Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n church_n head_n supreme_a 4,494 5 9.0477 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A46988 The excellency of monarchical government, especially of the English monarchy wherein is largely treated of the several benefits of kingly government, and the inconvenience of commonwealths : also of the several badges of sovereignty in general, and particularly according to the constitutions of our laws : likewise of the duty of subjects, and mischiefs of faction, sedition and rebellion : in all which the principles and practices of our late commonwealths-men are considered / by Nathaniel Johnston ... Johnston, Nathaniel, 1627-1705. 1686 (1686) Wing J877; ESTC R16155 587,955 505

There are 15 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Commons in his said Parliament assembled By Authority of the said Parliament by Authority of the same Parliament Our Sovereign Lord the King hath ordained and established divers Statutes Declarations and Ordinances The Preface to the Statutes at (c) Idem Anno 1452. fol. 286. Reading 31 Regni hath these words Our Lord the King by Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons being in the said Parliament and by Authority of the same Parliament hath made ordained and established divers Acts and Statutes Here the Commons Assent is joyned with the Lords whereas in most others of his Reign it is At the special request of the Commons So it is in that at Westminster which is like the first only it saith Our Sovereign Lord c. the Thirty ninth of his Noble and Gracious Reign Of the Parliaments in King Edward the Fourth 's Reign THE Preamble to the Statutes of (a) Idem Anno 1461. fol. 291. King Edward by the Grace of God Westminster 1 Regni is Edward by the Grace of God c. to the Honour of God and Holy Church to nourish Peace Unity and Concord within his Realm which he much desireth by the Advice and Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal of the same Realm and at the special Request of the Commons of his said Realm assembled by Authority of the same Parliament hath ordained The rest of the Prefaces vary very little except that in the 3 E. 4. it is By the Advice and Assent of his Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons c. Of the Parliament in King Richard the Third's time THE Preamble to the Statutes at (a) Idem Anno 1483. fol. 315. Westminster 1 R. 3. runs thus Richard by the Grace of God c. to the Honour of God and of Holy Church and for the Common-wealth of his Realm of England Advice and Assent of Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Request of the Commons c. By the Advice and Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and at the Request of the Commons of the said Realm summoned to the said Parliament by the Authority of the same Parliament hath ordained and established for the Quietness of his People certain Statutes Of the Parliaments in King Henry the Seventh 's time THE Prefaces to all the Acts in his (a) Idem Anno 1485. fol. 324. Reign are much alike thus The King our Sovereign Lord Henry c. To the Honour of God c. By the Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in the said Parliament assembled and by Authority of the said Parliament hath done to be made certain Statutes and Ordinances Of the Parliaments in King Henry the Eighth 's time MOST of the Prefaces to the 20th of his Reign are the same as in King H. the 7th mutatis mutandis The Title of the 21 H. 8. (a) Id. fol. 392. only is Statuta ad Rempublicam spectantia edita in 1 Sessione Parliamenti c. Anno Regni invictissimi Principis Henrici c. In the 5th Chapter of the Acts of the (b) Id. fol. 435. 24th of his Reign The King our Sovereign Lord. it is thus Be it enacted by the King our Sovereign Lord with the Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons of this present Parliament assembled and by Authority of the same So most of the rest are excepting that in the second Chapter of the 26. of (c) Id. fol. 465. his Reign it is said Therefore be it enacted by Authority of this present Parliament So in the first Chapter of the (d) Id. fol. 485. 28 Regni it is said For the Remedy whereof May it please the King c. it be enacted may it please the King our Sovereign Lord by the Assent c. it may be enacted The Title of the Acts 31 H. 8. (e) Id. fol. 537. H. 8. Defender of the Faith and in Earth Supreme Head c. runs thus Henry the 8th c. Defender of the Faith and in Earth supreme Head immediately under Christ of the Church of England to the Honour of Almighty God Conservation of the true Doctrine of Christian Religion and for the Concord Quiet and Wealth of this his Realm and Subjects of the same held his most high Court of Parliament c. wherein were established these Acts following and in the first Chapter it is said Be it enacted c. Be it enacted by the King our dread Sovereign Lord and by the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and by the Commons of this present Parliament assembled The Thirty second of H. 8. hath these Expressions which day the said Parliament continued by divers Prorogations was by His Graces Authority finished and dissolved amongst many other the Acts following By his Highness with the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons assembled in the said Parliament have been Established Ordained and Enacted Of the Parliaments in King Edward the Sixth 's Reign IN the first Chapter of the first (a) Id. fol. 687. Statutes made 1. Regni it is said The Kings most Excellent Majesty King 's Excellent Majesty Princely Serenity Highness minding the Governance and Order of his most loving Subjects to be in most perfect Unity and Concord in all things c. as his most Princely Serenity and Majesty hath already declared by evident Proofs Be it enacted by the Kings Highness with the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and of the Commons of this present Parliament assembled and by the Authority of the same In the second and third Year of Ed. 6. they are called (b) Id. fol. 712. Acts in the Session c. humbly prayen That it may be Ordained and Enacted by His Majesty with the assent of the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by the Authority of the same The rest are much what like these foregoing Of the Parliaments in Queen Mary's Reign IN the Title of her first (a) Id. fol. 817. Acts she is stiled Ordained and enacted by the Queen our Sovereign Lady and Assent of Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons Defender of the Faith and Supreme Head of the Church c. Be it therefore ordained and enacted by the Queen our Sovereign Lady with the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and of the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by the Authority of the same After the Marriage of (b) Id. fol. 831. Queen Mary with King Philip of Spain the title is only Acts made in the Reign of our Sovereign Lord and Lady Philip and Mary Defenders of the Faith leaving out Supreme Head c. In the fourth and (c) Id. fol. 863. fifth of Philip and Mary in the Body of the Acts it is thus Be it Enacted Ordained and Established by the King and Queens Majesty the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons
what condition soever shall draw any out of the Realm in Plea whereof the Cognizance appertaineth to the King's Court or of things whereof Judgments be given in the King's Court c. This Statute as well as that of Provisors 25 Ed. 3. was made to hinder the Subjects Appeals to Rome or to any other Court in such things whereby the King's Soveraignty might be diminished and this Statute relates to one made by King Edward the First Also in the Statute of Provisors 25 Ed. 3. reference is made to the (i) Anno 35 Regni Statute made at Carlisle by King Edward the First The Statute of (k) 16 R. 2. c. 5. Praemunire for purchasing Bulls from Rome gives an account of the preceding Statutes and further saith Whereas our Lord the King and all his Liege-People ought of right and of long time were wont to sue in the King's Court to receive their Presentments to Churches Prebends and other Benefices of Holy Church which they had right to present to the Conisance of Plea of which Presentment belongeth unto the King's Court of the old right of his Crown used and approved c. then particularly enumerates the Encroachments of the Bishop of Rome by Processes Excommunications of Bishops for executing Judgments given in the King's Courts and the translating of Prelates out of the Realm or from one spiritual Living to another against the King's Laws and Regality c. The Statute expresly declares That the Crown of England hath ever been so free that it is in no Earthly Subjection but immediately subject to God in all things touching the Regality of the Crown and to no other Under King Henry the Eighth (l) 24 H. 8. c. 12. the whole Parliament say that by sundry old and authentick Histories and Chronicles it is manifesty declared and expressed that this Realm of England is an Empire and so hath been accepted in the World governed by one Supream Head and King having the Dignity and Royal Estate of the Imperial Crown of the same unto whom a Body Politick compact of all sorts and degrees of People divided in Terms by names of Spirituality and Temporalty have bounden and owen to bear next to God a natural and humble Obedience The next (m) 25 H. 8. c. 21. Year in another Statute it is stiled the Imperial Crown and Royal Authority recognizing no Superior but only Your Grace and in the Chapter following the Kings of England are stiled Kings and Emperors of this Realm and in (n) 28 H. 8. c. 7. another of the same King it is called The most Royal Estate of the Imperial Crown of this Realm So in the same (o) Stat. Hil●●● 〈…〉 8. c. 2. Year before the Title of Lord of Ireland was altered into King the Stile is Kings and Emperors of the Realm of England and of the Land of Ireland and in several other Statutes it is called the Imperial Crown I have inserted these to clear that by our Laws the Kings of England are under no Subjectjon to any foreign Prince or Potentate whatsoever And Mr. (p) Tit. H●● p. 21 22. Selden saith that the Supremacy is not only used by the English Sovereigns but hath been challenged by the Kings of Spain Denmark Poland the Czars of Muscovy and other free Princes over all within their own Dominions exclusive of all foreign Powers and upon the like ground of Supremacy was that Law made by King James the Third of Scotland in these words Our Sovereign Lord has full Jurisdiction and free Empire within this Realm c. A Confirmation of this Supremacy of our Kings appears in what is reported of our King Edward the Third That when Lewis (q) Quod R●x Anglix non se submisit ad os●ula pedum suorum of Bavier the Emperor had an Interview with him the Emperor stomached that the King of England submitted not himself to kiss his Feet But the King answered That he was (r) Rex inunctus habet vitam membrum in potes●ate sua ideir●● non debet se submittere tantum sicut Rex alius an anointed King and had Life and Member in his Power therefore he ought not to submit himself to him as other Kings Whence it was that Alsonso the ninth King of Castile defining what Kings were after he had dispatched the Particulars that belonged to the Emperor says That they are every one in their Kingdoms the Vicars or Vicegerents of God placed over the People to govern them (s) Bien assi come el Emperador en su Imperio Partid 2. tit 1. Ley 5. 8. no otherwise than as the Emperor is in his Empire Whoever desires further Satisfaction in this Point may have recourse to the voluminous Collections of Mr. Pryn and other Authors that have treated of the Kings Supremacy Most of what I have hitherto discoursed relates to the King's Supremacy ab extra that he hath no foreign Superior that ought to impose any thing upon him or his Subjects contrary to his Pleasure and his Laws in his Dominions I shall now give a short Abridgement of what I find our learned Lawyers have writ concerning the King's Authority and Sovereignty in his Kingdom of England and how Wherein the King's Sovereignty consists according to our Laws in former Ages Kings have quitted some of their Royal Prerogatives In our Laws the King is stiled in Ecclesiastical matters the Supreme Ordinary (t) Cok● 11. 86. Calvin's Case 215. in Civil matters caput Reipublicae Pater Patriae totius Regni Pater-Familias Chief Justice c. being furnished with plenary Power to render Justice and Right to every Member and part of the whole Body (u) Co●● 2 part 1 2. 24 H. 8. c. 1. 24 Eliz. c. 1. without the help of Foreign Jurisdiction Some Attributes of God in a similitudinary way say (w) 〈◊〉 8● 〈◊〉 177 2●8 212 〈…〉 the great Lawyers are aseribed to him for the Excellency of his Person and the greatness of his Office as Sovereignty and Power Omnipresence Majesty Immortality c. In his Political (x) 〈…〉 Grand Ab●i●gment part 3. p. 44. Capacity not subject to the Infirmities of others as Nonage Death Attainder c. So no Laches Negligences Defects or Stops of Blood can be imputed to or fastned upon him as is well known in the case of King Henry the Seventh (y) St. Albans vita ●en 7. p. 29. wherein it was unanimously resolved by the Judges That his Natural Capacity doth so far participate with the Politic which is superadded to the Body natural of the King that these become consolidate consubstantiate and indivisible in one and the same Royal Person and the Body Politic which is the more worthy and of a sublimer Nature is in no ways obnoxious to the Humane Imbecillity of Death Infamy Crime or the like but doth draw from the Natural Body all Imperfections and Incapacities whatsoever So that there is
great Ceremonies swear the points of their Contests He also further declared that those who usurp'd upon the Limits of others Possessions were not only to be punished here but were doomed to Torments in Hell to the end that every Man might be afraid to seize on the Goods of another Mans. These therefore I look upon as the Fundamentals of civil Religion in the rendring so venerable the Faith by Oaths whereby not only Allegiance to the Prince but Society was established upon that firm Basis of mutual Confidence and by the securing Propriety the whole Compages of Government was preserved We ought likewise to consider that there are moral Vertues which conciliate such a Reverence to the Practisers of them Moral Vertues very useful to Government that they are great helps to preserve and make flourishing every Kingdom and Commonweal and which constitute a considerable Religious Portion of civil Government and when Princes and People exercise them both live happilier than when without them great Sanctity and Devotion are only pretended The Vertues I put in the Balance against Bigotry in Religion Better than Hypocritical Holiness are Justice Temperance Charity Fortitude Magnanimity which are branched out into many flourishing Boughs that bear the Golden Fruit upon them such as these Not to do to another that which we would not have done to our selves To live contentedly in our Station To be obedient to our Magistrates and Superiours To live in Charity with all Men To be Compassionate to the Poor and Needy To give no evil Example in any sort of Debauchery To consider that we come into this World to live according to the rules of Life the Sovereign Being of all hath pleased to reveal That we do nothing here which may forfeit our more durable Inheritance in the other World These were the Buttresses of Government in the Heathen World when the whole train of Moral Vertues without Hypocrisie and Dissimulation were practised and can Machiavel or any of his Disciples find that the same things are not pressed as a duty upon all in the Christian Religion there seeming to me this only advantageous difference That the Foundation and Basis upon which these Moral Vertues rest in the Christian Religion is more firm more regular and more curiously hewen and polished and more consentaneous to the Dictates of right Reason in that they are implanted and promulged as standing Laws by one God Omnipotent than in the multiform jarring Polytheism of the Heathens who for every different Species of things or qualifications of Beings introduced a presiding Spirit In answer to the second Plea of the Secretary That Religion doth not dis-spirit Men. That our Religion hath dis-spirited Christians I think every one will be furnished out of the Armory of his own Experience or the perusing of antient and modern Histories with Shield and Buckler against such false Thrusts and will own that there have been as considerable and glorious Atchievements performed by Christians as by Heathens as may be instanced in Constantine the Great Theodosius Valentinian Justin Charlemain Scanderbeg and infinite more modern Christian Princes who neither yield for Manhood Valour or Conduct to Turks or Pagans and how Patient and Meek soever Christianity teacheth Men to be yet it no ways hinders Subjects from using offensive or defensive Arms when commissioned by Lawful Authroity nor discourageth adventuring of Life for the defence of Kings or their Countries nor is it an Extinguisher of Endeavours to serve God the Soveraign or his People in the Honourablest Imployments It must be confessed True Piety lessened by subtile Disputes that since Religion hath been reduced from Precepts and Axioms to Systems and that the practical part of Justice Moral Vertues and Honesty were no longer in Esteem than as they were found subservient to the promoting Speculations there hath been a way found out to render these fundamental and substantial Qualifications of less value in very good Men unless withal they added some quaint Notions that might sublime their Heathenish Moralities as they call them into Elixirs and quintessences of Religion as in our late Times If one could not give a certain Diagnostick when Grace was wrought in him he was not fit for reforming Employment Men being more distinguished by Tests and Oaths than by good Manners By which we forgo the Substance of Moral Piety for a fleeting Shadow and many are so bigotted in their several Sentiments that it is a more arduous task of late than formerly for Princes to comport themselves in this particular so as to keep in one Uniformity Subjects of so different Perswasions whereby they may command that obedience Subjects ought to pay to their Sovereigns To find Expedients or offer any directions to Princes in this Case were to involve ones self in an endless Labyrinth and discover an unpardonable Presumption the Difficulties being very great if not insuperable how to frame Laws that should combine such varieties and diversities of Opinions in one Yoak Order or Rule without such an universal and absolute Monarch as scarce in Idaea much less in Practice can ever be I shall therefore concern my self no way in tugging at the end of that Saw of Controversies which how pleasant soever it may be to such as have an over-weening Opinion of their Knowledge in such Subtilties is very harsh and ungrateful to my Temper This one Hypothesis or Postulatum however I hope few will deny That since Monarchy is the Established Government in his Majestie 's Dominions and however maliciously and potently assaulted in our Memories yet never can be altered here The Government of the Church of England agreeable to the English Monarchy Princes by small searches into the aptitude of the several Schemes of religious Worship and Government may soon find which is most agreeable to the Constitution of the Monarchy and will be most subservient to it In which particular the Church of England as established by Law in its Doctrine and Discipline and all the true Members of it and the Subjects of all Conditions who act according to the Principles of it have obtain'd a Royal and Gracious Character founded upon the constant Experience the Kings of England have had That upon all the most critical trials the Members of it have stood firm to the Crown even when worn by Princes of different Religion Therefore till other Forms practised in the late times can give as undeniable Proofs of their unconditionate Loyalties I think it but reasonable they should allow His Majesty liberty to consult his own and the interest of his Government rather than their inconsistent Models One of the Principles of the Church of England conformable to that of the Christian Religion is That it teacheth Obedience to the Soveraign not for Fear only but for Conscience sake and all considerate as well as Pious Men where they are convinced That it is better to obey God than Man if any thing should be commanded that
would put them upon that Dilemma will chuse to suffer if they cannot fly rather than rebel Therefore since it pleased his Majesty at his first Step to the Royal Throne which was like that of the rising Sun dispensing innumerable Blessings to his People to express his Royal Favour to the Church of England The King's Commendation of the Principles of the Church of England as to Monarchy with such an Encomium of its Members in that most refreshing Declaration at his first Council which from so just a Prince carries the Force and Energy of an Act of Parliament as well as of State in it it ought to bow the Hearts of all Men that design not to be Rebels as one Man to him Since which by the repeated solemnity of it to his two Houses of Parliament all suspicion of his Majestie 's ever acting to the contrary so long as the Subjects keep their dutiful Station is totally removed His Majesty also hath laid a solid Foundation for true Piety in the discountenancing and discrediting all forts of Vice and Debauchery by which none can doubt but himself as well as his Subjects will in short time reap happy Benefit according to that so the excellent (b) Diutius durant exempla quam mores Tacitus 4. Histor Historian Examples have a more durable force than Laws I shall conclude this particular with the famous Story of the Zealots in (c) Josephus de Bello Judaico lib. 4. c. 5. lib. 7. Judaea Those being told by Vespasian which Messages Josephus himself carried to them that he would change nothing of their Religion but maintain them therein The Evils by Rebelling upon pretence of Religion and in all their Liberties and Franchises yet under colour that they were bound to sacrifice their Lives in the defence of the Temple would never hearken to Peace upon any condition what ever but living upon Forraging Rapines Free-booty and committing most cruel Butcheries Vespasian found himself obliged to arm against them and use them with all Extremity In fine Those who pretended so much the Preservation of their Religion committed a Thousand sort of Impieties and Cruelties and themselves set the Temple of Jerusalem on Fire and at last brought utter Ruin to their Country I shall make no further Application but that from hence we may learn First That it was agreeable to Principles of Government that Vespasian though a Prince of a different Religion to the Jews should not alter their Civil or Religious Government And Secondly That the utter Extermination of a People and their Religion there was the Consequence of the Zelots Rebellion as to the apparent procuring cause for I enquire not here into the Original cause of that Nations Destruction viz. The crucifying of our Lord and Saviour I come now to consider wherein a Sovereign's care of Religion consists Wherein the Sovereign's Care of Religion consists which would carry me into a dangerous Ocean if I should survey all the Rocks Creeks and Quick-sands to be avoided in this matter At the best I shall find an high rolling Sea as that in the Bay of Biscay if I escape the difficult and dangerous passage betwixt Scylla and Charybdis First therefore I shall consider the Obligation the Pagan Romans thought they had not to make any Innovation in matters of their Religion with some Reflections upon it Secondly Consider the Condition of People under Diversity of Religions Thirdly The Roman Heathens not for change of Religion Speak something of the Diversities of Religion sprung up in the time of the late War And Lastly Something concerning Toleration But I must praemonish the Reader that I intend not to treat of these either as Divine or Statesman but only as a Lay-man that loves Order and Peace in transitu as a Parergon First then as to the Heathens we find that remarkable Advice of (*) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dio Cassius lib. 52. Mecaenas to Augustus That he ought to worship the Deity in all Methods and at all times himself according to his Countries Laws and cause others to do so and further adds That he should restrain those that would innovate in Divine things not for the cause only of the Gods but because those that bring in new Deities do drive men to make other dangerous Changes and from thence Conspiracies Sedition Conventicles Cabals c. which are things no ways conducible to the benefit of Government In which we may consider Mecaenas to advise like a Statesman considering that Augustus had but newly extricated himself from a great and dangerous War for no less than the Empire Therefore it behoved him to make no Alterations in Matters that might endanger the Settlement of his present Estate Therefore we find That Augustus laid aside the name of Triumvir contented with the Consulship and for defence of the People with the Tribunitian Authority which were old Offices the People were acquainted with and that he attracted the Soldiers good Will to him by Gifts the Peoples by Provision of Food and all with the sweetness of Peace arising by (d) Paulatim insurgere munia Senatus Magistratuum 〈◊〉 in se trabere aullo adversante Tacit. 1. Annal degrees to draw to himself the Imployment and Authority of the Senate the Magistrates and the Laws none opposing him How far this is to be imitated by Princes in the Circumstances of Augustus I leave to others to determine As to the general Sentiment that the Heathen Roman Religion was not to be changed I shall content my self with two Authorities of the great Orator who in one place (e) Majorum instituta tueri sacris caeremoniisque retinendis sapientis est Patrios ritus migrare aut violare ubique gentium nefarium sir Cic. de Divinatione saith That it is the part of a wise Man to defend the Institutions of their Ancestors in retaining sacred Ceremonies and that in all Nations it is reputed wicked to violate and banish our Countries Rites In another place (f) Omnes Religione moventur deos patrios quos a majoribus acceperunt colendos sibi diligenter retinendos arbitrantur Cic. in Verrem he pronounceth it absolutely That all are moved with Religion and judge their Country Gods which they have received from their Ancestors to be worshipped and retained I am sensible that if this were yielded to Christianity would not have been propagated in the World For if it had not been lawful to alter the so long established Idol Worship and Polytheism the Doctrine of Christianity had been shut out But on the other side when I consider how Christianity was propagated by the working of Miracles and by the Force and Energy of Conviction upon the Minds of such as would admit the Explanation and Dilucidation of the Doctrine and the Christians patient sufferings under the Heathen Persecutions and peaceable awaiting till God Almighty disposed the Emperor Constantine's Heart to embrace the saving Doctrine of
the Earth is subject to the Power of the Emperor and he is constituted in the number of those Deities whom the Principal Divinity hath appointed to do and conserve all things grounded upon that Coin of (t) Adolphus O●●a p. 552. Constantius which hath on the reverse VICTOR OMNIVM GENTIVM But Mr. Selden hath sufficiently confuted this by shewing that the Roman Empire had its Limits or as Tacitus calls it its Claustra in Augustus Trajan's and Hadrian's time and that in the heighth of the Roman Empire there were Liberi Populi Regesque So that after the perusal of the several Instances he produceth none can be unsatisfied but that many other Princes enjoy their Supremacy as fully as the German Emperors in acknowledging no Superior but God as particularly I shall shew in what relates to England in the next Chapter For the fuller Expression of Majesty saith (u) Tit. Hon. cap. 4. Mr. Selden other Attributes have been given to Supream Princes which be Names as essential as those of Emperor and King yet they are not so convertible with them nor so particularly designing them These are chiefly Domini Dii Lords and Gods Of the one I have discoursed before of the other I shall now speak something This Title of Dominus or Lord Of the Title of Lord. How odious to the Romans importing properly a Master or Lord over Slaves was by the wisest of the Roman Emperors rejected though it be now grown (w) Nedum sermo●um stet honos gratia vivax Horat. de Arte Poet. so familiar that we use it to Tradesmen such a change being wrought by time in the Usage Emphasis or Signification of many other words (x) Domini Appellationem ut maledictum opprobrium semper exhorruit Suetonius tells us that Augustus at a Play hearing himself called Lord though with the Epithetes of Just and Good and finding the Spectators rejoicingly approve of it as applicable to him with his Hand and Countenance repressed the unbecoming Flatteries and the next day by a severe Edict prohibited it to be given him neither would he suffer his Children or Nephews to use it in their Complements or other Language to each other Neither would Tiberius endure this Title so much as in common Salutation whereupon the great (y) Tacitus 2. Annal. Historian and States-man observes Vnde Augusta lubrica oratio sub Principe qui libertatem metuebat adulationem oderat To which purpose (z) Sylvar 1. Statius speaks of Domitian Tollunt Innumeras ad astra Voces Saturnalia Principis sonantes Et dulci DOMINVM favore clamant Hoc solum vetuit licere Caesar Yet either the Poet flattered or dissembled or this was in the Infancy of the Empire for we find in (a) In Domit. c. 13. Suetonius that by his express Command the Titles of his Letters and other matters were Dominus Deus noster sic sieri jubet and Caligula before him endured it publickly and Festus (b) Act. Apost c. 25. v. 26. Lieutenant of Jewry in that of St. Paul's appeal calls Claudius absolutely Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Lord Emperor and the Emperor in his Petition to (c) M●●t F. ad Leg. Rhod. him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Lord Emperor and the Emperor in his Answer calls himself Lord of the World (d) Diocletianus se primus omnium Caligulam post Domitianumque Dominum palam ●ici passus adorari se app●●arique uti Deum Victor saith that Dioclesian the first of all the Emperors after Caligula and Domitian suffered himself openly to be called Lord to be adored and stiled as a God which may be understood of publick Salutations only For in Claudius and Antonine I have instanced to the contrary Also in a Gold Coin of the great and Religious Constantine stampt with his effigies sitting and his Court of Guard about him the (e) A●olph O●●a p. 537. Inscription is FELICITAS PERPETVA AVGEAT REM DO MIN. NO ST The reason why some Emperors refused this Name as Pliny in his Panegyrick makes (f) Principis sedem obtines ne sit Domino locus Trajan to do when he saith Thou obtainest the place of the Prince that there may be no place for Lord was either because it seemed a Relative to Servus a Bondslave or in respect that it supposed if ill interpreted the Subject and his Substance to be in the Property of the Emperor For (g) Domini Appellatione continetur qui ●abet proprietatem e●si usus fructus alienus sit Ulp. F. de Sc. Silaniano l. 1. sect 1. Vlpian tells us that in the Laws of the Empire in the Appellation of Lord was signified he that had the Propriety although another was Usufructuary How considerable a Name of Dominion this was appears in Lucan who being one of the Pompeian Party that stood much upon the ancient Liberty of Rome saith that that Age first found those Appellations by which they lyed to the Lords (h) Lucan Pharsal lib. 5. Namque omnes Voces per quas jam tempore tanto Mentimur Dominis haec primum reperit Aetas That which I observe from hence is That by this Title of Dominus the Soveraignty of Princes and greater absoluteness was understood than the first Emperors were willing to seem to allow that they might avoid Envy in the Infancy of their Power Multa renascentur quae jam cecidere cadentque Quae nunc sunt in honore vocabula si vole● usus Horat●de Arte Poet. v. 70. and now so great a Power or Dignity is not so much understood by the Word either Latin or Greek in the Person it is applied to as when our Kings had the Title of Lords only of Ireland and yet had Kingly Supremacy and now our Nobility are called Lords and Domine in the Latin is dwindled to signify any Gentleman There are other Forms of Speech that either have been or are peculiar to Kings The Appellations in the Plural Number as the use of the Plural Number as We command We ordain Our Royal Favour Our Royal Care Pleasure c. This seems derived from the Jews saith (i) Tit. Hon. par 1. c. 7. Mr. Selden who say that in their Language by reason of the Plurality of Vertues or Power being the true Roots of Dignities which are supposed in a Superior they use the Plural Number to or of one Man So with their Elohim Gods joined to a Word of the Singular Number is by their Grammarians made an Enallage of Number chiefly to express Excellency in the Persons to whom it is referred But this hath since been used by single Persons as particularly by Margaret Countess of Richmond Mother to Henry the Seventh thus Nos Margareta Comitissa Richmondiae Mater excellentissimi Principis Domini Henrici c. Inspeximus c. Therefore I leave this as communicable to great and eminent Subjects and shall pass to the abstract
WEST SEAXNA CYNING I Ine by the Grace of God King of the West Saxons in his preamble to his Laws But until about our Henry the Third it was not of so constant use as that the Stile of the King necessarily required it This Stile of Dei Gratia is frequently given in old time Given to Spiritual Lords and yet in use to Spiritual Lords nothing being more common in the Instruments of Bishops and Abbats in the Chartularies of Monasteries and it is given from Kings to them in the Summons of Parliament and Writs to Assemble or Prorogue Convocations in this form Jacobus c. Reverendissimo in Christo ●●tri praedilectoque fideli Consiliario nostro Georgio eade●● 〈…〉 Archiepiscopo Cantuariensi c. But at this day though it 〈◊〉 ●●ven to them they use it not in the first Person but De● (i) Rosula Novella 〈◊〉 cap. 111. ●●mentia or Providentia Divina and in older times when they writ to the Pope Emperor or King they were not to write Dei Gratia of themselves but only such or such licet indignus vel immerens Bononiae Episcopus c. By all these Titles we cannot but observe that the dignity of Kings and Sovereigns was looked upon in all Ages as deriving Authority from God Almighty and his Vicegerents here upon Earth having the Attributes of God that as he was Supreme over all things in Heaven and Earth so they within their Districts upon Earth I shall end this Chapter with this Observation That the Attribute of Dei Gratia applied to Sovereigns and Bishops might probably have Authority from the Constitution of Justinian (k) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Just No● 6. init 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ibid. which runs thus The greatest Gifts which Gods goodness from above hath conferred on Men are the Priesthood and Empire both of which proceed from one and the same Principle and are for the ordering and disposing of the Affairs of Mankind Concerning the peculiar Title of our Kings of England Defender of the Faith the learned Spelman having given us th● Copy of the Bull and discoursed so fully of it I shall 〈◊〉 the curious Reader to him for satisfaction CHAP. XVII Of the Soveraignty of the Kings of England according to our Histories and Laws THE Titles and Attributes which other Soveraign Princes have either assumed The Kings of England have used all the Titles proper to Sovereign Princes or have been given to them our Kings of England have used as might be made appear by innumerable Examples But I shall treat but of a few and shew wherein the Soveraignty is discovered and what ancient Prerogatives they have by their acts of Grace quitted and lastly how the long Parliament of 1641. would have cramped the King's Authority First as to the Title of King or Emperor promiscuously So our Edgar frequently in his Charters calls himself Albionis Anglorum Basileus As King Emperour Lord. and I have noted before that the Grecians esteemed the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be of full as eminent Signification as Emperor So in a Charter (a) Cod. Wigorn. to Oswald Bishop of Worcester he is called Anglorum Basileus omniumque Regum Insularum Oceanique Britanniam circumjacentis cunctarumque Nationum quae infra eam includuntur Imperator Dominus In which we may note that one of our Kings of England writ himself not only Basileus according to the Grecian usage which signified King and Emperor but also Emperor and Lord three of the fullest Attributes either the Grecian or Roman Emperors ever used as also Lord of the British Sea as Canutus his Successor challenged So in a Charter to (b) Mon. Ang. par 1. p. 64. Peterburg Ego Edgar sub ipso sidereo Rege praesidens Regno Magnae Britanniae I have seen another (c) Lib. MS. Roberti de Swapham c. Fundationis Burgensis Coenobii p. 38. of his Charters prefaced thus Gratia Domini nostri Jesu Christi omnium seculorum omnia suo Intuitu distribuentis Regna terrarum moderantis habenas rerum Ego Edgar sub ipso eodem Rege praesidens Regno Britanniae c. So King (d) Id. p. 39. Edward in the same Book stiles himself Ego Edwardus Rex Anglorum Monarchiam Regiminis tenens hoc decretum Patris mei per deprecationem Abbatis Aidulfi perhenniter affirmavi In which we may note that Edgar owns himself subject to Jesus Christ God And King Edward saith he holds the single Command of Government So King Edward in a (e) Coke Praefat. 4. Reports Rex Anglorum totius Britanniae Telluris Gubernator Rector Angligenum Orcadarum necnon in Gyro jacentium Monarcha Anglorum Induperator Charter to Ramsey stiles himself Totius Albionis Dei moderante Dominatione Basileus King of all Albion and King Edwin in a Charter to Crowland calls himself King of England and Governour and Ruler of all the Land of Britain So Ethelred in his Charter to Canterbury stiles himself Of all the English born and the Oreades lying in Circuit about it Monarch and Emperor of the English So that by Orcades must be understood all the Isles about Britain So William Rufus dates his Charter to the Monastery of Shaftsbury secundo Anno Imperii mei By all which it appears that the Kings of England have justly assumed the Supream Imperial Command in their own Dominions and though the Title of Emperor hath been disused Kings of England as much Sovereigns as Emperours yet we shall find the substance of it sufficiently challenged in that of (f) Ipse omnes liberta●●s 〈◊〉 R●gno habebat suo quas Imperator vendicabat in Imperio Matt. Paris in vita Willielmi 2. William Rufus to Arch-Bishop Anselm when he told him That he had all the Liberties in his Kingdom which the Emperor challenged in the Empire And in a Constitution (g) R●g●um Angliae ab om●i subjectione Imperiali liberrimum Claus 13 E. 2. m. 6. dorso of King Edward the Second it is declared That the Kingdom of England is most free from all Imperial Subjection which excluded all public Notaries who were made by the Emperor or Popes and by this Constitution were utterly rejected The Statutes for it This further appears in the (h) Stat. Anno 23 E. 3. c. 1. Vide Coke Instit 2. 111. 4 part 6. 8. 3. Instit 120 125. Statute of Praemunire made 23 Ed. 3. which runs thus That it being shown by the grievous and clamorous Complaints of the great Men and Commons how that divers of the People be and been drawn out of the Realm to answer of things whereof the Cognizance pertaineth to the King's Court and also that the Judgments given in the same Court be impeached in another Court in prejudice and dis-inherison of our Lord the King and of his Crown c. Therefore it was enacted That none of the King's Liege-People of
acquired a Soccage Tenure and Fee-simple Estate Therefore the foresaid (q) Praefat. Reger Twysden fol. 155. The English possess their Lands by ●avour not otherwise Hereditarily So Mut. Paris saith Commilitonibus terras Anglorum possessiones affluentiori manu contulit illud parvum quod remans●rat sub jugo posuit perpetuae servitutis Gervase of Tilbury concludes this Observation thus Sic igitur quisquis de gente subacta fundos vel aliquid hujusmodi possidet non quod ratione successionis debere sibi videatur adeptus est sed quod solummodo meritis suis exigentibus vel aliqua pactione interveniente obtinuit viz. So every one of the conquered Nation possest their Lands or any thing else not that he should seem to get it by way of Succession but by his deserts or by some Compact or Covenant made with his Lord as it must be understood The most industrious Doctor Brady having on purpose writ so much of this Argument in his Answer to the Argumentum Anti-Normanicum and out of so many Historians confirmed it in the Answer to the Appendix Brady p. 313.314 I must refer the Reader that desires satisfaction to his Book being loth to crowd those matters which are not directly to my purpose Only I cannot but note that the reason why we so often find the same Lands that have been granted by a Father for him and his Heirs required and had a Confirmation by the Son was because the Tenure was so fickle for want of Homage or Omission of Service whereby they might be forfeited I now proceed to the great Councils that I have found in the Reign of William the Conquerour and shall begin with that wherein the Laws I have spoken before of out of Hoveden were made which are agreed by all to be in the Fourth year of his Reign In general we find Gervase of Tilbury telling us The Conqueror makes written Laws That when the famous Subduer of England King William had subjected to his Empire the utmost parts of the Island and by terrible examples had brought to perfect obedience the Minds of Rebels that they might not have liberty to fall into the same errors for the future he (r) Decrevit subjectum sibi populum Juri scripto legibusque sabjicere Quasdam reprobavit quasdam autem approbans Transmari●●s Neustriae leges quae ad Regni p●●●m tuendam effic●teissionae videbantur adjecit Gerv. Tilb. lib. 1. c. 29. resolved to govern the People subjected to him by written Right and Law therefore the English Law being propounded according to their threefold distinction that is the Mercian Law Dane Law and West-Saxon Law he rejected some and approved others and added such Transmarine Norman Laws as seemed most efficacious to defend the Peace of the Kingdom In this account we may observe That the King solely is said to reject and approve and to add such of the Norman Laws as he thought fit for securing the Peace of the Kingdom and the Ingenious Dr. Brady thinks the 52 55 56 58 59 62 63 64. are those Norman Laws intimated Concerning the Oath which Frederick Abbat of St. Albans administred to the King on the Holy Gospel and the Reliques of the Church of St. Albans whereby he swore That for the good of Peace he would observe the good and approved ancient Laws of the Kingdom which the pious Kings of England and especially King Edward had inviolably observed I must refer the Reader to (s) Fol. 48. num 20 30 40. Matthew Paris to understand the occasion of it and Dr. (t) Argum. Antinorm p. 261. Brady's Exposition or Commentary upon it and how little he observed it What the Laws were that King William the First confirmed Authors agree not about as may be seen by comparing (u) Fol. 343. Hoveden (w) Fol. 138 149 Knighton Collect. 2354. N. 61. Lambard of Wheelocks Edition and Spelman in the First Tome of his Councils Fol. 624. Selden (x) In Eadmerum fol. 172. num 20. in his Notes upon Eadmerus writes very suspiciously of all the Laws that are attributed to King Edward except the Crowland Copy judging neither Hoveden Knighton or the Author of the Lichfield Chronicle well versed in Law matters and who writ long after Ingulphus of whom he gives this Character Qui in hac re testium non tam facile Princeps merito dicendus est quam solus forsan cui ut par fit credamus The Title of the Laws properly ascribed to William the Conquerour The Title of the Conqueror's Laws are in the Latin thus (y) Ces sont le Leis les Custumes que le Reis William grantut tut le peuple de Engleterre ●pres le Conquest de la Terre Ice les meismes que le Reis Edward sun C●sin tent devant luy LL. W. fol. 159. Hae sunt leges consuetudines quas Will. Rex concessit universo Populo Angliae post subactam terram Eaedem sunt quas Edwardus Rex cognatus ejus observavit ante eum In English thus These are the Laws and Customs (z) LL. W. 1. p. 170. which William the King granted to all his People of England after the subduing of the Land They are the same which Edward the King his Kinsman before him observed In this Preface we have only to note that the Laws are expresly said to be the Kings Grant and the Supplemental Laws after the 50th which were found in the Croyland Copy being writ in the Red Book of (z) LL. W. 1. p. 170. the Exchequer are by way of Charter or Grant thus Will. Rex Anglorum c. omnibus hominibus suis Francis Anglis salutem and all along the Authoritative parts expressed by statuimus volumus interdicimus prohibemus praecipimus decretum est The Terms used by the Conqueror in Law-giving The expressions Authors use concerning his Laws whereby the absolute Soveraignty of the Conquerour in the point of Law-giving is manifested are to be found in all those who have writ of his Life I shall content my self with a few Ordericus (a) Fol. 853. Vitalis saith eamque i. e. England Gulielmus Rex suis Legibus commode subegit that he subdued or rather subjected England profitably to his Laws Eadmer (b) Hist Nov. fol. 6. num 10 20 30. Vsus atque leges quas patres sui ipse in Normannia solehant in Anglia scrib●re volens Cuncta divina simul humana ejus nutum expectabant Edit Gal. de Moulins saith That King William designing to establish in England those Usages and Laws which his Ancestors and he observed in Normandy c. all Divine and Humane Things he ordered at his pleasure The Chronology of Rouen saith Leges quas in hunc diem Angli observant idiomate Normanico promulgavit The Laws which at this day the English observe he published in the Norman Language Mr. Camden saith (c) Britan. fol. 109. That
diversorum negotiorum causae in medium duci ex more coeperunt Id. p. 37. num 40. Ann. 1096. vel 1097. Therefore the Festival-days being passed the causes of divers affairs according to custom began to be transacted saith my Author among which that that of Anselm's was one But to draw to a Conclusion of this King's Reign my Author clears who were the Members of the Great Councils and that they were convened at the King's Pleasure in the relating that in the following (k) Mense Augusto cum de statu Regni acturus Rex Episcopos Abbates quosque Regni Proceres in unum praecepti sui sanctione egisset c. Id. p. 38. num 10. Month of August when the King being to transact things concerning the State of the Kingdom by his Summons had convened the Bishops Abbats and all the Noblemen of his Kingdom The affairs for which they were assembled being dispatched and every one prepared to return home Anselm moves again his Petition and in October when the Convention was dissolved he applied himself again to the King at Winchester Here we may observe that it was the King The King solely summons the Great Councils and dismisseth them who being to transact things about the State of the Kingdom by the Authority of his Precept or Summons called together the Members of the Great Council who are expresly mentioned to be the Bishops Abbats and all the Noblemen of the Kingdom Since therefore we find no other kinds of Great Councils in any Authors that write of this King we may conclude the Commons were no ways represented in any of them Most Authors mention this King with no good Character One old Writer saith Omnis jam legum sil●it Justitia causisque sub justitio positis sola in Principibus imperabat pecunia Florent Wigorn. That all Justice of Laws was in his time hushed in silence and Causes being put in a Vacation without hearing Money alone bore sway among the great ones Polydore Virgil will have the right or duty of First-fruits called Annats which our Kings claimed for vacant Abbies and Bishopricks to have had their Original from King William Rufus However that be it is certainly true that at his Death the Bishopricks of Canterbury Winchester and Salisbury and twelve Monasteries besides being without Prelates and Abbats payed in their Revenues to the Exchequer We may judge likewise of his burthensome Exactions Matt. Paris fol. 74. Edit penult by what we find in his Brother King Henry the First 's Charter Wherein he saith because the Kingdom was oppressed with unjust Exactions he makes the Holy Church free and all evil Customs wherewith the Kingdom of England was unjustly oppressed he doth henceforth take away and they are all in a manner mitigations of the Severity of the feudal Tenor as any one may see in Matthew Paris Mr. Selden and Dr. Brady and is plain by the very first concerning the Laity That if any one of my Barons Counts or others that hold of me shall dye his Heirs shall not redeem his Lands as he was wont to do in the time of my Father c. And in another Praecipio ut homines mei similiter se contineant erga silios silias uxores hominum suorum That according to the relaxation he had made to his Homagers they should regulate themselves towards the Sons Daughters and Wives of their Homagers Of the Great Councils in King Henry the First 's time COncerning the Great Councils in King Henry the First 's time as also till Edward the First 's time I must refer the inquisitive Reader to Dr. Brady's answer to Mr. Petyt in the respective Kings Reigns and to his Appendix in which he hath amassed out of Eadmerus Simeon Dunelmensis Florentius Wigornensis Hoveden Gervasius Dorobernensis Matt. Paris Malmsbury and other Authentick Writers the Emphatical Expressions by which the constituent Parts of the Great Councils are fully proved to be only the Bishops Abbats and Priors for the Clergy or the great Nobility or prime Tenents in Capite such as the King pleased to summon under the names of Magnates Comites Proceres Principes Optimates Barones or Sapientiores Regni expresly used for Barones Where the Populus is used by way of Antithesis as contradistinct from the Clerus and where Regni Communitas or Ingenuitas is used the same Doctor Brady by pregnant Proof puts it beyond dispute that none of the Commons as now we understand them could be meant as Representatives So that though I had collected a considerable number of such Proofs e're I saw the Learned Doctor 's Book I shall now wave them all and only add in every King's Reign some few that he hath omitted or wherein something remarkable relating to the King's Soveraignty or the manner of constituting Laws is found by him noted or as I have met with them in my Reading In the third of Henry the First in the Feast of St. (a) Omnes Princip●s Regni sui Ecclesiastici Secularis Ordinis Flor. Wigorn. Anno 1102. 3 H. 1. Michael saith the Monk of Worcester the King was at London and with him all the Princes of his Kingdom of the Ecclesiastick and Secular Order and of the same Council Malmsbury saith The King bidding (b) Ipso Rege annuente communi consensu Episcoporum Abbatum Principum totius Regni adunatum est Conciltum De Gest Pontif. Anno 1102. or willing with the common Consent of the Bishops and Abbats and Princes of the whole Kingdom the Council was united and this being mostly about Ecclesiastick affairs it is added that in this Council the Optimates Regni at the Petition of Anselm were present and gives the reason For that whatever might be decreed by Authority of the Council might be maintained firmly by the mutual care of both orders Whereby we may note the Obligation upon Subjects of both Orders to observe the Laws once enacted by the King and Council Anno 1107. 7 H. 1. Matth. Paris saith (c) Factus est conventus Episcoporum Abbatum pariter Magnatum ad Ann. c. there was a convention of the Bishops and Abbats as likewise of the Magnates i. e. Noblemen at London in the King's Palace Archbishop Anselm being President To which the King assented and speaking of what was established he saith Rex statuit To him Hoveden agrees only what the one calls Magnates the other calls Proceres The Manuscript of Croyland (d) Tum Episcoporum Abbatum totius Cleri Angliae by which must be understood the great dignified Clergy Sub Wifrido Abbate p. 104. saith The same Year the King giving manifold thanks to God for the Victory he had given him over his Brother Robert and other Adversaries appointed a famous Council at London as well of the Bishops and Abbats of the whole Clergy of England as of the Earls Barons Optimatum Procerum totius Regni In this Council
fol. 165. Gloucester 2 R. 2. is thus Our Lord the King at his Parliament c. amongst other things there assented and accorded hath made certain Statutes and Ordinances The Preface to the Statutes at (c) Anno 1379. fol. 167. Westminster the same year runs thus Our Lord the King c. of the Assent of the Prelates Dukes Earls Barons and other great Men and of the Commons of this Realm summoned c. hath ordained In the first Chapter of the Statutes at (d) Idem Anno 1380. fol. 169. Northampton 4 R. 2. it is thus The Commons of our Parliament have prayed us by their Petition delivered to us at our present Parliament c. We considering the said Supplication will and grant by the Assent of the Prelates and Lords aforesaid In the Fourth Chapter of the Statutes at (e) Idem Anno 1382. fol. 175. Westminster● 5 R. 2. The Members accustomed to be summoned to Parliament are particularly by their Degree distinguished viz. Archbishops Bishops Abbats Priors Dukes Earls Barons Bannerets Knights of the Shires Citizens and Burgesses which last are frequently comprehended by the words Others or Commonalty The Preamble to the Statutes 8 R. 2. at (f) Idem An. 1384. fol. 179. Westminster is to the Honour of God and at the Request of the Commonalty of the Assent of the Prelates Great Men and Commons aforesaid Assent of Commons Our Lord the King hath caused to be made The Statutes 9 R. 2. at (g) Idem Anno 1385. fol. 179. Westminster are thus prefaced Our Lord the King of the Assent of the Prelates Dukes Marquesses Earls Barons and Commons hath ordained and established The (h) Idem Anno 1386. fol. 180. Preface to the Statute 10 R. 2. is very full in the Expressions of the kindness of the King to his Subjects in this Form Know ye for the Reverence of God and to nourish Peace Unity and good Accord in all Parties within the Realm and especially for the common Profit and Ease of our People and good Government of the same which we chiefly desire of the Assent of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament Assent of the Lords and Commons we have caused to be made a Statute So in the 11th Regni (i) Idem Anno 1387. fol. 181. the King heartily desiring That the Peace of the Land be well holden and kept and his faithful Subjects nourished and governed in Quietness and Tranquillity and in that at Westminster (k) Idem Anno 1388. fol. 182. 13 Regni For the Honour of God and Holy Church and for the common profit of his Liege People In the First Chapter of the Statute at (l) Anno 1389. fol. 189. Westminster 13 R. 2. it is thus expressed That our Lord the King at his Parliament holden at Westminster c. Grievous Complaints of the Commons hearing the grievous Complaints of his said Commons c. the more because Charters of Pardons have been easily granted in such Cases the Commons requested that such Charters might not be granted To whom the King answered The King will save his Liberty and Regality That he will save his Liberty and Regality as his Progenitors have done heretofore But to nourish the more Quietness and Peace within this Realm by the Assent of the Great Men and Nobles he hath granted c. In the (m) Idem Anno 1396. fol. 199. Statute 20 R. 2. By the Assent of the Prelates Lords and Commons The Title of the Statutes at (n) Idem Anno 1397. fol. 200. Westminster 21 R. 2. is thus It is to be understood that our Lord the King c. of the Assent of the Prelates Dukes Earls Barons and Commons of his Realm there assembled hath made certain Statutes and Ordinances Repeal of Statutes made by Threats Amongst the rest is a Repeal of the Statutes made 10 R. 2. For that they were made by Threats given to the King and by constraint So it may be noted That Henry the Fourth repealed all the Statutes made in the last Parliament 21 R. 2. Of the Parliaments in King Henry the Fourth's time THE Preamble to the Statute at (a) Idem Anno 1399. fol. 200. Westminster 1 H. 4 runs thus Henry by the Grace of God c. to the Laud and Honour of God and Reverence of Holy Church for to nourish Unity Peace and Concord of all Parties within the Realm of England and for redress and recovery of the same Realm of England which now of late hath been dangerously put to great Ruin Mischief and Desolation of the Assent of the Prelates Instance and special Request of the Commons Dukes Earls Barons and at the Instance and special Request of the Commons of the same Realm assembled c. hath made ordained and established certain Ordinances and Statutes Throughout all this Kings Reign most of the Prefaces are much the same By the Assent or Advice and Assent of the Prelates c. At the Request or special Instance and Request of the Commons Only in the Preface to some Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal it is By the Assent and Advice of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal this Distinction being mostly brought into use in his time as may be seen in the 4th 6th and 9th of his Reign Of the Parliaments in King Henry the Fifth 's time THE Preamble to the Statutes at (a) Idem Anno 1413. fol. 224. Westminster 1 H. 5. runs thus Our Lord the King at his Parliament c. by the Advice and Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and at the special Instance and Request of the Commons of this Realm hath ordained established c. and so much like all the rest except the Statutes 4 H. 5. (b) Idem Anno 1416. fol. 234. which hath Our Lord the King with the Assent of the Prelates Dukes Earls Barons and at the special Instance and Request of the Commons Of the Parliaments in King Henry the Sixth 's time THE Preamble to the First Statute of (a) Idem Anno 1422. fol. 239. Westminster 1 H. 6. is thus At the Parliament held at Westminster c. Our Sovereign Lord the King Sovereign Lord the King by the Advice and Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and at the special Instance and Request of the Commons of the Realm c. hath caused to be ordained and established c. The 2d 3d. 4th and 6th of H. 6. are the same As the first Statutes call him Our Sovereign Lord which was not used formerly so in that of the 8th of H. 6. he is stiled Our most Noble Christian Lord Henry c. 11 Regni (b) Idem Anno 1433. fol. 261. part of a new Phrase was used By Authority of Parliament which after some while is now familiarly used that Preface runs thus By the Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and at the special Request of the
414 415. How the House of Commons of the Parliament 1641. seduded their Members till there were not above 70 left whom the Army-Officers impeached or disliked as a corrupt Party or corrupt Majority and so fifty or sixty by the power of the Army secured secluded and expelled near 400 Members and made themselves the Commons House without them and so proceeded to vote down and seclude both King and House of Lords and voted themselves to be the Parliament of England and sole Legislators and Supream Authority of the Nation The consequences of all which are too well known to the whole Kingdom whose Calamity of Civil War and all the unspeakable Tragedies of it flowed from the packing of Members in the Commons House and the Assistance the People relying upon their Sageness and Authority afforded them How this revived against Abhorrers We had of later Years a fresh revival of the same method in the House of Commons expelling those they called Abhorrers which is so well known that I need say nothing of it yet I would recommend to all interessed Persons the perusal of two Treatises which though they pass for Pamphlets yet have been writ by Judicious Authors and those are The Lawyer outlawed and the Three parts of the Addresses which are Books very fit for Gentlemen to peruse How full and unquestioned a power the Commons have to represent Grievances to the King and petition for Redress The unquestioned Rights of the Commons to impeach any Person of the highest Quality that is a Subject for Treason or high Misdemeanors to have the sole Power in having all Bills for Subsidies Aids and Supplies to begin and I think be perfected in their House and the Privileges they petition for by their Speaker are so well known that they need no Discourse upon But I find several Judicious Persons will not allow the House of Commons to be a Court which Sir Edward Coke affirms 4. Instit p. 28. Whether the House of Commons be properly a Court. and uses this only one Argument for it Because it is not Prorogued or Adjourned by the Prorogation or Adjournment of the Lords House but the Speaker upon signification of the Kings Pleasure by the Assent of the House of Commons doth say This Court doth Prorogue or Adjourn it self But to this it is answered Lawyer outlawed p. 18. That if this were sufficient to denominate a Court every Committee of Lords and Commons though never so few in number must upon this account be a distinct Court because they may thus adjourn and prorogue themselves without their respective Houses In another place 4. Instit p. 23. the same Chief Justice offers to prove the House of Commons not only a Court but a Court of Judicature and Record for that the Clerks Book of the House of Commons is a Record and so declared by Act of Parliament 6 H. 8. c. 16. But this House had no such Book as a Journal much less any Authentick Record When the House of Commons had a Journal first before the first Year of Ed. the Sixth all their material proceedings till then being drawn in Minutes by a Clerk appointed to attend them for that purpose and by him entred of Record in the House of Lords Therefore the Words of the Statute are That the Speakers Licence for Members going into the Country be entred of Record in the Book of the Clerk of the Parliament appointed for the Commons House and this Journal is rather a Register of what passeth than such a Record as denotes a Court of Judicature as the Author of The Lawyer outlawed endeavours to prove P. 17 18 19. Plowd Com. fol. 319. Coke 1. Inst fol. 260. because there is no Court but what is established by the Kings Patent by Act of Parliament or by the Common Law i. e. the constant immemorial Custom of former Ages for by that the House of Lords is the sole supream Court of Judicature it having never been heard of before Sir Edward Coke's fancy That there were two distinct Courts in the same Parliament Also there is no Court without a power of tryal but the House of Commons have no power to try any Crime or Offence because they cannot examine upon Oath and there can be no legal Tryal without Witnesses nor are any Witnesses of any force in Law unless examined upon Oath But I shall not enter into these Controversies Some Observations on the Privileges of the House of Commons in general but shall now lay down some general Observations and Rules which Judicious Persons have noted as worthy the consideration of the Honourable House in point of their claims of Privileges and Judicature First King James the First in his Declaration touching his proceedings in Parliament 1621. resolves That most Privileges of Parliament grew from Precedents which rather shew a Toleration than an Inheritance therefore he could not allow of the Stile calling it their Ancient and undoubted Right and inheritance but could rather have wished that they had said All Privileges from the Crown Their Privileges were derived from the Grace and permission of his Ancestors and him and thereupon concludes That he cannot with patience endure his Subjects to use such Antimonarchical Words concerning their Liberties except they had subjoyned That they were granted unto them by the Grace and Favour of his Predecessors yet he promiseth to be carefull of whatsoever Privileges they enjoy by long Custom and uncontrolled and lawful Precedents Secondly C. 29. None to be punished but by Legal Trial. It is to be considered That by the Great Charter it is declared That no Freeman shall be taken or imprisoned or diseised of his Freehold or Liberties or his Free Customs or be Outlawed or Exiled or in any manner destroyed but by the lawful Judgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land Stat. 28 E. 3. c. 3. So 28 E. 3. it is Enacted That no Man of what estate or condition he be shall be put out of his Land or Tenements nor taken nor imprisoned nor dis-inherited nor put to death without being brought to answer by due Process of Law So 42 E. 3. c. 3. it is assented and accorded for the good Government of the Commons that no Man be put to answer without presentment before Justices or matter of Record or by due course of Law or Writ Original according to the Old Laws of the Land Nulla Curia quae Recordum non habet potest imponere finem neque aliquem mandare carceri quia isla tantummodo spectant ad Curias de Recordo Mar. Sess 3. So Sir Edward Coke saith Courts which are not of Record cannot impose a Fine or commit any to Prison because these only belong to Courts of Record for which see Beecher's Case fol. 60. 120. Bonham's Case and lib. 11 fol. 43. Godfrey's Case So in the First Parliament of Q. Mary it is declared That the most Ancient
them exoptabiles leges and that they should have their Woods and Hunting free It is recorded of Henry the First King Henry the First 's Oath that having gathered to London the Clergy of England and all the People he promised them an amendment of the Laws with which they were oppressed in the time of his Father and his Brother lately deceased that he might obtain their (y) Vt animos corum in sui promotionem accenderet good Wills to his Promotion and that they might receive him for their King and Father to which the Clergy and all the Nobility answered * Si animo volenti ipsis vellet concedere charta sua communire illas libertates antiquas consuetudines quae floruerunt in Regno tempore Sancti Regis Edwardi Mat. Paris 250. n. 53. Hist Novel lob 3. p. 55. That if with a willing Mind he would grant them and with his Charter confirm all the Liberties and ancient Customs which fl●rished in the Kingdom in the time of the Holy King Edward they would consent to him and unanimously consecrate him King and he freely yielding to his and affirming by his Oath that he would do it he was consecrated King the Clergy and People favouring it Eadmerus saith That in ipso consecrationis die bonas Sanctas omni Populo Leges se servaturum omnes oppressiones iniquitates quae sub fratre suo emerserunt in omni sua dominatione tam Dei Lege quam in secularibus negotiis prohibiturum subversurum sposponderat haec omnia Jurisjurandi Interjectione formula per totum Regnum divulgata ire praeceperat and when he was Crowned he granted the Laws recited by (z) Diademate insi●nitas has libertates subscriptas in Regno ad exaltationem Sanctae Ecclesiae pacem Populo tenendam concelsit Mat. Paris Hist p. 46. num 40. ult Edit Matthew Paris to be held in his Kingdom for the exalting of the Holy Church and Peace of his People which Laws being at large recited by Matt. Paris may be perused by the Inquisitive wherein he will find how far the old Laws were confirmed and what a Foundation there was laid for Magna Charta Concerning King Stephen (a) Histor. Novel p. 101. b. num 40. Vide Mat. Paris p. 62. num 35. Malmsbury saith King Stephen's Oath That Henry his Brother Bishop of Winchester was a great help to his obtaining the Crown having great hopes that he would follow his Grandfather King William's Steps in the Government of his Kingdom especially in matters of Ecclesiastical Discipline therefore he saith William Archbishop of Canterbury 〈◊〉 exacted a solemn Oath from him of granting and preserving the Liberty of the Church the Oath it self is long and the Immunities to the Church many those to the Laity are conceived in these words Omnes Exactiones Mescheningas Injustitias sive per Vicecomites vel per alios quoslibet male inductas funditus extirpo Bonas Leges Antiquas justas Consuetudines in Murdris Placitis aliis Causis observabo observari praecipio constituo Malmsbury saith That the King swore according to the tenor of the Writing he there produceth Dated at Oxford Anno Dom. 1136. 1 Regni I find no mention of an Oath taken by K. H. 2. at his Coronation but (b) Chron. col 1043. num 67. Brompton saith that he confirmed the Charter of his Grandfather King Henry the First King Henry the Second's Oath and that he was sollicitous ut Lex quae extincta videbatur paulatim exsurgeret and Matt. Paris (c) Hist 1080 1081. saith That Anno 1172. he swore before the Cardinals that he would abrogate all the evil Customs introduced in his time against the Church We find that Pope Alexander (d) Gul. Newbrigensis lib. 4. c. 25. Gerv. Dorob Chron. col 1413. Matt. Paris p. 117. the Third Excommunicated several Bishops and suspended the Archbishop of York for his rash Presumption in the Coronation of a new King in contempt of the Archbishop of Canterbury to whose Office of ancient Right it was known to belong and for that in the Coronation according to Custom there was no sworn Caution offered or exacted by them for the keeping of the Liberties of the Church but afterwards (e) Vt Regni consuetudines antiquas sub quibus dignitas pericli●bitur Ecclesiae illibatae debeant omni tempore observari Hoveden Annal. pars poster p. 518 519. it is said to be confirmed by Oath that the ancient Customs of the Kingdom from which the dignity of the Church was in danger should inviolably be kept in all time to come The Solemnities of King Richard the First 's Coronation are fully described by the Abbat of Jorval (f) Rectam Justitiam exercebit in populo sibi commisso leges malas consuetudines perversas si aliqua sint in Regno suo delebit bonas custodies Brompton col 1158. num 60. and as to his Oath King Richard the First 's Oath he saith that he swore and vowed the Holy Evangelists and the Reliques of many Saints being set before him that he would bear Peace Honour and Reverence all his Life to God and the Holy Church and its Ministers and then he swore that he would exercise right Justice to the People committed to him and after he swore that he would blot out or abolish evil Laws and perverse Customs if any were in his Kingdom and he would keep good Laws I find that King John took an Oath as Duke of Normandy King John's Oaths that he would defend Holy Church and its Dignities in good Faith without evil Intention and would honour all the Ordained and that he would destroy all evil Laws if any were and substitute good ones the words (g) Matt. Paris fol. 165. ult Edit num 27. are quod ipse Sanctam Ecclesiam ejus dignitates bona fide sine malo Ingenio defenderet ordinatos honoraret quod Leges iniquas si quae essent destrueret bonas surrogaret At his Coronation (h) Quod sanctam Ecclesiam ejus ordinatos diligeret eam ab incursione malignantium indemnem conservaret quod perversis legibus destructis bonas substitueret rectam Justitiam in Regno Augliae exerceret Idem p. 166. num 4. Promisit se per anxilium Dei bona side ea quae juraverat servaturum he took another Oath that he would love Holy Church and the ordained of it and would preserve it indempnified from the Incursions of the Malignant and that the perverse Laws being destroyed he would substi● good ones and would exercise right Justice in England Besides these Matth. Paris p. 189. of the Old Edition saith That he was sworn by the said Archbishop ex parte Dei districte prohibitus ne honorem hunc accipere praesumeret nisi in mente habeat opere quod juraverat
Earls Barons Great Men and the whole body of the Tenents in Capite expressed by those words in the former Questions Clergy and People for by them these demands were made and no doubt they would first ask for themselves for the Vulgar or Rabble could not come near to make their Demands at such a Solemnity as this was so (y) Walsingham fol. 95. num 20. great and splendid there being at it Charles and Lewis Earls of Clermont two of the King of France's Brothers the D. of Brabant the Earl of Fens and the other great Men both of France and England with the Countess of Artois Whoever desires further satisfaction may consult the same learned (z) Elossary p. 24. Author who makes it clear That the word Plebs Vulgus Populus in the Writers of that Age was used for the Laity in way of contradistinction from the Clergy I shall at present leave this and note that for any thing appears to the contrary the same Interrogations Oath c. presented to Edward the Second and Third without the additions of King Richard's continued without any alteration to Henry the Eighth's (a) Book of Oaths fol. 1. time and in that we find the King promiseth he shall keep and maintain the Liberties of the Holy Church of old time granted by their Righteous Kings of England The Oath of King Henry the Eighth I find in the Heralds Office the words thus Do ye grant the rightful Laws and Cusioms to be holden and permit ye after your Strength and Power such Laws as to the Honour of God shall be chosen to the People by you to be strengthned and desensed Vid in Coll. Arm. p. 60. and that he shall keep all the Lands Honours and Dignities righteous and free of the Church of England in all manner Holy without any manner of minishments and the rights of the Crown hurt decay or loss to his Power shall call again into the ancient estate and that he shall keep the Peace of Holy Church and of the Clergy and of the People with good accord and that he shall do in his Judgment Equity and right Justice with Discretion and Mercy and that he shall grant to hold the Laws and Customs of the Realm and to his Power keep them and affirm them which the People and Flock have chosen and the evil Laws and Customs wholly to put out and stedfast and stable Peace to the People of this Realm keep and cause to be kept to his Power In this Oath King Henry the Eighth interlined for the right explication of it instead of People and Flock these Words which the Nobles and People have chosen with my Consent The Oath of King Edward the Sixth Oath of Edward the Sixth so far as relates to my purpose was this Do you grant to make no new Laws but such as shall be to the honour and glory of God and to the good of the Commonwealth and that the same shall be made by the consent of the People as hath been accustomed Oaths of Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth not seen by the Author The Oaths of King James the First and King Charles the First The Oath of King Charles the Second Hist Coronationis Caroli 2. in Colleg. Arm. I have not seen any Transcripts of the Oaths of Queen Mary or Queen Elizabeth those which King James and King Charles the First took run thus Will you grant to hold and keep the Laws and Rightful Customs which the Commonalty of this Kingdom have and will you defend and uphold them to the Honour of God so much as in you lyeth That Branch of the Oath which relates to my purpose taken by King Charles the Second runs thus Sir Will you grant to keep the rightful Customs which the Commonalty of your Kingdom have c. The Oath that our present King James the Second took at his Coronation The Oath of King James the Second was in the same Words as that of his Royal Brother wherein the Word Customs is to be taken in the largest extent to include Laws also Now upon the whole we must consider First Considerations upon this Discourse of the Coronation Oaths That in the Eye of the Law the King never dyes so that he is King before any Solemnity of Coronation Secondly The variety of Forms and Precedents seem to prove that one precise form is not simply necessary so the interlining of Henry the Eighth upon Record also shews And if it had been of consequence to have retained the old form we should have heard of it either then or in some succeeding Parliaments Lastly it cannot be denied that if the King be bound by a lawful Oath to pass all Bills it is not the form of denying it but the not doing of it which makes the Perjury And so when the King is tender of a flat denial and attributing so much to the judgment of his great Council that he only useth the words avisera it would be a strange Doctrine that all the Kings of England who have given this Answer have been forsworn and neither Parliament nor Convocation taken notice of it in so many Ages But when by dint of Argument the Parliament Champions were driven from these Holds they fled to their last Burrow So one of them confesses that in Acts of Grace the King is not bound to assent nor in Acts wherein he is to depart from the particular right and interest of his Crown and lastly that if he do not consent however bound by Oath yet they are not binding Laws to the Subject How the Long Parliament Writers would have the King part with his Prerogative in Cases of necessity only But then comes the handful of Gourds which spoils the Pottage Except in cases of necessity If the safety of the People be concerned If it may prove dangerous or inconvenient to them then an extraordinary course may be taken This was the plausible Plea of 1641. to get the Militia into their hands for they urged that in case of apparent and imminent danger the Peoples safety was not to be neglected They might not be exposed as a prey to their Enemies therefore must be put into a posture of defence This was grateful to the People out of that real love they bare to themselves they must favour that side which pretends to take care of their safety Give to any Person or Society a Legislative Power without the King in case of necessity (b) Answer to Observ b. 76. permit them withal to be sole Judges of necessity when it is and how long it lasts and then it is more than probable the necessity will not determine till they have their utmost desires which is the same in effect as if they had the Legislative Power Further it must be considered that necessity upon that supposition must be very evident there needs no such great stir who shall be Judge of it when it comes indeed it
When Princes not to make themselves Parties but only private-Animosities betwixt some of the Nobility wherein the Government is not much concerned there may be some allowance for my Lord Verulam's Opinion That Princes being Common Parents should not lean to one Party because a Boat that is overset by the unequal Weight on one side may carry such Passengers in it as the Prince would not lose Therefore to study ways to piece them and solder up the flaws is better than to side with one to the Ruin of the other and sometimes of themselves also As we may observe in Henry the third of France who entred into the League and it was shortly after turned against himself which may be a document saith that wise Lord to Kings how they make themselves a Party for by that a Prince makes himself unus ex nobis which makes an Obligation Paramount to that of Soveraignty So that a Prince must be very cautelous when he must side with one Party which he espouseth (d) In caducam pari●tem ne inclinet lest he lean upon a ruinous Wall But if there be a Party by whose fall the Prince (e) Cujus r●ina se quoque tradura est Tacitus de Moribus Germ. likewise shall be sure to be ruined as in case of Factions against Government as I mean in this whole Discourse it is necessary for him strenuously to support it When Princes to support one Party Upon this Consideration it seems to me that it ever will be the great Interest of the Kings of England to defend and support the Episcopal Government for that by fatal Experience it was found that the overthrow of it was the Praeludium to the Destruction of the Blessed King and Monarchy For although he was a very great Champion of the Church of England as established by Law yet he too fatally yielded to take away the Bishops Votes in Parliament whereby he lost a considerable Party in the House that would never have deserted his Interest So that in this case I may apply that of Galba (f) Manifestum est neque perire nos neque salvos esse nisi una posse Tacit. 10. Hist P. 195. Edit Lips 5. to his Soldiers It is manifest that undivided or alone they can neither be Saved or Perish in times when they are attacqued But to return to the Prognosticks of dangerous Seditions I shall mention some that Tacitus hath noted and described Speaking of the Revolt of the Legions in Germany under Germanicus at the Beginning of Tiberius's Reign Unanimity a dangerous Sign he saith Those that looked deeply into the Disposition of the Soldiers judged it a strong Argument of an unappeasable Revolt (g) Id militares animos altius conj●●●antibus praecipuum indicium magni atque implacabilis motus quod neque disjecti nil paucorum instinctu sed pariter ardescerent pariter silerent tanta aequalitate constantia ut regi crederes 1. Annal. that they were not scattered or divided nor any attempt given by a few but grew insolent together were quiet at once with such moderation and constancy that one would have thought they had been governed by one Head For when any Sedition is carried on with such Unanimity it is a certain Sign that the Poyson hath a large spread and there are few sound Parts left The Progress (h) Ad tuendam plebem Tribunitio Ju●e ●tentum militem do●is populum Annena cun●los dulcedine o●ii pellexit Insurgere pa●tatim munia Sena●us Magistratuum Legum in se trahere nullo adversante lbid Augustus made to establish the Sovereignty in himself The Methods of Designers is the usual Method by which such as intend subverting of Government may proceed which according to the same Author was That to ingratiate himself with the People he contented himself with Tribunitian Authority to defend the Common People that he wound himself into the Favour of the Soldiers by Gifts of the People by Provision of Sustenance and of all in general with the sweetness of Ease and Repose by little and little taking upon him the affairs of the Senate the Duty of the Magistrates and Laws and so without the Contradiction of any he obtained the Empire This in Augustus was commendable and Politically done being to alter a Commonweal into a Monarchy and Wisemen by his method might have foretold his Design So in Seditious enterprises against Monarchy the way is to court the People and insensibly cajole them with the sweetness of Liberty under a Commonwealth and the heaviness of the Yoak of Monarchy and having possessed them with this they have no more to do but to await some critical time or revolution that may suit their Design as some new Imposition laid some publick Calamity the displacing some great Officer or Death of some great Man or their Prince such (i) Opportunos magnis conatibus transitus rerum 1. Histor Revolutions being the sittest times for great Attempts as Tacitus speaks of Otho's Conspiracy by Galba's Covetousness to the Soldiery c. Concerning Sejanus the same Judicious (k) Primas dominandi spes in arduo ubi sis ingressus adesse studia ministros Lib. 4. Annal. Author gives us the Saying of Drusus That the first hopes of attaining Command or working themselves into Power by Sedition is difficult but after the Entrance there will not want aids of Council and assisting Hands Therefore it is most necessary Speedy Suppression most necessary that Princes diligently watch the motions of all kind of Seditious aspiring Persons to prevent their first Entrance upon their Designs lest they prove afterwards too Powerful In such a State of affairs the Council of (l) Nibil in civilibus discordiis festinatione tutius ubi facto magis quam consilio opus 1. Hist Tacitus is to be followed That nothing is safer in Seditions and Civil Discords than quickness of dispatch when there is more need of Action than Consultation The misfortune is great which happens to the Subjects by Faction and Sedition The Mischiefs of Faction for such things once begun are not in a short time hushed but the Animosities are durable and when one (m) Inter victores victosque nunquam solida sides coalescit Idem 2. Hist Party overcomes yet the Conquered retains his old grudge and is always catching at opportunities to promote his Interest and there is rarely in that Generation at least a sincere amnesty and union of Affections Therefore as Princes by Acts of Pardon endeavour to put all into a State of Unpunishableness though they cannot into a State of Innocence so those that have assisted the Seditious Party ought with a generous Repentance and Fidelity to their Prince endeavour all their Lives to be rubbing out those Stains by their Loyalty For he that (n) Quem paenitet peccasse pene est innocens repents he hath offended is in the next degree to the Innocent It
his two Sons Proclus and Euristhenes to an equal share in the Lacedemonian Throne The like observations are to be made in the Succession of Ptolomaeus Lagus and Ptolomaeus Phisco In the Sons of Severus in the Succession of Sinesandus who killed his brother Suintill rightful Heir of Spain and that of Sforza and Francis Duke of Milain and thousands more in all which either the Usurpers or the Kingdoms that obeyed them perished utterly or were brought to great ruine In Britain the whole nation of the Picts were extirpated by the endeavour of that People to hinder Keneth Son of Alpinus from possessing the Kingdom as right Heir of Fergusiana Sister of Mordred their King In England the Usurpation of Harold upon the Right of Edgar opened the passage to William the Conqueror The Usurpations of William Rufus and Henry the First upon their Brother Robert and of King Stephen upon the Empress Maud were accompanied with great effusion of Blood So that a great part of the ancient Norman Nobility both such as resided there or were transplanted hither were slain or grievously harassed The Usurpation of King John upon his Nephew Arthur caused great disquiets during his Reign and the effects lasted a great while after The removal of King Richard the Second by Henry the Fourth occasioned those lasting Wars and most miserable devastations betwixt the Houses of York and Lancaster during which Usurpation before the Crown was setled upon Edward the Fourth Historians reckon no less than seventeen pitched Battels and eight Kings and Princes of the Blood slain and put to death and that forty six Dukes and Earls besides innumerable Barons and Gentlemen and above 200000. common People were slain and destroyed in the space of Sixty Years To which we may add the cruel death of Edward the Fifth and his Brother by their bloody Unckle and his own miserable end and the calamitous fall of the Lady Jane Grey and her Noble Relations All which Princes although for the supporting their unjust Claims Invasions and Usurpations of the Crown they procured Parliamentary concurrence and popular Establishments yet after so great effusion of blood could not in reality transfer the Right from the next Heir of the blood but at last all centred again in the Right Heir ERRATA PAge 7. line 31. for Babarous read Barbarous for und r. and l. 24 for wins r. wires p. 13. l. 6. for Resumption r. Presumption p. 17. l. 5. for who r. where p. 44. l. 45. for removeable r. removal p. 47. l. 27. for purity r. parity p. 63. l. 26. for Herds r. Hords p. 81. l. 18. for third r. fifth p. 83. l. 46. for than r. not p. 92. marg l. 5. for mediocrita r. mediocriter and below for ad Clement r. ad Cluentem p. 133. l. 48. after before r. l. p. 141. l. 36. dele That p. 150. l. 28. for Peace r. Grace p. 152. l. 27. for 68. r. 6. E. 1. p. 160. l. 43. for Sarson r. Sarron p. 162. l. 12. for Fenix r. Ferrix l. 48. after rewards add he p. 167. l. 18. after find add 4 p. 176. l. 5. for implied r. imployed l. 32. for Frameae r. Framiae p. 180. l. 46. for Wargild r. Weregild p. 181. l. 10. for many r. money p. 194. marg l. 17. for King Edward's r. King Edmund's p. 197. l. 41. for Northrigena r. Northwigena p. 199. l. 19. for Markesus r. Markerus p. 216. l. 11. for Silvanset r. Silvanect p. 222. l. 36. for Aubert r. Hubert p. 245. l. 18. for Bochan r. Boetian p. 266. l. 3. for whereas r. where l. 18. for Mauleveren r. Mauleverer p. 291. l. 36. for Hull r. Hall p. 321. l. 13. dele having p. 335. l. 12. for Privileges r. Prerogatives p. 341. l. 8. for Salteyn r. Salveyn p. 376. l. 33. for dies twice r. diu p. 380. l. 24. for ele r. aelc and in marg for vpp r. App. p. 387. l. 6. for lye r. tye p. 389. l. 5. after finishing add a Period l. 7. for almost r. all most l. 13. for Bretan r. ●●●●an l. 14. for sorda r eorda p. 400. l. 28. for albe r. able p. 419. l. 2. for Hisparians r. Hipparians l. 3. for Cleotimac r. Cleotimas l. 17. for Peleponensian r. Peleponesian and for Ob r. Obe p. 427. for Fifthly Sixthly and Seventhly r. Fourthly Fifthly Sixthly p. 430. l. 13. for keep r. help p. 437. l. 24. for hopes r. hops p. 446. l. 37. for end r. and. p. 452. l. 31. for Fung r. Fangs p. 459. l. 1. for Brats r. Brut● p. 461. l. 7. for Colbar r. Cobbam l. 25. for Rebellious r. Rubellius p. 462. l. 43. for rare r. race p. 467. l. 28. for Praeter r. Praetor p. 468. l. 1. for discovered r. described p. 469. l. 11. for milder r. middle A Catalogue of Books Printed for and Sold by Robert Clavel at the Peacock in St. Paul's Church-yard Books in Folio A Companion to the Temple or a Help to Devotion in the Use of the Common Prayer divided into Four Parts 1. Of Morning and Evening Prayer 2. Of the Litany with the Occasional Prayers and Thanksgivings 3. Of the Communion-Office with the Offices of Baptism Catechism and Confirmation 4. Of the Occasional Offices viz. Matrimony Visitation of the Sick c. The whole being carefully corrected and now put into one Volume By Thomas Comber D. D. Praecentor of York A Practical and Polemical Commentary or Exposition upon the Third and Fourth Chapters of the latter Epistle of St. Paul to Timothy By Thomas Hall B. D. A Course of Divinity or An Introduction to the Knowledge of the True Catholick Religion especially as professed by the Church of England In Two Parts The one containing the Doctrine of Faith the other the Form of Worship By Matthew Scrivener Etymologicon Linguae Anglicanae seu Explicatio Vocum Anglicarum Etymologica ex propriis Fontibus scil ex Linguis duodecim Anglo-Saxonica seu Anglica prisca notata A. S. Runica Gothica Cimbrica seu Danica antiqua notata Run Dan. Franco-Theotisca seu Teutonica vetere notata Fr. Th. Danica recentiori notata Dan. rec Belgica notata Belg. Teutonica recentiori notata Teut. Cambro-Britannica notata C. Br. Franco-Gallica notata Fr. Italica notata It. Hispanica notata Hisp Latina notata Lat. Graeca notata Gr. Authore Stephano Skinner M.D. The Voyages and Travels of the Ambassadors sent by Frederick Duke of Holstein to the Great Duke of Muscovy and the King of Persia begun in the Year 1633. and finished in 1639. Containing a compleat History of Muscovy Tartary Persia and other adjacent Countries with several Publick Transactions reaching near the present Times In Seven Books Whereto are added the Travels of John Albert de Manstelslo a Gentleman belonging to the Ambassie from Persia into the East-Indies containing a particular Description of Indosthan the Mogull's Empire the Oriental Islands Japan China and the Revolutions which hapned in those Countries within these
the Instruments 2. Of Cures performed And 3. Of things Remarkable Written by Johannes Scultetus a famous Physician and Chirurgeon of Vlme in Suevia Faithfully translated into English by E. B. The Compleat Chymist or A new Treatise of Chymistry teaching by a short and easie Method all its most necessary Preparations Written in French by Nicholas Glasier Apothecary in Ordinary to the French King and the Duke of Orleans and from the Fourth Edition revised and augmented by the Author and now faithfully Englished by a Fellow of the Royal Society Il Nepotismo di Roma or The History of the Pope's Nephews from the time of Sixtus the Fourth Anno 1471. to the Death of the late Pope Alexander the Seventh Anno 1667. In two Parts Written Originally in Italian and Englished by W. A. fellow of the Royal Society The Present State of Egypt or A new Relation of a late Voyage into that Kingdom performed in the Years 1672. and 1673. by Fr. Vansleb R. D. Wherein you have an Exact and true Account of many rare and wonderful Particulars of that Ancient Kingdom Englished by M. D. R. D. The History of the Government of Venice wherein the Policies Counsels Magistrates and Laws of that State are fully related and the Use of the Ballotting Box exactly described Written in the Year 1675. by the Sieur Amelott de la Houssa●e Secretary to the French Ambassador at Venice The Present State of the Ottoman Empire In three Books Containing the Maxims of the Turkish Policy their Religion and Military Discipline Illustrated with divers Figures Written by Sir Paul Ricaut then Secretary to the English Ambassador there and since Consul at Smyrna The Memoires of Philip de Comines Lord of Argenton Containing the History of Lewis the Eleventh and Charles the Eighth Kings of France with the most Remarkable Occurrences in their particular Reigns from the Year 1404. to 1498. Revised and corrected from divers Manuscripts and Ancient Impressions by Dennis Godfrey Counsellor and Historiographer to the French King and from his Addition lately printed at Paris newly translated into English A Relation of three Embassies from His Majesty Charles the Second to the Great Duke of Muscovy the King of Sweden and the King of Denmark Performed by the Right Honourable the Earl of Carlisle in the Year 1663. and 1664. By an Attendant on the Embassies The Secret History of the Court of the Emperor Justinian Written by Procopius of Caesarea Faithfully rendred into English The History of the late Revolutions of the Empire of the Great Mogul together with the most considerable Passages for many Years in that Empire with a new Map of it To which is added An Account of the Extent of Industan the Circulation of the Gold and Silver of the World to discharge it self there as also the Riches Forces and Justice of the same and the Principal Cause of the Decay of the States of Asia By Monsieur F. Bernier Physician of the Faculty of Montpelier Englished out of French by H. O. Secretary to the Royal Society The Voyage of Italy or A Compleat Journey through Italy In two Parts With the Character of the People and the Description of the Chief Towns Churches Monasteries Tombs Libraries Pallaces Villas Gardens Pictures Statues and Antiquities As also of the Interest Government Riches Force c. of all the Princes with Instructions concerning Travel By Richard Lassels Gent. who travelled through Italy five times as Tutor to several of the English Nobility and Gentry The History of France under the Ministry of Cardinal Mazarine viz. from the Death of King Lewis the Thirteenth to the Year 1664. Wherein all the Affairs of State to that time are exactly related by Benjamin Priolo and faithfully Englished by Chr. Wase Gent. The History of the Twelve Caesars Emperors of Rome Written in C. Suetonius Tranquillus Newly translated into English and illustrated with all the Caesars Heads in Copper Plates The Compleat Gentleman or Direction for the Education of Youth as to their Breeding at home and Travelling abroad By J. Gailliard Gent. who hath been Tutor abroad to several of the Nobility and Gentry The Annals of Love containing Select Histories of the Amours of divers Princes Courts pleasantly related Deceptio Pisus or Seeing and Believing are two things A pleasant Spanish History faithfully translated In two Books The Loves of sundry Philosophers and other Great Men. Translated out of French The Novels of Dom Francisco de Quevedo Villegas Knight of the Order of St. James faithfully Englished Whereunto is added The Marriage of Belphegor an Italian Novel Translated from Machiavel A Relation of the Siege of Candia from the first Expedition of the French Forces under the Command of M. de la Fuillada Duke of Koannez to its Surrender Sept. 27. 1669. Written in French by a Gentleman who was a Voluntier in that Service and faithfully Englished The Present State of the Greek and A●menian Churches Anno Christi 1678. By Sir Paul Ricault late Consul at Smyrna and Fellow of the Royal Society The Rights of the Bishops to judge in Capital Cases in Parliament cleared Being a full Answer to two Books lately published the first entituled A Letter from a Gentleman to his Friend c. the other A Discourse of the Peerage and Jurisdiction of the Lords Spiritual in Parliament endeavouring to shew the contrary A Resolution of Conscience touching Impositions Suffragium Protestantium Wherein our Governours are justified in their Impositions and Proceedings against Dissenters Meisner also and the Verdict rescued from the Cavils and Seditious Sophistry of the Protestant Reconciler By the Right Reverend Father in God the Lord Bishop of St. Davids The Living Temple or A design'd Improvement of that Notion That a Good Man is the Temple of God By John Howe M. A. sometimes Fellow of M. Coll. Oxford A Friendly Conference between a Minister and a Parishioner of his inclining unto Quakerism c. With the Vindication of it from the Exceptions of Thomas Ellwood in the pretended Answer to the said Conference Thirteen Sermons preached before King Charles the Second in His Exile by the late Reverend Henry Byam D. D. Rector of Luckham Canon of Exeter and one of His Majesty's Chaplains in Ordinary With the Testimony given of him at his Funeral by Hamnet Ward D. D. Counsel and Directions Divine and Moral in plain and familiar Letters of Advice from a Divine of the Church of England to a young Gentleman his Nephew soon after his Admission into a College in Oxford The Christian's Defence against the Fears of Death with seasonable Directions how to prepare our selves to die well Written originally in French by the late Reverend Divine of the Protestant Church of Paris Char. Drelincourt And translated into English by M. D' Assigny B. D. A Discourse of Natural and Moral Impotency By Joseph Truman B. D. Aminta the famous Italian Pastoral translated into English Paradise Regained a Poem in four Books To which is added Samson