated beyond sea than either France or Spain unless you take that decision as relating onely to the Civil notion of this kinde of situation to wit that it is not situate beyond that Sea which is a part and Territorie of the English Empire but placed therein and comprehended under one and the same Supreme Power with England and so that an Excuse or Essoin de ultra mare is not in that kinde to bee admitted In the antient Records also concerning the Customs of our Court of Admiraltie wee read it was an usual Custom in the time of King Henrie the first who died Anno Dom. MCXXXVI and of other Kings both before and after him That if any man accused of a capital crime don by Sea beeing publickly called five times by the voice of the Crier after so many several daies assigned did not make his appearance in the Court of Admiraltie hee was banished out of England de mer appurtenant au Roy d Angleterre or out of the Sea belonging to the King of England for fourtie years more or less according to the pleasure of the Admiral Other particulars there are that relate hereunto about Actions for matters arising in this Sea that were wont to bee entred in express terms heretofore in the ordinarie Courts of our Common Law who●e Jurisdiction was ever esteemed of such a nature that an Action instituted about a matter arising in any other place than within the bounds of the Realm was by the antient strict Law alwaies to bee rejected by them After which manner as it hath been a Custom now for many years that an action ought to bee rejected unless the matter have its rise within the Bodie as they call it of the Countie that is within som Province or Countie of the Island usually given in charge to certain Governors or Officers known to us by the name of Sheriffs So also is it in this Sea-Province belonging by the antient received Custom to the high Admiral or his Deputies not onely so far as concern's its defence and guard but also as to matter of Jurisdiction So that at length it is manifest that the Sea-Dominion of the King of England is without controversie admitted and asserted also both by the Determinations and Customs of the Law of the Land and by the express words of the Writs and Forms of the Actions themselvs Nor is that of any force at all to the contrarie which either our Countrie-man Bracton the Lawyer as hath been said or som others of late as well as antient time that are Followers of him but in too careless a manner while they set down the Institutions of our English Law have unadvisedly utter'd by the way touching that antient communitie of the Sea and of Fishing also in Rivers according to the Books of Justinian as if such a kinde of communitie were admitted in our Law Truly that which they have so let slip is not so much to bee taken as contrarie to the known Law of the Land in this particular for even Bracton himself as I have shewn hath divers other passages that signifie this Dominion of the King as it is to bee reckoned for som of the reliques of Ulpian or of the School of the Imperial Law too slightly and carelesly added by the way in writing And the like may bee said of one or two more of our Writers who after the manner of reasoning received for the most part in the Imperial Law touching the middle of a River and an Island risen therein do by the way but ignorantly make the middle of the Sea flowing between to bee the bound of this Sea-Dominion of our Kings Moreover the same may bee said likewise of the Commissioners of Queen Elisabeth who treating at Bremen with the Commissioners of Christiern the fourth King of Denmark about a freedom of Navigation through the Northern Sea object a perpetual communitie of every kinde of
what hath been alreadie spoken And from hence perhaps it is that the more antient Arms of the Kings of Man were a Ship with a Sail folded together and this Inscription added Rex Manniae Insularum King of Man of the Isles as M r Camden observ's from their Sails For the three legs of humane shape now every where known are but of later time But afterwards when Ireland was subdued by Henrie the Second and King John and Reginald King of Man brought into the power of King John the English possessing this Sea at that time with a very numerous Navie there is no reason at all to doubt but that the neighboring Sea round about was taken also into the Dominion of the English For in that Age the King of Man was no absolute Prince but beeing subdued hee paid homage to the King of England yielded under his subjection But in a short time after Alexander the Third King of Scots annexed it to the Dominion of Scotland and put in a Governor who was to assist him upon occasion with thirteen Gallies five hundred Seamen Hee recover'd the Hebrides also by driving out the Norwegians transmitted it to his posteritie Then Man returned again to the English who enjoied Ireland a long time together with it that sea-territory But the Kings of the Hebrides and of Scotland enjoied the Northern part of this Western Sea after that they had expell'd the Norwegians who were Lords here of the Sea And from hence it is that as Scotland England this Isle of Man the Hebrides and Ireland with other adjacent Isles so even the Vergivian and Deucaledonian Sea it self washing the West of Scotland and surrounding these Isles with windings and turnings ought now also to bee accounted the antient Patrimonie of the King of great Britain But there is moreover in the more Westerly part of this open and main Sea another Right belonging to the King of Great Britain and that of a verie large extent upon the Shore of America Whenas S r Humfery Gilbert Knight did by Autoritie of Queen Elisabeth transport a Colonie into the New World with design to recover certain Lands in the East parts of the Northern America which of Right belong'd to the English Dominion the Queen was by him as her Procurator put into a possession for ever to bee held by her and her heirs both of the Port called by the name of S t John which is in the Island of Baccalaos and also of the whole Sea as well as Land on every side for the space of six hundred miles Then hee received this new Kingdom of the Queen as her Beneficiarie having a Branch and a Turf deliver'd in his hands according to the usual cerimonie of England in transferring the Ownership of Lands and Possessions Nor truly was it necessarie that hee should otherwise get the Possession from whence this Dominion of the Queen and her Posteritie had its Original For as Paulus saith well there is no necessitie that hee who intend's to take possession of a Field should walk about the whole but t is sufficient if hee enter any part of that Field so long as hee doth it with a minde thought and intent to possess the Field to its utmost extent and bound Which saying may relate to Seas as well as Lands that were never taken into possession So that as Siculus Flaccus Treating of Occupatorie Lands saith Men did not possess so much land as they were able to till but they reserved as much as they were in hope they might bee able to till the like also may bee said of a Sea so taken into possession Look how much was reserved in hope of using and enjoying so much also was bounded But perhaps the first original of the Dominion of this main Sea of America did not proceed from the Possession that was acquired by Gilbert Hee rather restored and inlarged the Right of the Crown here For that Island called Baccalaos was added to the English Empire by Sebastian Chabot in the time of Henrie the Seventh And it is certain that afterwards it grew to be a Custom for the Officers belonging to the High Admiral of England in whose charge are all the Seas subject to the King of England and Ireland as King of England and Ireland to demand Tributes of such as fish't also in this Sea which was I suppose a most evident token of the King's Dominion But it was provided by an Act of Parlament in the Reign of Edward the Sixth that no Tributes of that kinde to the grievance of Fishermen should bee paid any longer How far our English Colonies lately transported into America have possessed themselvs of the Sea there I have as yet made but little enquirie Touching the Dominion of the King of Great Britain in the Scotish Sea especially toward the East and North. CHAP. XXXI THose particulars which were cited before out of the Proclamation of James King of Great Britain about the Prohibition of Fishing relate as well to the Scotish Seas on every side from whence also you must acknowledg their possession hath been reteined together with an antient Sea-Dominion That is to say all Foreiners were prohibited to Fish in these Seas without leav first obteined at Edenburgh And in those Scotish Acts of Parlament they are not so much new Laws made as old ones revived wherby it was ordeined That all manner of Fischeres that occupies the Sea and vtheres persons quhat sumever that happenis to slay Hering or quihte Fish upon the Coast or within the Iles or out with the samen within the Frithes bring them to free Ports c. where they may bee sold to the Inhabitants of the same kingdom quhairby his Ma●esties Customes bee not defrauded and his Hienes Lieges not frustrat of the Commoditie appointed to them be God under the pain of confiscation and tynsel of the veschelles of them that cumes in the contrair hereof and escheiting of all their movable guddes to our soveraine Lords use So that use and benefit is claimed hence by a special right in that Sea otherwise truly that use and bene fit would of right no more appertein either to the King of Scotland or his Subjects than to any other whomsoêver But the Law was made concerning all Fisher-men as well strangers as Scotch-men as beeing ordeined by all the Estates of that Kingdom who so well understood both the King 's Right and also their own as subordinate to the King's by Tradition from their Ancestors or by long-continued possession and Dominion that there remained not the least ground of scruple touching that business And a Scotish Lawyer speaking about Fishing in the Eastern Sea of Scotland I cannot saith hee omit to tell you that in the past Age after a most bloudie quarrel between the Scots and Hollanders about occasions belonging to the Sea the matter was composed after this manner that in time to
thing in a manner was acknowledged by a subject of the King of Denmarks no mean man in a Letter that hee wrote som years since to a friend of his in England his name is Gudbrandus Thorlacius Bishop of Hola in Island who in a Letter sent hither Anno MDXCV to Hugh Branham Pastor of Harwich call's the Britains almost Lords there of the whole Sea There is saith hee a report now at this day that you of Britain whom I had almost called Lords of the Sea have Negotiations every Year in Groenland But the Kings of Denmark deny it here and this more Northerly Sea which belong's to Island they challenge to themselvs as they are Kings of Norway and that by antient right if not unjustly pretended To this purpose let us observ that passage which I finde in a speech of the Ambassadors of Erricus the tenth King of Norway and Denmark delivered unto our Henrie the fift which run's to this effect Most victorious King of England may it pleas your Majestie to understand that our most gratious Lord the King of Norway c. aforesaid hath certain Islands to wit Island Jeroy Hietland and manie more belonging to his Kingdom of Norway whereunto of old no persons were wont to repair out of other Countries upon any occasions whatsoëver either of Fishing or Merchandisi●g under pe●il of life and limbs nor might the men of the Kingdom of Norway more than those of other Countries without special licence from his Majestie Nor might they after Licence obteined set forth out of any other place than the Citie of Bergen nor return to the same place but upon inevitable necessitie or when they ought to paie Customs and other Duties to the King's Exchequer according to the most antient Custom of Norway which hath been constantly observed time out of minde in that Kingdom Also in the year MCCCCXLV Christophor King of Denmark and Norway granted the Inhabitants of Zirickzee in Zealand a freedom of Navigation into his Kingdom Island and other Isles beeing excepted and prohibited which are the very words of the Grant Moreover out of the League made at Koppenhagen in the year of our Lord MCDXXXII between our Henrie the sixt and the same Erricus King of Norwaie and Denmark the Commissioners of the King of Denmark who held a Treatie at Bremen with the Commissioners of our Queen Elisabeth in the year MDC II about the free use of this Sea alleged this Article almost to the same sens It is provided that all Merchants and all other men whatsoëver in subjection to the King of England and France do not presume hereafter under peril of loss of life and goods to visit the Countries of Island Finmarck Halghaland or anie other prohibited places and unlawful Ports whatsoëver in the Kingdoms of Denmark Sweden and Norway Yea and som years before the use of this Sea was prohibited both to Merchants and Fisher-men unless they were bound with Merchandise to North-barn the most eminent Town of Traffick under the King of Norwaie And touching that particular there is an Act of Parlament of Henrie the sixt whereby such a kinde of Prohibition continued in force for certain years in favor of the King of Norwaie So that there were many Letters Patents afterwards granted by our Kings to their subjects of England whereby they had Licence to go unto Island Finmark and other Dominions of the King of Norway and Sweden But that Statute the rigor whereof was dispensed with at the King's pleasure by such kinde of Grants became repealed at the beginning of the Reign of King Henrie the eight And Joannes Maior making mention of that time saith A Fleet of English went everie year to Island beyond the Arctick Circle to catch Fish But what manner of determination soêver ought to bee made touching the Dominion of this more Northerly Sea yet certain it is such a perpetual servitude at least was by several agreements betwixt the Kings of England and Norwaie imposed upon it that to this day also the subjects of England enjoy a perpetual right of sailing unto Island and of using and enjoying this sea For by a League made at Koppenhagen in the year MCDXC betwixt Henrie the seventh of England and John the second King of Denmark and Norwaie it was concluded that all Merchants and Liege-men Fisher-men and any other persons whatsoëver beeing subjects of the King of England and France might for ever in time to com sail freely to the Island Tyle that is to saie Island for in that age it was generally taken for Thule as it is now also by som thither to have recours and to enter with their ships and goods and merchandise victuals and any other commodities whatsoever upon occasion of buying selling fishing or merchandising and there to abide and convers after the manner of Merchants and from thence freely to return as often as they pleas without any Prohibition molestation or impediment of Us or our heirs and successors in the Kingdoms of Denmark and Norway or of any of our Officers they paying the due rights and usual Customs as well in that Island as also in the Ports belonging to the same where they shall happen to arrive Provided alwaies that seven years immediately after the date of these presents they do Petition to renew their Licence from us and our successors Kings of Denmark and Norway to the end that so from seven years to seven years Merchants and all othe● persons aforesaid may for ever acknowledg us and our successors Kings of Denmark and Norway in the renewing of their Licence But that this League was not limited by any time but concerned the heirs and successors of both the parties appear's not onely in part by what hath been alleged alreadie but by the very form of the Preface which I thought meet to add in this place VVee John by the Grace of God King as aforesaid by the unanimous advice and consent of our beloved Counsellors and others the Lords and Nobles of our Kingdom of Denmark have caused a Treatie to bee had with the Orators of the most illustrious Prince Henrie by the Grace of God King of England and France our most dear Brother James Hutton Doctor of the Civil Law Thomas Clarentieux King of Arms Thomas Carter and John Beliz Merchants of Lyn about the restoring of peace and establishing a perpetual concord between our Kingdoms which Counsellors of ours and the Orators autorised in our Citie of Koppenhagen by special Commission of the afore named King of England our most dear Brother and with full power whereof wee are assured by the Letters of the said King of England have concluded that between us our heirs and successors well willers friends and allies and the most illustrious Prince Henrie King of England and France our most dear Brother his heirs and successors well willers friends and allies there bee and shall bee for ever in time to com
that in it which may seem to import that hee call's himself King of the Ocean especially if you consider those words which wee finde somtimes among Germane Writers in the Title of Charls the fifth Emperor and King of Spain In the Preface to the constitution concerning publick Judicatories in the Empire hee is called King of the Canarie Ilands also of the Islands of the Indies and of the Continent and of the Ocean Archduke of Austria c. And in the Imperial Sanctions published in high Dutch Konig-under Jnsulen Canariae auch der Jnsulen Indiarum und Terrae firmae des Maers Oceant c. as you may meet with it at least six hundred times The word Ocean is added as if hee entitled himself King of the Ocean But this is a mistake for the same in Spanish is Rey c. de las Islas y terra firma del mar Oceano c. that is King of the Islands and of the Terra firma of the Ocean namely the Islands or Continents of or lying in the Ocean which Pope Alexander the Sixth gave to Ferdinand the Fifth King of Spain all of them lying Westward from the very first Meridian of those hee entitle's himself King not of the Ocean it self How far private Dominion over the Sea is admitted according to the Customs or opinion of the French CHAP. XVIII AS concerning Dominion of the Sea according to the Customs of the French som perhaps may seem to have met with verie ancient evidences thereof in those Officers deputed for the guard of the Sea-Coasts whom wee read of in the Statute-Books and in that Rotlandus Governor of the British that is the Aremorican shore mentioned in the life of Charle-maign by Eginhartus a Writer of that time But those dignities have relation not so much to the Sea it self as to the shore and Sea-Coast or the border of the Land confining with the Sea notwithstanding that Rotlandus is by the French-men of this and the former Age promiscuously styled Governor both of the Sea and Shore as if there were no difference But it cannot bee denied that Princes heretofore upon the Shore of Aremorica or Bretaign as the Veneti of whom wee spake before did upon the same Shore impose Custom upon Ships as for the use of the Road upon their Coasts and challenge to themselvs other Rights of the like nature called Nobilitates super navibus So it is to bee read in an ancient Record made in the time of Duke Alanus in the year MLXXXVII concerning Precedence of Place among the Nobles of Bretaigne In that Record the second place is assigned to the Viscount of S t Pol de Leon who as the very words of it are had verie many of those Customs called Nobilitates super navibus imposed on such as passed the Ocean upon the Coasts of Osismer or Leon which as it was said Budicius an antient King of Bretaign did give and grant to one of his predecessors upon Marriage in reward of the virtue fidelitie and valor of that Viscount but with the consent of the Prelates Counts Barons and Nobles of Bretaign What these Nobilitates were and whence they had their original is partly declared by Bertrandus Argentraeus somtime President of the Province of Renes where hee discourseth also of the right of giving Pass ports which they call brefs de conduicte at this time in use on that shore That saith hee whereas till then it had been a right peculiar to the Princes beeing given by way of Dowrie to the Barons of Leon of which wee have alreadie spoken out of the aforesaid Record remained an hereditarie and proper right to that Familie until Joannes Ruffus the Duke redeemed it for a vast sum of monie of Guynomarius Baron of Leon after that Peter Mauclerc of Dreux Duke of Bretaign had in vain attempted to re assume it by force of arms It had its original they say upon this occasion When our Princes and antient Kings considered the daily Shipwracks made upon that shore where there were many Rocks and but few Havens they made a Law that none should set to Sea without their leav Such as did set out paying a certain rate had passes and guides appointed them that were well acquainted with the Sea and Shores They that refused forfeited their ships with all their tackling and furniture thereof and if the Ship were cast away their goods also were confiscate They that had leav were in no danger of confiscation and if they suffered Shipwrack had libertie to recover as many of their goods as they could And these guides were paid their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Conduct-money which wee have mentioned elswhere called by them droit de salvage These Tickets or Passes are given out now as heretosore at a certain price And among other Revenues of the Exchequer they also were rented out to the Farmers of the Custom So far Bertrandus from whom Renatus Choppinus borroweth almost the very words But Petrus Berlordaeus Advocate of the Parlament of Reines tell 's us that the Custom of taking forfeiture in that manner of all shipwrack't goods was abolished there by an Edict in the year MDLXXXIII But in the mean time for so much as concern's any part of that Western Sea lying next the Shore these are manifest evidences either of Dominion or of subjection in the Sea which indeed sufficiently prove by the Customs of that people that the Sea is capable of Dominion Moreover upon occasion of these Passes there have been controversies raised somtimes between the Dukes of Bretaign and the Kings of England as may bee seen in certain memorials of the affairs of Bretaign which have relation to the times of our Richard the second and John the Fourth Duke of Bretaign But this wee know for certain that in the agreement made between our Edward the Fourth and Francis the second Duke of Bretaign in the year MCCCCLXVIII concerning mutual traffick and free passage to and fro for the subjects of each Nation during a truce of thirtie years there is an express proviso concerning Wrecks but such a one as left an equal right to both of them not altogether unlike that which for many ages hath been in use upon the English Shore No mention at all beeing made in the Articles of the Truce either of the right or use of these aforesaid Passes as beeing a thing in no wise admitted by the English But som modern Lawyers among the French do vainly affirm that their King is Lord not onely of a part of the Sea neighboring upon the Territorie of Bretaign but of the whole Sea that is adjoyning to any part of France and so of the British or English Sea also By which very Assertion of theirs they sufficiently declare their judgment that there may bee a soveraign over the Sea The King saith Charondas Caronaeus is supreme Lord of the Seas which flow about his
Divine Natural or of Nations any thing which may so oppose the private Dominion thereof that it cannot bee admitted by every kinde of Law even the most approved and so that any kinde of Sea whatsoëver may by any sort of Law whatsoëver bee capable of private Dominion which was the thing I intended to prove The End of the first Book Touching the DOMINION OR Ownership of the Sea BOOK II. The order or Method of those things that are to bee handled in this Book The British Ocean divided into four parts CHAP. I. HAving made it evident in the former Book that the Sea is capable of private Dominion as well as the Land and that by all kindes of Law whether wee seriously consider the Divine or Natural or any Law of Nations whatsoëver it remain's next that wee discours touching the Dominion of great Britain in the Sea encompassing it about and of those large Testimonies whereby it is asserted and mainteined Wherein this Method is observed that in the first place wee premise both the distribution and various appellation of the Sea flowing about it in order to the Discours Then it shall bee shewn from all Antiquitie down to our times without interruption that those who by reason of so frequent alterations of the state of Affairs have reigned here whether Britains Romans Saxons Danes and Normans and so the following Kings each one according to the various latitude of his Empire have enjoied the Dominion of that Sea by perpetual occupation that is to say by using and enjoying it as their own after a peculiar manner as an undoubted portion either of the whole bodie of the estate of the British Empire or of som part thereof according to the state and condition of such as have ruled it or as an inseparable appendant of this Land Lastly that the Kings of Great Britain have had a peculiar Dominion or proprietie over the Sea flowing about it as a bound not bounding their Empire but to borrow the Terms used by Surveiors of Land as bounded by it in the same manner as over the Island it self and the other neighboring Isles which they possess about it The Sea encompassing great Britain which in general wee term the British Sea is divided into four parts according to the four Quarters of the World On the West lie's the Vergivian Sea which also take's the name of the Deucaledonian where it washeth the Coast of Scotland And of this Vergivian wherein Ireland is situate the Irish Sea is reckoned to bee a part called in antient time the Scythian Vale but now the Channel of S t George So that as well that which washeth the Western Coast of Ireland as that which flowe's between great Britain and Ireland is to bee called the British Sea For not onely this which of old was called great Britain and somtimes simply the Great Island but also the Isle of Ireland with the other adjacent Isles were termed Britanniae So that many times Albion and Ireland are equally called British Isles and Britannides as you may see in Strabo Ptolomie Marcianus Heracleötes Plinie Eustathius upon Dionysius Afer and others Moreover Ireland is called by Ptolomie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 little Britain And saith Ethelward an antient Writer They go to Ireland called heretofore Britannides by the great Julius Caesar. Perhaps hee had a more perfect Copie of Julius Caesar's Book For in none of his Commentaries which wee use is Ireland called by that name And it hath been observed by learned men that that book hath been maimed and alter'd by one Julius Celsus whose name wee finde now and then in the Manuscript Copies Towards the North this Sea is named the Northern Caledonian and Deucaledonian Sea wherein lie scatter'd the Orcades Islands Thule and others which beeing called the British or Albionian Isles yea and Britannides gave name to the neighboring Sea And indeed Thule which som would have to bee Island others and that with most reason do conceiv it to bee the biggest of the Shetland or Zetland Isles called ●hilensel by the Seamen and som there are again that think otherwise was of old not onely termed a British Isle but also by som expresly placed in Britain it self Mahumedes Acharranides an Arabian called likewise Aracensis and Albategnius a famous Mathematician who lived above nine hundred years ago saith Som observing the breadth of the Earth from the Equinoctial Line towards the North have found it to bee determined by the Isle Thule which is in Britain where the longest day is XX ●ours that is to say Ptolomie and his ●ollowers who by drawing a Line on the Northside of Thule or the Shetland Isles through 63 degrees and a quarter of Northern Latitude have set it down for the utmost bound of the habitable world Yea and som have used the name of Thule for Britain it self or England In times past the Emperor of Constantinople was wont to have trustie Guards called Barrangi constantly attending his person who were taken out of England as appear's out of Nicetas Choniates and Codinus also who was keeper of the Palace write's that they were wont to salute the Emperor with a loud voice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the English Tongue But in the Storie of Anna Comnena the Daughter of Alexius it is said expressly that they came 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the Island of Thule In like manner all the Islands either known or heard of in this Northern Sea were at length called by the name of British the utmost Bounds whereof as also of Thule it self som of the Antients would have to reach unto 67 degrees of Latitude or thereabout And Albategnius speaking of the Sea as it look's toward Spain saith There are XII British Isles in it towards the North and beyond these it is not habitable and how far it stretcheth is unknown Having made this preparation then wee treat first concerning the Sea-Dominion of the Britains before they were reduced under the Roman power Next touching a Dominion of that kinde belonging to the Romans while they ruled here continually and necessarily accompanying the Soveraigntie of the Island Afterwards it is made evident by such Testimonies as are found among the Antients that the English Saxons and others who enjoied the supreme Power in Britain before the Norman's Invasion had such a kinde of Dominion Lastly according to the fourfold division of the British Sea wee set forth the antient Occupation together with the long and continued possession of every Sea in particular since the Norman's time whereby the true and lawful Dominion and Customs of the Sea which are the subject of our Discours may bee drawn down as it were by a twin'd thred until our own times Moreover seeing both the Northern and Western Ocean do stretch to a very great Latitude this to America that not onely to Island and the Shores of Groenland but to parts utterly unknown and
also his Sea-men to keep all relief of Victual from going to the Enemie by Sea Hee used the word Pirats in this place as others of that age have don not for Robbers as 't is commonly taken but for such as beeing skill'd in Sea-affairs were appointed to set upon the Enemie's Fleets and defend the Dominion by Sea Touching the derivation of the word the old Scholiast upon Sophocles his Aiax saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is Pira in the Attick Tongue signifie's craft or art and hence it is that they are called Pirats which infest the Sea But when the English-Saxons and Danes in the time of K. Alfred were ever and anon strugling for the Soveraigntie in England for Gurmundus or Guthrunus King of the Danes was at that time setled in Northumberland as a Fiduciarie Client or Vassal to Alfred and had very large Territories in the East-part of England their Fights were mostly by Sea as if they had both been of opinion that hee which could get the Dominion of the British Sea would by necessarie consequence becom Lord also of the Land or of that part of the Isle which lie's before it For this caus also it was that the Danes growing strong at Sea K. Alfred mightily augmented his Naval Forces by building ships twice as long as the Danish ships deeper nimbler and less rocking or rolling and so much more convenient for Sea-Fights Florentius the Monk saith In the same year that is to say the year of our Lord MCCCXCVII the Forces of the Pagans residing in East-England and Northumberland using Piracie upon the Sea-Coasts did grievously infest the West-Saxon's Countrie with very long and nimble ships which they had built divers years before Against whom ships were built by the Command of K. Alfred twice as long deeper nimbler and less waving or rolling by whose force hee might subdue the aforesaid ships of the Enemie It is related also in the same words by Roger Hoveden But Henrie of Huntingdon speaking expresly of the number of Oars that served for the rowing of these ships of Alfred saith King Alfred caused long ships to bee made readie to wit of 40 Oars or more against the Danish ships But there are Chronicles written in the Saxon Tongue that speak of ships of 60 Oars and larger built by him at that time out of which these Writers above-mentioned and others of the like sort have compiled theirs The words of the Chronicles are these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is to say King Alfred gave command for the building of long ships to encounter the Danish But they were twice as long as these whereof som had sixtie Oars som more They were also more nimble less rolling and deeper then the other Not built after the Frisian or Danish manner but such as hee conceived most convenient for fighting So that there is no doubt but the business of shipping was mightily advanced in his Reign among the English-Saxons in order to the defence and maintenance of their Dominion by Sea And wee very often finde that those Sea fights managed by Alfred and his son Edward with various success against the Danes and Normans were undertaken not without great numbers of Shipping But in the time of King Athelstan who was very strong at Sea upon the Irish Nation saith Huntingdon and those that dwelt in ships there fell a fatal destruction The English-Saxon words in the antient Chronicles from whence Huntingdon translated those and which agree w th these are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which fully signifie the same thing For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Scotish Nation and Scots are by the Antients often taken for the Irish. Hee also saith the same Autor led an huge Armie by Land and Sea into Northumberland and Scotland and in regard there was none appear'd to make any opposition bee marched up and down the Countrie and wasting it at pleasure returned with Triumph whereupon saith a Poët of that time Jam cubat in terris fera barbaries Aquilonis Jam jacet in campo pelago pirata relicto Illicitas torvásque minas Analavus anhelans Now is the wilde and barb'rous North brought down Now Analave the Pirat is o'rethrown Who having left the Sea on Land doth lie And spightful threats breath's out against the Skie This Analavus was King of the Irish and of many Islands who invading the Coasts of Athelstan with a Fleet of DCXV ships at the mouth of the River Humber received a great overthrow and was put to a most shameful Flight But King Edgar as saith Florentius of Worcester sailing about the North of Britain with a great Navie arrived at Chester where his eight pettie Kings met him as hee had given order who sware fealtie to him and that they would assist him both by Sea and Land Or as Huntingdon saith of the same thing they all did homage to him declaring themselvs readie at his command to serv him by Sea and Land Among these pettie Kings there was one Maccusius whom Hoveden and Florentius call a King of very many Islands and Florilegus a King of Man and very many Islands William of Malmsburie call's him an Arch Pirat Moreover the same King Edgar as if hee intended to set forth the splendor magnificence and as it were an Epitome of his whole Empire in Sea-affairs and Shipping did as say Florentius and Hoveden during his abode at Chester enter into a Boat wherein hee was rowed by those pettie Kings himself holding the Stern and steering it about the River Dee and beeing attended by all his Dukes and Peers in such another Vessel bee sailed from the Palace to the Monasterie of S. John Baptist where an Oration beeing made to him hee returned in the same pomp unto the Palace In the very Entrie whereof hee is reported to have said to his Lords that then his Successors might boast themselvs Kings of England when they should bee thus attended by so many Kings and enjoy the state and glory of such honors or as Malmsburie write's of the same thing when they should enjoy so great a Prerogative of honors So many Kings as Vassals to bee readie alwaies to assist with their Forces whensoëver they should bee required both by Sea and Land There is also a notable testimonie in the same Florentius and the Monk of Malmsburie how that this King sailed round about his Sea every year and secured it with a constant Guard and Forces Every Summer saith Malmsburie immediately after Easter bee commanded his ships upon every shore to bee brought into a Bodie sailing usually with the Eastern Fleet to the West part of the Island and then sending it back hee sail'd with the Western Fleet unto the Northern and thence with the Northern hee returned to the Eastern beeing indeed very diligent to prevent the Incursions of Pirats that is behaving himself in this manfully as say Florentius also and Hoveden for the
least allow such a Dominion VIII Som antient Testimonies of inferior note All the testimonies almost that are comprehended in this Division are indeed domestick but so publick and of so approved credit that hardly any thing can bee imagined which might give a clearer proof of possession whether Civil as they call it consisting in the act and intention of the minde or Natural which require's the presence of the Bodie As it will appear to any man that pleas to make enquirie Especially if hee add hereunto the judgment or acknowledgment of such Forein Nations whom it chiefly concerned whereof wee shall treat also by and by But of these things severally and in order That the Kings of England since the coming in of the Normans have perpetually enjoied the Dominion of the Sea flowing about them is in the first place proved from the Guard or Government thereof as of a Province or Territorie that is to say from the very Law of the English Admiraltie CHAP. XIV AS concerning the Guard or Government of this Sea there are three things therein that deserv special consideration 1. The bare mention and nature of the Guard of the Sea and of the Guardians or Admirals thereof in publick Records and Histories 2. The Tributes and Customs imposed demanded or accustomed to bee paid for and in consideration of the said custodie And lastly the tenor and varietie of Commissions belonging to this Guard and English Admiraltie or Government by Sea Since the coming in of the Normans there is frequent mention of a Guard or Government instituted for the defence and guarding of the Sea Here call to minde those observations touching this kinde of Guard which have been alreadie gathered out of that Record or Breviarie of England called Doomesday And King Henrie the first saith Florentius of Worcester gave order to his Butsecarli to guard the Sea and take care that no person from the parts of Normandie approach the English Coasts The same saith Roger Hoveden in the very same words almost save onely that the printed Copies err in putting Buzsecarlis for Butsecarlis These Butsecarli or Butescarles in the old English Language are Officers belonging to the Navie or Sea-souldiers as Hutesecarli were Domestick Servants or Officers in Court And that to guard the Sea here signified to secure the Sea it self not to defend the Sea-Coasts as somtimes though seldom it did with Land-forces plainly appear's out of Henrie of Huntingdon in whom it is clear that the persons who thus guarded the Sea were emploied by the King to make Warr by Sea against Robert Duke of Normandie who was then preparing an Expedition against England Now those publick Records are lost wherein the Roial Commissions for the delegation of this Command or Government were wont to bee registred all that space of time betwixt the coming in of the Normans and the Reign of K. John But from thence through all the succeeding ages unto this present time it is as clear as day that the Kings of England have been wont to constitute Governors or Commanders who had the charge of guarding the English Sea and were the Guardians or Governors thereof in the same manner as if it had been som Province upon Land First of all there were intrusted with the Government of the Sea or the Maritimae and Marinae the Maritime and Marine part of the Empire understanding by those words not onely som Countrie lying upon the Sea-Coasts but comprehending the British Sea it self though I confess it was not alwaies so such as were to guard and keep it under the title somtimes of Custodes Navium Guardians of the ships but more frequently Custodes Maritimae or Marinae in the sens aforesaid And in the time of Henrie the third Thomas de Moleton is styled Captain and Guardian of the Sea and hath autoritie given him to guard the Sea and the Maritim parts of the Eastern Shore In the same King's Reign also the Inhabitants of the Cinque-Ports are said to guard the Coast of England and the Sea So Hugh de Crequeur was Warden of the Cinque-ports and of the Sea in those parts Afterward the title of Guardians or Wardens very often changed into that of Admirals Edward the First saith Thomas of Walsingham for the keeping of the Sea divided his Shipping into three Fleets setting over them three Admirals namely over the Ships at Yarmouth and the road thereabout John de Botetort over those at Portsmouth William de Leyburn and over the Western and Irish Ships a certain Irish Knight Moreover also that John de Butetort is in the Records of that time styled custos Maritimae as were others also After this in the Reign of Edward the Second three Admirals of the three several Coasts of England saith Walsingham had the guarding of the Sea namely Sir John Oturvin Sir Nicolas Kyriel Sir John Felton Wee finde moreover in our publike Records that the principal end of calling a Parlament in the fourteenth year of Edward the Third was De Treter sur la gard de la pees de la terre de la Marche d'Escoce de la Meer i. e. That consultation might bee had concerning keeping the peace of the Land also of the Borders of Scotland and of the Sea The same regard they had to the defence of the Sea as of the Island or Land-Province giving us to understand that the Land and Sea together made one entire bodie of the Kingdom of England Other evidences of the same nature wee finde in the Records of Parlament of the same King's time or in the consultations of the estates of the Realm had about this matter that whilst they Treat indifferently De la saufegard de la terre concerning the safeguard or defence of the Land or Island and de la saufeguard de la Mere the safeguard of the Sea they seem sufficiently to declare beeing well inform'd by their Ancestors that the Dominion of this as well as of that did belong unto the Crown of England For the business debated by them was not onely how to provide a Navie to make resistance against their Enemies by Sea but for the guarding the Sea it self as well as the securing of the Isle and so for the maintaining the antient right of their King in both In the time of Richard the Second Hugh Calverlee was made Admiral of the Sea saith Walsingham and M r Thomas Percie joined in Commission with him to scour the Roades of the Sea for one year And in the Reign of the same King and likewise of the two succeeding Henries the Fourth and the Fifth debate was had in Parlament about the Guard of the Sea In the Reign of Henrie the Sixth the Guard of the Sea was with a numerous Navie Committed to Richard Earl of Salisburie John Earl of Shrewsburie John Earl of Worcester and James Earl of Wilts to whom was added Baron Sturton and afterward to John Duke
of Excester And in those daies it was usual to procure King's Letters commonly called in the language of the Law Protections whereby Privilege and exemption from all suits was granted to those that were emploied in this kinde of Guard or Defence of the Sea or that spent their time super salvâ custodiâ defensione Maris For the safeguarding and defence of the Sea as the form of the words hath it which wee frequently finde in the Archives Moreover in the Acts of Parlament of the same King's Reign mention is made of the safeguarding of the Sea or de la saufegard de la mier as of a thing commonly known and for which it was the Custom of the English to make as diligent provision as for the Government of any Province or Countrie And in the twentieth year of the same King the Commons preferr'd a Bill that a strong and well accomplished Navie might bee provided for the defence of the Sea becaus It is thought fit be all the Commens of this Land that it is necessarie the See be kept Verie many other passages there are to the same purpose Geoffrie Chaucer who lived in the time of Richard the Second and was a man verie knowing in the affairs of his Countrie among other most elegant and lively characters of several sorts of men written in the English Tongue describe's the humor of an English Merchant of that time how that his desire above all things is that the Sea bee well guarded never left destitute of such protection as may keep it safe and quiet Which hee speak's to set out the whole generation of Merchants in that age whose custom it was to bee sollicitous for traffick above all things and consequently about the Sea it self which would not afford them safe Voyages did not the Kings of England as Sovereigns thereof according to their Right and Custom provide for the securitie of this as a Province under their Protection The words of Chaucer are these His reasons spake hee full solemnely Shewing alway the encreas of his winning Hee would the See were kept for any thing Betwixe Middleborough and Orewel Orewel is an Haven upon the Coasts in Suffolk Middleborough is in Zealand The whole Sea that floweth between Britain and Zealand the English Merchants would have secured this they were wont solemnly and unanimously to pray for knowing that the Sea was part of the Kingdom and the Protection of them part of the dutie of the Kings of England For as concerning any Protection herein by any forrein Princes any farther then in their own Harbors or at the most within the winding Creeks between those Islands which they possessed upon the Coasts of Germanie or Gallia Belgica there is nothing as far as wee can finde to bee gathered from any Testimonies of former Ages In the succeeding Ages likewise there is frequent mention of this kinde of Guard Defence and Government of the same Sea as will hereafter more fully appear when wee com to speak of Tributes and of the tenor and varietie of the Commissions given to our Admirals But now it is to bee observed that both the name and nature of this Guard is very well known not onely by the use of the word both in the Imperial and Canon Law wherein it denotes that the Guardian ought to take a diligent care of that thing whereof hee is owner who doth either lend it or commit it to his over-sight but also by the common and obvious use which the English make of the same word in other Offices or Governments For in those daies of old when the title of Guardians or Wardens of the Sea was more usual there were appointed Wardens of the Ports even as at this day there are Wardens of the Counties who are those Commanders of Counties called Sheriffs and in the usual form and tenor of their Writ have custodiam comitatûs the Guard or Defence of the Countie committed to their charge Wardens or Keepers of the Marches or Borders Keepers of Towers or Castles Parks Houses and the like Yea and the Lord Lievtenant of Ireland was especially in the time of King John and Henrie the Third styled usually Warden or Keeper of Ireland and his Office or dignitie commonly called the Keepership of Ireland after the same manner as John Duke of Bedford and Humphrey Duke of Glocester whom Henry the fift during the time of his absence in France deputed to govern the Kingdom of England by turns were called Custodes Angliae Keepers of England as wee very often finde both in Histories and Records So Arthur Prince of Wales was made Keeper of England while Henry the seventh was beyond the Seas So Piers Gaveston was keeper of England while Edward the second remained in France So were others also in like manner The Governors also of the Islands of Jarsey and Garnesey and the rest that are situated in this Sea who now are styled Governors Keepers or Captains were in antient times called onely by the name of Guardians or Keepers This then beeing so what reason have wee to think that our Ancestors did not use the same Notion of Guardian or Keeper and of guarding or keeping in the name of the Guardian and the Guard of the Sea which they were wont to use in the Guard and keeping of the Island and in the other dignities or offices before mentioned Doubtless in all these the peculiar Dominion and Soveraigntie of him that conferr'd the Dignities is so clearly signified and included that his Dominion or Ownership of the thing to bee kept and guarded as well as Autoritie over the person dignified is plainly implied in this Title Nor is it to bee omitted that in antient times before the autoritie of the high Admirals of England was sufficiently established by our Kings and setled so distinct that the Command and Government of the Sea did belong onely to them the Governors or Keepers of the Provinces whom wee call Sheriffs of the Counties by virtue of their Office had also som Custodie or Command of part of that Sea which adjoined to their respective Provinces as of a part of the Kingdom of England Which truly to let pass other proofs is sufficiently evident by this that many times in those daies they who by the Common Law of the Land were wont as at this day to put in execution the Commands of the King in those places onely that were committed severally to their charge and custodie did do the same also in the Sea it self as well as in any Land-Province belonging to him from whom they received their autoritie For by virtue of their ordinarie power derived from the King and such as was founded upon the very same right by which they held the Government of the Countie or Province they did oftentimes remove the King's Ships and Fleets from one Port to another by Sea as through the Territorie of the Province that was committed to their
the saufegard of the Seas for the entercourse of Marchandise safely to come into and to pass out of the same which is the usual form of words That is to say these words are part of the Preface or Preamble which was usually placed in the beginning of any Law or Statute whereby that most known Custom or Impost of Tonnage and Powndage was wont to bee imposed For the keeping and sure defending of the Seas against all persons entending or that shall extend the disturbance of us your said Commons in the intercourse and the invading of this your Realm So that the King of England hath ever been so accounted the Arbitrator and Lord of Commerce throughout these Seas that it could not lawfully bee hindred without his Commission Which truly is a manifest evidence of that Dominion or Ownership whereof wee treat And here you see also that the defence of the Realm that is of the Island for somtimes the Isle alone and somtimes the Sea also as I shall shew by and by is comprehended in that name and of the Sea as of those things which are held and possessed by one and the same Right is joined together The Tribute or Custom afore-mentioned which was wont to bee imposed and the usual form of the same Imposition may bee seen compleat in the printed Acts of Parlament of K. Kdward the Sixt and others following But it appear's most certain by the Rolls that the Predecessors also of this Edward whose Records are yet extant did enjoy the same or the like according to the various Custom of the Times Observations touching the Dominion of the English and Irish Sea from the tenor and varietie of those Letters Patents or Commissions Roial whereby the Admirals of England were wont to bee put in Autoritie CHAP. XVI THe usual form of Commission whereby the High Admiral of England is wont to bee invested with Autoritie for the Guard of the Sea run's thus at this day as it hath don also for very manie years past Wee give and grant to N. the Office of our great Admiral of England Ireland Wales and of the Dominions and Islands belonging to the same also of our Town of Calais and our Marches thereof Normandie Gascoigne and Aquitain And wee have made appointed and ordained and by these Presents Wee make appoint and Ordain him the said N. our Admiral of England Ireland and Wales and our Dominions and Isles of the same Our Town of Calais and our Marches thereof Normandie Gascoign and Aquitain as also general Governor over all our Fleets and Seas of our said Kingdoms of England and Ireland our Dominions and Islands belonging to the same And know yee further that Wee of ●u● especial grace and upon certain knowledg c. Do give and grant to the said N. our great Admiral of England and Governor general over our Fleets and Seas aforesaid all manner of Jurisdictions Autorities Liberties Offices Fees Profits Duties Emoluments Wrecks of the Sea Ejectments Regards Advantages Commodities Preheminences and Privileges Whatsoëver to the said Office our great Admiral of England and Ireland and of the other Places and dominions aforesaid in any manner whatsoëver belonging and appertaining And afterwards there follow verie many other particulars in the King's Commission setting forth that most ample Command and Jurisdiction In former times as hath been alreadie shewn you this kinde of Commanders were called Custodes Maris Guardians or Keepers of the Sea who afterward began to bee invested with the name of Admirals in the Reign of Edward the First But their Commands were usually restrained to certain Limits of Coasts So that particular Commanders were somtimes set over each of the Three Western Southern and Northern Coasts but for the most part over the Western and Northern Seldom was one set over both before that the Title of Admiral of England Ireland and Aquitain was put into the Commissions of which more by and by But as the name of Guardian of the Sea was taken from the Sea it self whereof hee was Governor as of a Province so that of Admirals a word whose Original is very uncertain but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Amiralius was used of old for a Commander of a Fleet or Navie not onely in the West but also in the Eastern Empire derived its name of Dignitie either from the Fleet wherewith hee defended his Jurisdiction at Sea as it was usual heretofore or els from the Land either bordering upon that Jurisdiction or joined therewith as it hath been in the later Form of Commissions Whereupon from the time of Edward the first unto Henrie the Fourth about one hundred and Fiftie years they were in solemn manner created Admirals of the Fleet or Navis of our Ships towards the Northern Parts or towards the Western Parts or the Southern or as it ●●ll out somtimes of both together For the Southern and Western Coast did as appear's by the thing it self signifie one and the same That is to say the Coast stretched here and there along the Shore from the North of the Thames But as the Dignitie of those Officers called Comes and Magister Equitum of the West Magister Equitum throughout Gallia Magister Militum throughout the East Magister Militum throughout Thrace and others of that kinde in the Imperial Offices did no less denote the Autoritie and Jurisdiction of them that commanded in these Provinces who before were Lords of the Provinces than if they had been called Comes and Magister of the West Magister throughout Gallia throughout the East and throughout Thrace so it is evident that the Admirals of the Fleets and Navies whereby the Sea is guarded after the same manner as the Land is possessed by Land-Forces did no less set forth the Command and Dominion and civil possession of those that had autoritie over the Sea who before were Lords of the Sea then if they had been styled Guardians of the Sea Commanders or Admirals in their Commissions And such as were so constituted Admirals of both Coasts or of the whole English Navie were somtimes by a general name called Admirals of England over the Sea before that form of words was put into the Royal Commissions And of this sort of Admirals you have a Catalogue set down by that eminent man Sir Henrie Spelman in his Glossarie where there are others also that follow But such a change hapned in the Form of the Commissions in the time of Henrie the Fourth that there was one man appointed Admiral not onely of the fleets or Navies but of England and Ireland over whose Fleet of Ships or Navie for Defence of the Irish Sea somtimes a particular person was made Admiral as was Thomas Percie Earl of Worcester yea and in express words also Admiral of Aquitain and Picardie As was Thomas Beaufort who also was Duke of Excester under Henrie the Fifth in the thirteenth year of Henrie the Fourth after hee had surrendred the Commission whereby hee had
Officers that are called Presidents or Masters of the Waters and Forests That is to say the publick Waters which are within the Bounds of the Kingdom and over which the King hath Dominion do belong to another dignitie not at all to the Admiral who according to the general nature of his Office is not appointed to take charge of any Province there much less of the Rivers as in England The principal intent therefore of this Office or Dignitie is onely to command the Fleets by Sea For which caus also som years since Henrie of Momorancie Admiral of France having set up a Statue on hors back at Chantillie in honor of his Father Henrie Duke of Momorancie call's himself in Latine onely Navalis Militiae Magistrum Master of the Militia by Sea instead of Admiral So that never any Admiral constituted by the French King either of France or Britain or Aquitain had any autoritie in the Sea it self whereby hee might challenge a Dominion to himself as Governor or Commander in Chief which may bee said in like manner of all the Admirals of the Belgick and the neighboring shore on this side and of the Cantabrian or Spanish shore on the other side For the autoritie of them all so far as concern's this particular hath been and is alike Wee know indeed that this dignitie was wont to bee styled Admiral of France and Governor of the Roial Navie as the same Dignitie among the English was usually called in the same manner Admiral of England and Governor of the Roial Navie in several Leagues that have been made betwixt the English and French But it is clear by what hath been shewn that they bare the Office or Dignitie called by the same name upon a different accompt And the Qualitie of a Dignitie is to bee valued by the nature of the Charge not by the bare name or title And let so much serv to bee spoken touching the defect of antient Testimonies and the Nature or Qualitie of the Government But now as to what concern's the most ample and entire Command of the English for very many Ages and the comparing of it with those several Governments heretofore on the opposite shore it is most certain that there was almost from the very beginning of the very first Times of the English-Saxons one entire Empire throughout England and so on the whole shore which lie's over against Germanie France and that part of Spain called Biscay and this also in the time of that Heptarchie which is mentioned by Writers For there was alwaies som one person who had most power therein and to whom the rest yielded obedience as wee are told by Beda And touching that particular there is a notable Testimonie in Alcuinus where by reason of the Quarrels betwixt Offa King of the Mercians that is indeed of the most large and in a manner the most midland part of the Heptarchie and Charls sirnamed the Great King of France Navigation was so prohibited on both sides that Trade was wholly obstructed which truly cannot bee conceived unless these large Territories near the Sea had been under the Dominion of Offa yea the Inscription whereby Offa was wont to set forth his Roial Title was often exprest after this manner Offa by the Grace of God King of the Mercians and also of the Nations round about But after the time of Egbert or the 800 year of our Lord there is a continued Catalogue plain enough of those Kings whether English-Saxons or Danes who unless you fondly except Edmund the Anglo Saxon and Canutus the Dane by whom the Kingdom was for som little time divided did Reign without any other sharer in the Dominion upon this shore No wonder then that the Kings of England beeing entire and absolute Lords in command of so ample a shore for so many Ages did also take special care to retein the Dominion of the Sea lying before it as an Appendant of the Island especially seeing they not onely had so long and large a command likewise on the shore over against us but also there were not any of their neighbors that could in any wise hinder it except such as possessed som pettie Countries bordering on the Sea which truly may bee so called beeing compared to the spacious shore of the English Empire and those also that were under distinct Jurisdictions The summe of all this is seeing that about the beginning of our great Grand-Father's daies there was onely a very small shore conteined within the bounds of the French Kingdom and the Lords of the Maritim Provinces by the addition whereof that Kingdom as wee have alreadie shewn was afterwards enlarged did not so much as pretend any Right to the Dominion of the Neighboring Sea upon the interest of those Provinces and seeing no Testimonie can bee had in the Monuments of antient Writers concerning such a kinde of Dominion but that very many are found touching the Sea-Dominion of the Kings of England they having continually possessed the whole English shore in its full latitude under one entire Empire for above a thousand years and concerning the perpetual enjoiment of the Sea as an Appendant of the Kingdom Therefore it follow 's that their Right is very manifest in this particular and so that the Sea it self is a Province under the tuition or protection of the Admiral of England as part of the Kingdom but that the Admirals of the shore lying over against us are not in reason to bee called Governors of the Sea in such a sens as may signifie any Dominion of a Commander in Chief in the Sea it self out of the Ports or other In-lets of that kinde For which caus also it was that som Ages since very many of the Neighbor-Nations understanding well enough the Right of England made their Complaint in express tearms against Reyner Grimbald Admiral of the King of France becaus that l' Office del Admiralté en la mier d' Engleterre per Commission de Roy de France tourcenousment Emprist usa un an plux c. That is becaus hee had arrogated to himself and for the space of a year exercised the Office of Admiraltie by the King of France his Commission in the English Sea The old Records from whence this is taken are set down entire by and by where you have more also that make to the same purpose And so much may serv to bee spoken touching the Guard or Government of the English Sea as a part of the King's Territorie or Province and Patrimonie of the Crown That in the Dominion of those Islands lying before the shore of France which hath ever been enjoied by the Kings of England it appear's that the possession of the Sea wherein they are situate is derived from their Predecessors CHAP. XIX THat a Possession and Dominion of this Southern Sea hath been held also of old by the Kings of England is not a little manifest by the Dominion of
somtimes slight mention is made not onely in the proêms of som Charters of later times but also in several antient Petitions of the Isl●nders that those Islands belong'd heretofore to the Dutchie of Normandie and upon that account were held by the Kings of England But yet wee know as well that those Provinces which in Antient time were derived by Inheritance to our Kings in France of which kinde truly these Islands are to bee reckon'd if they were held as parts of Normandie were alwaies permitted so to use their own Customs and antient Forms of Jurisdiction that they were not at all subject to the ordinarie Jurisdiction of the Courts of England The same privilege was ever allowed likewise to the people of Aquitain Anjou Normandie and others Yea and som Ages since the Kings of England were pleased to order that such Controversies as hapned there should not bee decided in any other place out of the Islands but in their own Courts of Judicature whereas notwithstanding it is most certain that in the Reigns of Edward the Second and Third times which without doubt made good search into that Right whereby those Islands were annexed to the Patrimonie of the Kings of England there were Justices Itinerant that is Officers created of old who were often by ordinarie right to take cognisance especially of the more heinous crimes through all the Counties of England also of such Rights and Privileges of the Crown as were usurp't and arrogated by any and of other matters for the most part that are usually brought into Courts of Justice who beeing sometimes also called Justitiae errantes Justices errant were wont to bee sent forth into those Islands as well as into the Counties of England though the Inhabitants did indeed exclaim and somtimes preferr'd their Petitions against this kinde of Jurisdiction But yet it is most certain that the opinion of those very Officers who were themselvs learned in the Law then was that those Commissions whereby they were so inabled to administer Justice in those Islands were not onely grounded upon Law which was the opinion also of those who ruled at that time in this Nation but also that the very Provinces of the Islands were so incorporated one with another as they are all with England throughout the extent of that Sea which lie's between after the manner of our English Custom in the Provinces or Countries that a Caus beeing somtimes inlarged they might appoint daies of Appearance to any Inhabitants of those Islands in the King's Bench in England as well as to the Inhabitants of any one of the Isles in the other after the same manner as is used within England it self Which appear's by the Commission of John de Scardeburgh and his Fellow-Justices in the time of Edward the Third and others of that Age. But it was never heard I suppose that upon such an inlargement a time of Appearance might by our Common Law bee appointed in any other place but that which is of the same Jurisdiction as conteined within the Patrimonie of the Crown whereto also that place belong's out of which any one is so adjourned Nor do I remember that any such thing was ever so much as attempted in those Provinces which were not reckoned in the Patrimonie of the English Empire yet possessed upon another Title by the King of England as the Dutchies of Anjou Normandie Aquitain and the like Moreover also in the more antient Charters of som of our Kings in confirmation of the Privileges of Islanders they are noted more than once for such Privileges as they or their Ancestors or Predecessors have enjoied under the obedience of any of our Progenitors beeing Kings of England Surely if it had been then believed that those Islands were a part of the Dutchie of Normandie it is not to bee doubted but they had added also or Dukes of Normandie which wee finde truly in som Charters of later time yet so that in these also those Isles are said in express terms and that upon verie good ground to bee retained in sealtie and obedience to our Crown of England But in the time of Edward the Third the Islanders petitioning the King in Parlament for their Privileges and Custom 's which had been established time out of minde annexed the Customs of som of the Islands among which are these Item that no man ought to bee questioned about his Freehold after hee hath quietly enjoied it a year and a day unless it bee by Writ taken out of the Chancerie of our Lord the King making special mention both of the Tenement it self and of the Tenant Item That they shall not bee put to Answer before the King's Justices of Assise until they first give them Copies of their Commissions of Assise under their Seals Item that the King's Justices assigned by Commission for the bolding of Assise ought not to hold Pleas here longer than the space of three weeks Truly these antient Customs seem so to re●●sh as if those Islands had been subject to our Kings their ordinarie Jurisdiction by the right of English Empire not by the Norman although the Islanders insinuate also in the same Petitions that they were a part of the Neighboring Province of Normandie Add hereto also that the ●sle of Serk was granted by Queen Elisabeth to Herelie de Carteret to bee held in Capite by him and his heirs that is to say as a Feud belonging to the patrimonie of the Crown of England notwithstanding that it bee unawares or els carelesly admitted in the Charter of this Grant to bee within the Dutchie of Normandie But in the Treatie held at Chartres when Edward the third renounced his claim to Normandie and som other Countries of France that border'd upon the Sea it was added that no controversie should remain touching the Islands but that hee should hold all Islands whatsoëver which hee possessed at that time whether they lay before those Countries that ●ee held or others For reason required this to maintain the Dominion by Sea Yea both Jersey and Gernsey as also the Isles of Wight and Man are said in divers Treaties held betwixt the Kings of England and other Princes to belong unto the Kingdom of England and to lie near the Kingdom of England These Isles also were granted heretofore by King Henrie the fift to his brother John Duke of Bedford without any recognition to bee made unto Us or Our Heirs notwithstanding any Prerogative of the Crown for any other Tenure held of Us out of the said Islands which may in any wise belong unto the said Islands Castles or Dominions Which words seem not in the least measure to admit any Right of the Dutchie Perhaps also that antient custom was as a token or pledg of the Sea's Dominion beeing conjoin'd with that of the Isles whereby all the Fish as it is in the Records of Edward the third taken by the Fishermen of
were newly designed to cross over into Bretaign that they might bee arm'd and set forth in the King's service The Title of this Commission is De Navibus arrestandis capiendis For arresting and seizing of ships The Form of it run's thus The KING to his beloved Thomas de Wenlok his Serje●nt at Arms Lieutenant of our beloved and trustie Reginald de Cobham Admiral of our Fleet of ships from the mouth of the River Thames towards the Western parts greeting Bee it known unto you that wee have appointed you with all the speed that may bee used by you and such as shall bee deputed by you to arrest and seiz all ships Flie-Boats Barks and Barges of ten Tuns burthen and upward which may happen to bee found in the aforesaid Admiraltie that is in the Sea reaching from the Thames mouth toward the South and West and to caus the Flie-Boats Barks and Barges aforesaid to bee well and sufficiently arm'd and provided for the warr by the Masters and owners of the same and to bring them speedily so provided and arm'd to Sandwich except onely the ships that are order'd for the passage of our beloved and trustie Thomas de Dagworth and his men that are bound for Bretaign so that you bee readie there in your own person together with the Ships Flie-Boats Barks and Barges aforesaid so well provided and fitted for the warr upon the Saturday next before the Feast of the Apostles Simon and Jude next ensuing at the farthest to go thence upon our Command according to such direction as shall then on our part bee given to the Masters and Mariners of the aforesaid Ships Flie-Boats Barks and Barges and to take sufficient Provision for the enabling of you to do the premises in such places as you shall see most convenient except onely Church-Land you making due paiment for the same and also to seiz and arrest all those that you shall finde to oppose or resist you in the execution of the premises and them to commit into our Prisons there to abide till wee shall think fit to take farther order c. All Officers also in the said Admiraltie are commanded to yield obedience and assistance upon the same occasion The usual subscription in that Age shewing the Original Autoritie of the Commission was By the King himself and his Council But that the aforesaid Sea it self was conterned under the name of the Admiraltie is clearly manifest by what wee have alreadie shewn you And King Edward the third used his antient Right as other Kings of England did also therein as well as in the Ports themselvs or Shores of England for there are innumerable examples of the staying of all Ships whatsoêver by the King's Command in Port or Shore But that which hath been alleged about the staying of Ships and Listing them for the King's Service you are alwaies to understand it was so don according to equitie that competent Pay was to bee allowed them answerable to the proportion of Tuns and also to the number of Sea-men that were so taken into emploiment Touching which particular there are several Testimonies also to bee found in the Records of Parlament That Licence hath been usually granted to Foreiners by the Kings of England to fish in the Sea Also that the Protection given to Fisher-men by them as in their own Territorie is an antient and manifest Evidence of their Dominion by Sea CHAP. XXI AS a freedom of passage so also wee finde that a libertie of Fishing hath been obteined by Petition from the Kings of England There is a clear Testimonie hereof in that which was alleged before out of the Records of Parlament concerning those Tributes or Customs that were imposed in the time of Richard the Second upon all persons whatsoëver that used Fishing in the Sea Moreover it appear's by Records that Henrie the Sixt gave leav particularly to the French and very many other Foreiners for one whole year onely somtimes for six Months c. to go and fish throughout the Sea at all times and as often c. But this leav was granted under the name even of a Passport or safe conduct yea and a size or proportion was prescribed to their Fishing-boats or Busses that they should not bee above XXX Tuns And it is true indeed there was a kinde of consideration or condition added that som others who were subjects of the King of England might in Fishing enjoy the same securitie with Foreiners Which was for this caus onely put into the Licence that if the Foreiners did disturb or molest them they should lose the benefit of their Licence The words of that consideration or condition in the beginning of those Licences run after this manner To the end that the business of the Herring-fishing and of other Fish may bee advanced continued and mainteined for the publick good yea and that the like securitie may bee yielded and afforded to som certain Fisher-men under our obedience I suppose that those certain Fisher men under our Obedience were also the French who at that time continued in subjection to the English whereas almost all in France except the Shore of Picardie had newly revolted from the King of England That is to say at the latter end of the reign of Henrie the Sixt. But that which wee finde either here touching equal securitie or in other places somtimes also about the giving of safe conduct even to the Fishermen of England by Licence granted either to French or Flemings or Bretaigns that usually hapned when the heat of War was over a Cessation agreed on to treat of Peace or Amitie In the mean time securitie of that kinde was given on both sides now and then by agreement But by the King of England as well in respect of his beeing Lord of the place as his beeing a partie that was treating about a League or Amitie By others upon this account onely not upon that unless you understand the question to bee about the use of Ports and Shores For so no man denie's but these were Lords as well as hee Moreover also in our time leav was wont to bee asked of our Admiral for French-men to fish for Soles in the neighboring Sea for King Henrie the Fourth of France his own Table as it is affirm'd by such as have been Judges of our Admiraltie and Commanders at Sea of an antient standing yea and that the Ships of those French were seized as trespassers upon the Sea who presumed to fish there without this kinde of Licence But in the Eastern Sea which washeth the Coasts of Yorkshire and the neighboring Counties it hath been an antient Custom for the Hollanders and Zelanders to obtein leav to fish by Petition to the Governor of Scarb●rough Castle situate by the Sea-side in the Countie of York and this for very many years past as is affirm●d by that learned man M r Camden speaking of those Coasts It is worth the while saith hee to note
as a River or Brook must bee conteined under the same Jurisdiction as an entire Bodie with the Land therefore somtimes mention is made also of this kinde of Sea flowing in as of a Sea reckoned within the Jurisdiction Current of the Sea of the opposite shores as for example of the Sea Flanders or as I finde it in som antient Manuscripts which seem to bee the Originals of certain Letters of King Henrie the Fift to the Earl of Carolois and to the Governors of Ypres Gaunt and Bruges deins la Jurisdiction l'estrem de la meer de Flandres within the Jurisdiction and stream of the Sea of Flanders which is all one For setting aside the Sea so flowing in or making an in-let or harbor before the opposite shore all that which remain's or the Sea flowing between those opposite Countries and England was ever esteemed to bee of the English Dominion according to what I have formerly shewn So that a late Writer doubtless was in a dream when upon the repairing of the Dock at Mardike hee write's that hee saw the Empire of the British Sea restored to the King of Spain And so I have don with this point touching the Declaration and acknowledgment of the Sea Dominion of our Kings made by those Forein and Neighbor-Nations who were most concerned in the Business Of the Dominion of the King of Great Britain in the Irish and Western Sea consider'd singly and apart by it self CHAP. XXX I have alreadie spoken in general of the English or British Sea which is a part of the Patrimonie of the Crown of England but chiefly as it lie's either East or South It rest's now that wee treat of the Western as also the Scotish and Northern and in a word of the whole British Sea that remain's It is evident to all that part of the Western Sea lying before England is understood as well in that Libel which was exhibited by so many Nations to the Commissioners deputed by the Kings of England and France above three hundred and thirtie years ago wherein wee so often read le mer d' Angleterre or the sea of England as in the King 's Commission-before mentioned wherein our Kings are expressly-declared Lords of the English Sea on every side and therefore I shall forbear to repeat what is cited out of Bracton about the Essoyning or excusing of a man absent in Ireland and other things of that kinde alleged before which make to this purpose Moreover also wee read every where that all the Isles in this neighboring Sea were called British as wee observed at the beginning of this Book just as if the narrow Seas flowing between like Rivers or turnings of Rivers did disjoin those Banks or Shores from great Britain as Fragments of the same Whereby it appear's that the narrow Seas themselvs with the Isles even as Rivers with their Banks are to bee reckoned a part of the British Territorie And hereunto especially relate's also that expression in the Libel so often cited to wit that the Kings of England have ever been Lords both of the English Sea or of the British so far as it stretcheth before England and also of the Isles situate therein par raison du Royalme d' Angleterre by right of the Realm of England So that the Isle of Man which as Giraldus Cambrensis saith stand's in this Sea in the very midst betwixt the Northern Parts of England and Ireland was if I understand any thing reckoned of old among the Land-Provinces of England even as the Isle of Wight Lundie and others of that kinde Nor doth it seem to bee understood otherwise by those men of antient time who upon occasion of a dispute whether this Isle ought by right to bee taken for an appendant of England or Ireland beeing placed in the midst of the Sea flowing between determined the controversie on this manner They brought venemous serpents and observing that the Isle did entertain and cherish them as well as England and the rest of great Britain but on the contrarie that Ireland destroied them it was concluded saith Giraldus Cambrensis who lived under Henrie the Second by the common censure of all that it ought to bee ascribed unto England For if they had so thought the Territorie either of Ireland or England as it consisted of Land and Sea to bee dis-joined from this Isle of Man that they had conceived the Sea lying between either common to all men or by antient right subject to other than the Kings either of Ireland or Britain they might seem to have raised a very ridiculous Controversie For I suppose the Question could bee no other than touching the bounds of England or great Britain and Ireland But that a Question about bounds may bee admitted between Owners that are Neighbors where the Territories of both are not continual or contiguous is beyond my understanding It is well said by Paulus that if a publick Thorow-fare or publick River intervene which belong's to neither of the neighboring Owners an Action cannot bee brought upon that Title of the Law Finium Regundorum And truly after that Quintus Fabius Labeo beeing appointed Arbiter by the Senate betwixt the Nolans and Neapolitans about the bounds of a Field had so craftily perswaded both of them to retire backwards apart from each other that a portion of the Field was left in the middle which hee adjudged to the people of Rome there could not any Controversie arise farther between them about the bounds of this Field becaus there ceased to bee any confine betwixt them But if any Question arose afterwards they were both to contend with the people of Rome Even so it is to bee conceived of that Question to which of the two Countries the Isle of Man ought by Right to bee ascribed it arising chiefly upon this ground becaus it lay in the midst between the Territories belonging to Ireland and Britain and at the confine of both For by an Argument drawn from the nature of the very soil onely without a civil consideration of Dominion though they would have here the very nature of the soil to bee the evidence thereof as a Lot for decision it ought no more to bee ascribed either to Britain or Ireland than to Norway Spain or France where every man know's that venemous Creatures are bred as well as in Britain Therefore to bee ascribed to England or Britain in that antient Decision is so immediately to bee annexed to the British Territorie that the Isle of Man may truly and in a civil sens bee called a Land-Province of England or Britain seeing the English Territorie is so continually extended as far as its Western Coasts that which bend's Westward from the very Confine beeing ascribed to Ireland And therefore Queen Elisabeth's Commissioners let fall those words too unadvisedly in the Treatie held at Bremen with the Danish Commissioners about free Navigation and Fishing in the Norwegian