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A45252 The arguments of Sir Richard Hutton, Knight, one of the judges of the Common Pleas, and Sir George Croke, Knight, one of the judges of the Kings Bench together with the certificate of Sir John Denham, Knight, one of the Barons of the Exchequer, vpon a scire facias brought by the Kings Majesty in the Court of Exchequer against John Hampden, Esquire : as also, the severall votes of the Commons and Peeres in Parliament, and the orders of the Lords for the vacating of the judgement given against the said Mr. Hampden, and the vacating of the severall rolls in each severall court, wherein the judges extrajudiciall opinions in the cases made touching ship-money are entred. England and Wales. Court of Exchequer.; Hutton, Richard, Sir, 1561?-1639.; Croke, George, Sir, 1560-1642.; Denham, John, Sir, 1559-1639.; Hampden, John, 1594-1643, defendant.; England and Wales. Parliament.; England and Wales. Sovereign (1625-1649 : Charles I) 1641 (1641) Wing H3842; ESTC R16237 74,278 200

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henceforth we shall take such manner of aides taxes or prizes but by the common consent of the Realme and for the common profit thereof Saving the ancient aides and prizes due and accustomed Observe the words in this Statute that for no businesse he shall take any manner of aides taxes or prizes but by the common consent of the Realme The words of this Statute are so plaine for no businesse as they include all and admit any exposition Then in 34. Edw. 1. cap. 1. It is enacted No tallage nor aide shall be taken or levied by us or our heires in our Realme without the good will and assent of Archbishops Bishops Earles Barons Knights Burgesses and other Free-men of the land Then by a Statute made in the fourteenth yeare of King Edward the third it is in this manner That whereas the Prelates Earles Barons and Commons of our Realme of England in our Parliament holden at Westminster upon Wednesday in Mid-lent in the fourteenth year of our Raigne over England and the first over France have granted to us of their free and good will in aide of the speed of our great businesse which we have to doe aswell on this side the Sea as beyond The ninth sheafe the ninth fleece and the ninth Lamb to be taken by two years next comming after the making of the same And the Citizens and Burgesses of Cities and Boroughs the very ninth part of all their goods And the foraine merchants and others which live not of graine nor of flocke of sheepe the fifteenth part of their goods to the value We willing to provide for the indempnitie of the said Prelates Earles and other of the Communalty and also of the Citizens Burgesses and Merchants aforesaid will and grant for us and our heires to the same Prelates Earles Barons and Commons Citizens Burgesses and Merchants that the said grant which is so chargeable shall not another time be had forth in example nor fall to their prejudice in time to come nor that they be from henceforth charged nor grieved to make any aide or to sustaine the charge if it be not by common consent of the Prelates Earles Barons and other great men and Commons of our said Realm of England and that in Parliament Then by the Statute made in the five and twentieth year of King Edward the third cap. 8. it is enacted That no man shall be compelled to finde men of armes holberts or archers other then such as hold by such services if it bee not by common consent and grant in Parliament for that is against the common right of the Realme Which last words for that is against the common right of the Realme are in the Parliament Roll but left out of the printed books of the Statutes And this Act of Parliament is recited by an Act of Parliament made in the fourth yeare of the raigne of King Henry the fourth the 13. Chapter and enacted and observed in all things Then in the first yeare of King Richard the third and the second chapter it is recited That the Commons of this Realme by new and unlawfull inventions have beene put to importune charge especially by a new imposition called A benevolence It is enacted That the Subjects Communalty of this Realm from henceforth in no wise be charged by any such charge or imposition called a Benevolence nor by any other such charge Then comes the Act of Parliament made in the third yeare of the Kings Majesties owne raigne called The Petition of right whereby the Statute made in the time of King Edward the first commonly called the Statute De tallagio non concedendo is mentioned and many particular incroachments recited to be made upon the liberties of the Subject And many particulars being recited it is required to be enacted That no loane of money against the will and good liking of the Subjects Billeting of Souldiers and Mariners in mens houses there to sojourne against their wills Commissions of Martiall laws in times of peace They doe therefore humbly pray you that no man be hereafter compelled to yeeld or make any gift loan benevolence tax or such like charge without common consent by act of Parliament whereunto his Majesty consented with this subscription Soit Droit fait come est Desire And these are the Statutes whereupon I relie that this charge cannot be laid upon the Subject by this Writ onely without the aide of some act of Parliament Now for authorities of Booke cases and other authorities concurring herewith First by the Case of 13. Hen. 4. fol. 14 15 and 16. which were long debated It appeares that the King had granted an office for the measuring of Cloth in London and a power to take so much for his labour There was a Writ under the great Seale directed to the Mayor of London commanding him to put the Patentee in possession and the Patentee had put it in practice and divers had paid money to the Patentee And yet after upon a returne that there was no such office it is adjudged a good returne And it is there agreed That the King cannot by his Patent create or erect a new office in charge of his people without the speciall assent of the Commons And the King cannot grant to any that he shall take of every Carriage that shall come over such a bridge such a sum And it is said there in the sixteenth leafe that a common charge though it sound to the profit of the people cannot be granted out of Parliament And this in my opinion is a strong case in the point Then see 37. Hen. 8. Broke in Patents placito 100. The Kings Majestie may erect Markets and Faires with tolls incident For that concernes onely such as will buy but the King cannot grant toll Travert nor a Thorow toll nor alter or change Laws or Customes of the Realme nor make land deviseable or gavel-kinde or Borough English or change gavel-kinde or Borough English to be descendable to the heire which is so agreed in divers Books Then in the booke of Fortescue of his commendation of the Laws of England it is thus written in the ninth chapter the five and twentieth leafe The King of England cannot alter or change the Laws of his Realme at his pleasure For why he governeth his people by power not onely Royall but also politique If his power over them were onely Royall thē he might change the Laws of his Realme and charge his Subjects with tallage and other burthens without their consent And such is the dominion which the Civill law purports when they say that the will of a Prince hath the force of a Law But from this much differeth the power of a King whose government over his people is politique for he can neither change Laws without the consent of his Subjects nor yet charge them with strange impositions against their wills Rejoyce therefore O Soveraign Prince and be glad
that the Laws of your Realme wherein you shall succeed are such For it shall exhibit to you and your people no small security and comfort And the same Author fo. 84. cap. 36. saith thus That the King by his Officers though the owners would say nay may take necessaries for his house at a reasonable price to be assessed by the Constable Neverthelesse he is bound by the Law to pay therefore either presētly or at a day to be limited by the higher Officers of the house For by the Laws hee may take away none of his Subjects goods without due satisfaction for the same neither doth the King there either by himselfe or his servants and officers levie upon his Subjects Tallages Subsidies or any other burthens or alter their Laws or make new Laws without the expresse consent and agreement of his whole Realme in his Parliament And thus I have done with the positive part of my argument and I will indeavour to be shorter in the rest THE SECOND PART NOw in the second place I will give an answer to all such objections that have beene made by the Counsell of the King at the Barre and by some of my Brothers in their arguments against these Statutes First it hath beene objected that the Statute de Tallagio non concedendo was not a Statute And this was insisted upon by Mr. Solicitor and not without many probabilities of the Kings not then being in England and many other things by him alledged Yet because it hath beene generally agreed by all that have argued since that it was and is an Act of Parliament and is so recited in the Petition of right I will say no more to that But thereby and by his insisting so much upon that to be no Statute I doe conceive that he understood that Statute to be as indeed it is a forceable Statute against this imposition of a charge by Writ without the consent of the Parliament The second objection was That the words Aides Tax and Tallages doe not extend to this provision of Ships of Warre and men for defence and that there is no exception of the aides which are due to the Kings Majesty for making his eldest sonne Knight nor aides for mariage nor other aids by tenures The answer is easie for the words of the Statute of the fourteenth year of King Edward the third are That they shall not from henceforth be charged or grieved to make any aide or to sustaine any charge These are words so generall that all is comprehended which charges all And for the aides of making the eldest sonne Knight and the other aides they are not generall to charge all but particular such as are charged by tenure and neede no exception And yet in the Statute of 25. Ed. 3. cap. 8. there is an exception of other then those which hold by such tenure which exception was needlesse because no charge of any in particular is within any of the acts of Parliament but such as are generall and extend to charge all the Subjects of the Realme as this doth There hath beene another objection made against the Statute of 14. Edw. 3. that it should be but temporary for the time of the continuance of those wars And my Brother Berkley did except to this Statute because it is not mentioned in The petition of right To this there needs no other answer then the Statute it selfe First the preamble and then the body of the Act viz. That from henceforth they shall not be compelled to make any aide or sustaine any charge but by the common consent of the Prelates Earles Barons Great men and Commons of our Realme of England and that in Parliament This is an absolute Statute It is true that the latter clause whereby the King was pleased that the profits to be made of his Wards Marriages Escheats and other profits should be disposed of for the maintenance of the Realme of England and of his wars in Scotland France and Gascoy and elsewhere during the said warres This was a matter of the Kings bounty and Grace and was to continue no longer And to say that because it was not particularly mentioned amongst other in The petition of right therefore it should be of no force doth not stand with any reason to impeach the Statute nor many others that are not there enumerated The last and greatest Objection that hath beene made first by my Brother Crawley and after by others and insisted upon by my Brother Iones is That this is a Prerogative or power Royall so incident to the Kings Majesty that it cannot be taken away by any act of Parliament And as it was said it is proprium quarto modo And in proofe thereof it was affirmed that when there was in the beginning of King Iames his raigne a purpose to have taken away all tenures by an act of Parliament and to have shut up the Court of Wards It was resolved by the Judges that such a Statute had beene void First I doe agree that there are many things so incident in power to a King as are not in the power of any Parliament to take away as appeares by the case of 1. H. 7. of the disposing of the right of the Kingdome power of making Warre and Leagues The power of the coine and the value of coines and many other Monarchicall powers and prerogatives which to be taken away were against naturall reason and are incidents so inseparable that they cannot be taken away by Parliament And yet I will shew you and prove that Acts of Parliament have bounded limited and qualified the Kings ancient and inherent Prerogatives of like nature and of as great importance as this is It it said in Ploydon in the case of Mines f. 332. That every Prerogative that the King hath containes in it selfe a matter of Prescription and as it is there said That before the Statute of 2. Edw. 3. cap. 12. if one held his Land by Knights service of the King in Capite and had aliened that land in fee without the Kings licence the land was forfeited to the King And the King should have had the land to him and his Successors for ever The King willeth and granteth that the King shall not hold them as forfeit But shall take a reasonable fine to be assessed in the Chancery by due Processe And in the same booke fo. 322. The Kings Majesty might by Prerogative have taken woods in any mans wood for the repaire of his Castles but by the Statute of Magna Charta cap. 21. he is excluded of that The words are Neither We nor our Bailiffe nor any other for us shall take wood of any other mans to repaire our Castles nor to doe any other thing with them but by good will of him whose wood it is And by the Statute of 25. Edw. 3. cap. 1. It is enacted that from thenceforth neither he nor any of his heires shall
THE ARGVMENTS OF Sir RICHARD HUTTON Knight One of the Judges of the Common Pleas AND Sir GEORGE CROKE Knight One of the Judges of the Kings Bench TOGETHER WITH THE CERTIFICATE OF Sir JOHN DENHAM Knight One of the Barons of the Exchequer Vpon a Scire facias brought by the Kings Majesty in the Court of Exchequer against John Hampden Esquire AS ALSO The severall Votes of the Commons and 〈◊〉 PARLIAMENT and the Orders of the Lords for 〈◊〉 vacating of the Judgement given against the said 〈◊〉 Hampden and the vacating of the severall Rolls in each severall Court wherein the Judges extrajudiciall Opinions in the Cases made touching SHIP-MONEY are entred LONDON Printed by M. Flesher and R. Young the Assignes of I. More Esquire 1641. THE ARGVMENT OF Mr. Justice HUTTON A Scire facias brought by the Kings Majestie in the Exchequer against Iohn Hampden The case upon the pleading appeares to be this THE Kings Majesty by his writ under the great Seale of England bearing date the fourth day of August in the eleventh yeare of his raigne directed to the Sheriffe of the County of Buck and to the Bailiffe and Burgesses of the Borough and parish of Buckingham and to the Mayors of divers particular Townes in the said County of Buckingham and to all honest men in the same and in all the Townes Villages and places in the said County sendeth greeting reciting that where hee is given to understand that certaine Robbers Pirates and spoilers by Sea as well enemies to the name of Christians as Mahumetans and others being assembled together not onely to take and spoile our Ships and the goods and merchandizes but also the goods and merchandizes of the Subjects of our friends upon the Sea and which had of old been used to be defended at their pleasures and to take and carrie the men in those ships into most miserable captivity and there keepe them And the King doth see that they daily provide ships to vex our Merchants and grieve our Kingdome unlesse speedy remedy bee provided therein And considering the perils which in these times of war are every where imminent The King for the defence of the Sea the security of his Subjects the safe conduct of the Ships and merchandizes being willing by Gods assistance to provide the rather for that he and his progenitors Kings of England have beene Lords of the Sea And where this charge of publique defence which concerneth all ought to be supported by all as by the Laws and Customes of this Realme of England it had been done Therefore the King by his Writ commanded that a Ship of warre of the burthen of foure hundred and fifty Tunnes fitted and furnished with all things necessary for warre and one hundred and eighty men able and sufficient victualled and this to be done before the first of March And then at that time to come so prepared furnished and victualled for the space of twenty six weekes then next following and with wages for so many men of warre for that time to Portchmouth into the companie of such other ships of our Subjects and our owne as shall bee there under the government of such a man to whom before that day wee shall commit the custody of the Seas and to goe from thence with the Kings ships and the ships of other our faithfull Subjects for the defence of the Sea and the repulsing and overcomming of any whosoever which shall molest and hinder the comming in or going out of our Merchants or others upon the Seas A power is given by the writ to the Sheriffe and to the Mayors and any two of them for Corporate townes whereof the Sheriffe to be one to assesse what summes the Mayors and Corporations shall pay towards this charge if they doe not then to be done by the Sheriffe alone A generall power to the Sheriffe to assesse all the inhabitants of all other Townes Villages Hamlets and places and the Tertenants other then such as shall have a part of the said ship or shall serve in the said ship to contribute towards the necessary expence for the provision of the premises upon every man according to his estate and faculty And such portions so to be assessed upon them to levie by distresse or other due meanes A power to name Collectors And a power to commit to prison all such as the Sheriffe shall find rebellious or contradicting the premises There to remaine untill the Kings Majestie shall thinke fit to give order for their inlargement And by vertue of this writ Sir Peter Temple then Sheriffe of the said County did assesse upon the Defendant twenty shillings towards this charge which was after allowed by the succeeding Sheriff Sir Henry Proby and the Defendant was required to pay it but refused And then by a Certiorare out of the Chancery directed to those Sheriffes which had beene Sheriffes betwixt the fourth day of August in the eleventh yeare and the first of March then following to certifie what sum of money had been assessed upon the Defendant for contribution They certified the said summe of twenty shillings Then by Writ of Mittimus out of the Chancery bearing date the fift day of May in the thirteenth year of the Kings Majesties raigne the writ of 4. Augusti Anno undecimo Car. and the Schedule returned into the Chancery whereby the Defendant was so assessed are sent into the Exchequer to proceede against the Defendant for the levying of the summe of twenty shillings which he hath not paid and proceede there to do that which of right and according to the custome ought to bee done for the levying thereof In this Writ of Mittimus it is contained that the writ bearing date the fourth of August Anno 11. Car. was granted for the defence of the Realme the safegard of the Sea the security of the Subjects and for that the safety of the Kingdom of England was in danger But these causes are not expressed in the Writ but other particular causes And upon the tenours of these Writs depending in the Chancery thus sent into the Exchequer this Writ of Scire fac ' is awarded bearing date the twentieth day of May in the thirteenth yeare of the Kings Majesties raigne against the said Iohn Hampden to shew what hee hath to say for himselfe why the said summe so assessed upon him and not paid ought not by him to be satisfied and to doe further what that Court should thinke fit to order To which writ the Defendant appeared in Trinitie Tearme and praied the sight of the writ of the fourth of August and the Certiorare and the Mittimus and they are all entred in haec verba Whereupon the Defendant did demurre generally And Master Atturney generall joyned in demurrer and the Record being read there and opened the Court did adjourne it into the Exchequer Chamber before any argument there at the Barre The sole Question is Whether this Scire fac doth lye
are not found in the Rolls as Magna Charta is not And as touching the time I conceive it to be made in 34. Edw. 1. cap. 1. for so it is set down in the great printed book of Statutes anno 1618. to bee the first chapter of the Statutes therein made viz. in these words No tallage or aide shall be taken or levied by us or our heires in our Realme without the good will and assent of Archbishops Bishops Earles Barons Knights Burgesses and other Freemen of the land And that it is a Statute all my brethren the Judges have agreed The onely doubt then is Whether this Statute extendeth to aides for defence of the Kingdome which I thinke it doth for it is the precise words That no tallage or aide shall bee taken or levied but by consent in Parliament which extendeth to all manner of aides Bodin saith fol. 97. by a Law made in the time of Edw. 1. that it was provided and enacted That no taxe tallage nor aide shall bee imposed but by grant in Parliament and by this Law the Subjects of England have defended themselves ever since as with a buckler whereby it appeareth that notice was taken of this Law in forraine parts and so held still to be a Statute in force The next Statute is 14. Edw. 3. cap. 1. which reciteth the grant of the great Subsidy of the ninth fleece of the ninth Lamb c. formerly granted and thereupon these words follow Wee willing to provide for the indemnity of the said Prelates Earles Barons and other the Comminalty of the Realme and also of the Citizens Burgesses and Merchants aforesaid will and grant for us and our heires to the same Prelates Earles Barons and Commons Citizens Burgesses and Merchants that the same grant shall not bee had forth in example nor fall to their prejudice in time to come Nor that they bee from henceforth charged nor grieved to make any aide nor sustaine charge if it bee not by the common assent of the said Prelates Earles Barons and other great men and Commons of the said Realme of England and that in the Parliament And that all the profits arising of the said aide and of Wards marriages Customes and Escheats and other profits arising of our said Realme of England shall be set dispended upon the maintenance of the safeguard of this Realme of England and of our warres of Scotland France and Gascoin and in no place elsewhere during our said warres By this statute it appeareth that it is expresly provided That the subjects should not be from thenceforth charged nor grieved to make any aide nor sustaine any charge but by common assent and that in Parliament which is as expresse as may be and exclusive to any charge otherwise which I conceive was made against the appointment of making or preparing and sending of ships at the charges of the Townes whence they were or sending men out of their Counties at the charges of the County Now where it is alledged by my brother Weston and my brother Berkley that this was but a temporary statute and ended when his warres ended which appeareth by the last clause for employment of those profits of his Wards c. towards those warres I conceive it appeareth to bee an absolute and perpetuall statute for it is granted for him and his heires which is in perpetuity And also it appeares by Plowd his Cōmentaries fol. 457. in Sir Thomas Wroth's Case where a grant is by the name of the King which is in his politicke capacity this extended against him his heires and successours although they bee not named Also the intendment of this Law appeareth to bee for the security of the subjects from thenceforth for all future ages and then the office of Judges is as appeares by Sir Edward Cokes Reports lib. 3. fol. 7. and Plowdens Commentaries in Byston and Studs Case to construe statutes according to the true intent of the makers thereof which was in this Case That it should bee a perpetuall security for them and to little purpose it had been to make a statute to continue but during the time of the warres Also where it is alledged that the statute of 14. Edw. 3. is not mentioned in the Petition of right which is some Argument that it was not conceived to be a continuing statute To that I answer that in that Petition of right it is said That by the statutes there recited and other the good Statutes of this Realme the Subjects shall not be compelled to contribute to any Taxe Tallage Aide nor other like charge not set by Parliament in which this Statute is as well intended as other Statutes and as farre as if it had beene expresly recited Also it appeareth by all the bookes of Statutes that this Statute is printed as a Statute continuing whereas others expired are so set downe as expired 21. Edw. 3. pars 2. m. 11. A Subsidy being granted by Parliament viz. forty shillings of every sacke of Wooll transported before Michaelmas following and six pence of every twenty shillings of merchandize for the safe guarding of the Merchants defence of the Coasts c. After Michaelmas viz. 31. Octob. 21. Edw. 3. by Writ the Collectors were commanded to continue the collection of those Subsidies untill Easter But 26. Novemb. 21. Edw. 3. the King by Writ commanded the stay of the collection of the six pence in the 20 shillings and to continue the collection of the Subsidies upon the sackes of Wooll untill Easter 22. Edw. 3. Parliament mem. 16. the Parliament being holden in Lent the Commons complained of this continuance of the collection of the Subsidy upon the sacks of Wooll longer then the Parliament had granted it and provided that it should not be continued longer then Easter by the procurement of no person By this it appeareth that the Parliament being carefull that the time for levying of a Subsidy granted should not bee inlarged by any power much lesse would they admit of a Writ to lay a charge without grant by Parliament 25. Edw. 3. m. 8. it was enacted That no man should bee compelled to find men at armes other then such as hold by such services except it be by common assent in Parliament By this it appeareth that if men bee not compellable to find a man at armes unlesse it bee by common assent in Parliament much lesse is any bound to bee contributory to the preparing of a ship with 180. men at armes and victuals and wages of the souldiers for a time unlesse it be by common assent in Parliament Rot. Parliamenti 2. Hen. 4. nu 22. an Act of Parliament as I account in the very point is in these words For that of late divers Commissions were made to divers Cities and Burroughs within the Realme to make Barges and Barringers without assent in Parliament and otherwise then hath beene done before these houres The Commons do pray the King that
he to return the same to the Court whereunto he is the immediate officer and the former are not any officers So the Scire fac ' thereupon grounded I conceive is not good also the Scire fac ' to warne Mr. Hampden ad ostend ●i quid pro se habeat c. quare de praedict viginti solid onerare non debet not shewing to whom is uncertaine and insufficient Thereupon I conclude upon the whole ma●er That no judgement can be given to charge the Defendant FINIS Iudgement was given against Mr Hampden by the greater part of the Iudges And when the Iudges had delivered their opinions the Barons gave Iudgement Quod oneret●r c. Afterwards in this present Parliament begun at Westminster 3. Novembris Anno Dom. 1640. the Commons took into their considerations the extrajudiciall opinions of the Iudges the Ship-writs and this Iudgement against Mr Hampden and being read openly in the House after long debate Die Lunae septimo die Decemb. 1640. these foure severall Votes passed upon them without so much as one negative Voice to any of them viz. THat the charge imposed upon the Subjects for the providing and furnishing of Ships and the assesments for raising of money for that purpose commonly called Spip-money are against the Laws of the Realm the Subjects right of Property and contrary to former resolutions in Parliament and to The Petition of Right THat the extrajudiciall opinions of the Judges published in the Star-chamber and inrolled in the Courts at Westminster in haec verba THE CASE Charles Rex VVHen the good and safety of the Kingdome in generall is concerned and the whole Kingdome in danger whether may not the King by Writ under the Great Seal of England command all the Subjects in this Kingdome at their charge to provide and furnish such number of Ships with men victuall and munition and for such a time as hee shall think fit for the defence and safegard of the Kingdome from such danger and perill and by Law compell the doing thereof in case of refusall or refractorinesse And whether in such case is not the King the sole Judge both of the danger and when and how the same is to be prevented and avoided C. R. THEIR OPINIONS MAy it please Your most excellent Majesty We have according to Your Majesties command severally and every man by himself and all of us together taken into serious consideration the Case and questions signed by Your Majestie and inclosed in Your Letter And we are of opinion That when the good and safety of the Kingdome in generall is concerned and the whole Kingdome in danger Your Majesty may by Writ under the Great Seale of England command all the Subjects of this Your Kingdome at their charge to provide and furnish such number of Ships with men victuall and munition and for such time as Your Majesty shall think fit for the defence safegard of the Kingdome from such danger and perill and that by Law Your Majesty may compell the doing thereof in case of refusall or refractorinesse And we are also of opinion that in such case Your Majesty is the sole Judge both of the danger and when and how the same is to be prevented and avoided In the whole and in every part of them are against the Lawes of the Realme the Right of Property and the liberty of the Subjects and contrary to former Resolutions in Parliament and to The Petition of Right THat the Writ following in hae● verba viz. CHARLES by the Grace of God King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. To Our right trusty and welbeloved Councellor Thomas Lord Coventry Keeper of Our great Seal of England greeting These are to will and require you that for the safegard of the Seas and defence of the Realme you issue forth or cause to be issued forth of our high Court of Chancery these ensuing Writs in the forme following with Duplicats of them under Our Great Seale of England unto the Counties Cities Townes and places hereafter ensuing and for so doing this shall be your warrant REx c. Vic. Com. nostri Buck. Ballivis Burgensibus Burgi paroch de Buckingham Maiori Ballivis Burgensibus Burgi de Chepping Wicombe alias Wicombe Ballivis Aldermannis Burgensibus Burgi de Aylesbury ac probis hominibus in eisdem Burgis parochiis membris eorundem in Villis de Agmondisham Wendover Marlowe magna ac in omnibus aliis Villis Burgis Villat Hamlet aliis locis in dicto Com. Buck. salutem Quia datum est nobis intelligi quod praedones quidam Piratae maris Grassatores tam nominis Christiani hostes Mahumetani quam alii congregat Naves bona ac mercimonia non solum Subditorum nostrorum verumetiam Subditorum Amicorum nostrorum in mari quod per gentem Anglicanam ab olim defendi consuevit nefariè diripientes spoliantes ea ad libitum suum deportavere hominesque in eisdem in captivitatem miserrimam mancipantes Cumque ipsos conspicimus Navigium indies praeparantes ad Mercatores nostros ulterius molestand regnum gravand nisi citius remedium apponatur eorumque conatui virilius obvietur consideratis etiam periculis quae undique his guerrinis temporibus imminent ita quod nobis Subditis nostris defensionem maris regni omni festinatione qua poterimus accelerare convenit Nos volentes defensioni regni tuitioni maris securitati Subditorum nostrorum salvae conductioni Navium Merchandizarum ad regnum nostrum Angliae venient ' de eodem regno ad partes exteras transeunt ' auxiliante Deo providere maxime cum nos Progenitores nostri Reges Angliae Domini maris praedict. semper hactenus extiterint plurimum nos taederet si honor iste regnis nostris temporibus depereat aut in aliquo imminuatur Cumque onus istud defensionis quod omnes tangit per omnes debeat supportari prout per legem consuetudinem regni nostri fieri consueverit Vobis praefat. Vicecom Maior Ballivis Aldermannis Burgensibus probis hominibus omnibus aliis quibuscunque supramentionat Villis Burgis Vill Hamlet locis suprad eorumque membris in fide ligeantia quibus nobis tenemini sicut Nos honorē nostr. diligitis necnon sub forisfactur omniumque quae nobis forisfacere poteritis firmiter injungend Mandamus quod unam Navem de guerra portagii quadringent quinquagint doliorum cum hominibus tam Magistris peritis quam Marinariis valentioribus expertis centum octoginta ad minus ac etiam tormentis tam majoribus quam minoribus pulvere tormentario ac hastis telis aliisque armatur necessar pro guerra sufficien cum duplici eskippamento necnon cum victual usque ad primum diem Marcii jam proximè