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B09176 The faithful analist:, or, The epitome of the English history: giving a true accompt of the affairs of this nation, from the building of the tower in London, in the days of William the Conquerour, to the throwing down the gates of the said city, by the command of the Parliament, which state before the secluded members were admitted, in the yeer 1660. In which all things remarkable both by sea and land from the yeer 1069. To this present yeer of 1660 are truly and exactly represented. G. W. 1660 (1660) Wing G69; ESTC R177297 114,611 376

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Suffolk The second of May Ione Butcher was burned in Smithfield for heresie she held that Christ took no flesh of the Virgin Mary Richar● Lion Godard Gorran and Richard Ireland were executed the fourteenth of May for attempting a new rebellion in Kent In the moneth of May a miller at Battle-bridge was set in the pillory in cheap-side and had both his ears cut off for speaking some words against the Duke of Sommerset On Saint Valentines day at Feversham in Kent one Arden a gentleman was murdered by consent of his wife for the which fact she was on the fourteenth of March burnt at Canterbury Michael Master Ardens man was hanged in chains at Feversham and a maiden burnt Mosby and his Sister were hanged in Smithfield at London Green which had fled came again certain years after and was hanged in chains in the high-way over against Feversham and Black-VVill the Ruffin that was hired to do the act was burnt in Zealand at Flushing The twenty fourth of April a Dutch-man was burnt in Smithfield for an Arrian The twenty fifth of May an earthquake about Croydon and those parts did put the people in great fear An. Dom. 1552 The twenty sixth o● February Sir Richard Vine and Sir Martin Patridge were hanged on tower-hill Sir Martin Stanhope with Sir Thomas Arundel were beheaded there the last of April a house near to the tower of London with three barrels of powder was blown up the Gunpowder-makers being fifteen in number were all slain The third of August at Middleton eleven miles from Oxford a woman brought forth a child which had two perfect bodies from the navel upwards and were so joyned together at the navel that when they were laid out at length the one head and body was West and the other East the legs of both the bodies were joyned together in the midst they lived eighteen daies and they were women children The eighth of August were taken at Queenborough three great fishes called Dolphins and the week following at Black-wall was six more taken and brought to London The seventh of October were three great fishes called Whirl-pools taken at Gravesend The eighth of October was three more great fishes called Whirlpools taken at Gravesend and drawn up to the Kings Bridge at VVestminster King Edward being at the age of sixteen years ended his life at Greenwich on the sixth of Iuly when he had reigned six years five moneths and odd daies and was buried at VVestminster The tenth of Iuly was pro●lamation made of the death of King Edward and how he had ordained that the Lady Iane Daughter to Frances Dutchess of Suffolk which Lady Iane was married to the Lord Gilford Dudley fourth son to the Duke of Northumberland should be Heir to the Crown of England The eleventh of Iuly Gilbert Pott drawe● to Ninion Sanders Vintner dw●lling ●● the sign of S●int Iohn-Bapt●st-head within Ludgate was set on the pillory in Cheap wi●h bo●h his ears nailed to the Pillory and cut off for words speaking at the time of Proclamation of the Lady Iane. Lady Mary eldest daughter to King Henry the eight fled to Frammington Castle in Suffolk where the people of the countrey almost wholly resorted unto her In Oxford Sir Iohn Williams in Buckinghamshire Sir Edmond Peckham and in divers other places many men of worship offering themselves as guides to the common people gathered great powers and with all speed made towards Suffolk where the Lady Mary was Also the thirteenth of Iuly by the appointment of the Councel the Duke of Northumberland the Earl of Huntington the Lord Grey of Wilton and divers others with a great number of men of Armes set forward to fetch the Lady Mary by force and were on their way as far as Burie The ninteenth of Iuly the Counsel assembled themselves at Baynards Castle where they communed with the Earl of Pembrook and immediately with the Lord Mayor of London certain Aldermen of London and the Sheriffs Garter King of Arms and a Trumpet went into Cheap where they proclaimed Lady Mary daughter to King Henry the eight Queen of England France and Ireland The twentieth of Iuly Iohn Earl of Northumberland being at Saint Edmonsbury and having sure knowledge that the Lady Mary was at London proclaimed Queen of England returned back again to Cambridge and about five of the clock in the Evening he came to the market-place and caused the Lady Mary to be likewise proclaimed Queen of England but shortly after he was arrested and brought to the Tower of London the twenty fifth of Iuly under the conduct of Henry Earl of Arundel thus was the matter ended without any bloodshed which men feared would have brought the death of thousands Queen Mary An. Reg. 1 MAry the eldest daughter to King Henry the eight began her reign the sixth of Iuly in the year 1553. She came to London and was received with great joy and entred the Tower the third of August where Thomas Duke of Norfolk Doctor Gardner late Bishop of Winchester and Edward Courtney son and heir to Henry Marquess of Exeter prisoners in the Tower discharged the fifth of August Edmond Bonner late Bishop of London prisoner in the Marshal Seas and Cutbert Tunstal Bishop of Durham prisoners in the Kings Bench were restored to their Seas shortly after all the Bishops which had been deprived in the time of King Edward the sixth were restored to their Bishopricks again also all beneficed men that were married or would not forsake their opinions were put out of their livings and others set in the same The eleventh of August certain gentlemen minding to pass through London Bridge in a Wherrie were there overturned and six of them drowned The thirteenth of August master Bourn a Canon of Pauls preached at Pauls Cross so offended some of his audience that they breaking silence cryed out pull him down and one threw a dagger at him whereupon master Bradford and Master Rogers two preachers in King Edwards dayes with much labour conveyed the said master Bourn out of the audience into Pauls School The twenty second of August Iohn Duke of Northumberland Sir Iohu Gaites and Sir Thomas Palmer Knights were beheaded on tower hill The Queen was crowned at VVestminster the first of October by Doctor Gardiner Bishop of Winchester The twenty f●f●h of October the Ba●ge of Gravesend was overturned and forty persons drowned In the beginning of the moneth of Ianuary the Emperour sent a nobleman called Egmont and certain other Embassadours into England to conclude a marriage between King Phillip his son and Queen Mary The twenty fifth of Ianuary Sir George Gage Chamberlain certified the Lord Major of London that Sir Thomas VViat with cettain other Rebels were up in Kent whereupon great watch was kept and that night the Lord Major himself rode about the City to look to the same and every night after two Aldermen did the like in the day time the gates of the City were guarded by substantial Citizens The
in the Cathedral Church of Pauls that the Church did shake as if it would have fallen and out of a dark cloud there leaped such a flash of lightning that all the Church seemed to be on a fire the people thinking they should have been burned ran all of them out of the Church fell groavling on the ground void of understanding an reg 15. The Iews at Norwich stole a boy and circumcised him an indirision of Christian Religion they had an intent to have crucified him at Easter for which fact they justly suffered as they deserved an reg 19. A Scholer of Oxford endeavouring to kill the King in his chamber at Woodstocst was taken and pulled to pieces with horses an reg 20. The Iews were constrained to pay twenty thousand mark or to be kept in perpetual imprisonment the wals of the Tower of London were thrown down by an Earthquake as they were some years before an reg 27. The Thames overflowed the banks about Lambeth and drowned houses and fields for the space of six miles all along In the great Hall at Westminster men did ride on horseback an reg 28. The sea flowing twice without an Ebb did make so horrible a noise that it was heard a great way into England and did much amaze and affright the people and not long afterwards in a dark night the sea seemed to be all on a fire and the waves to fight against one another so that the Marriners were not able to save their ships from shipwrack an reg 34. The steeple of Bow in Cheapside fell down and slew many men and women an reg 35. IX Edward the first called Long-shanks GReat Earthquakes lightning and thunders with a blazing star and a Comet in the appearance of a great Dragon which made many men afraid anno reg 3. An accusation was made for clipping the Kings coyn for which offence two hundred sixty and seven Iews were executed an reg 5. So great a frost that five arches of London Brige and all Rochester Bridge were born downe and carried away anno regni 9. The Summer was so exceeding hot that many died with the extremity thereof an reg 16. The King banished the Iews out of England giving them wherewith to bear their charges till they were out of England the number of the Iews expulsed were 15 M. and nine person an reg 19. Three men had their hands cut off for rescuing a prisoner from an Officer of the City of London an reg 22. The Monastery at Westminster was much ruined by fire an reg 27. X. Edward the second PEirce Gauston being banished and returned again into England was taken by the Barons of England and beheadded at Warwick Castle an reg 5. The King caused Writts to be published that no oxe stalled or corn-fed should be sold for more then four and twenty shillings no gras-fed oxe for more then sixteen shillings a fat stalled cow at twelve shillings another cow at ten shillings A Butt Motton whose wooll is well grown at twenty pence a fat mutton shorn at fourteen-pence a fat hogg of two years old at three shillings four pence a fat goose at two pence half penny in the City three pence a fat Capon at two pence in the City two pence half penny a fat hen at one penny in the City at three half-pence four pidgeons for one penny twenty four eggs for a penny in the city twenty eggs a penny I would they were so still an reg 6. And yet for all this there was a grievous famine and mortality so that the quick could hardly bury the dead the cattel died by reason of the corruption of the grass the famine was so great that some in holes and corners did eat the flesh of their own children the thieves that were in prison did pluck in pieces those that were newly brought in amongst them and greedily devoured them half alive an reg 11. A great murraine of kine happened insomuch that doggs and ravens eating of them were poysoned an reg 12. II. King Edward the third KIng Edward the second was cruelly murdered in the Castle of Berkley by the practise of the Queen his wife and the Lord Mortimer an reg 2. Roger Mortimer was taken and sent to London where he was condemned and hanged an reg 3. The sea brake in through all the banks of England so that great store of cattle were drowned an reg 11. In Oxfordshire a serpent was found having two heads and two faces like women one face attired of the new fashion of womens attire and the other face like the old attire and wings like a bat an reg 20. Many men and women perished with thunder and lightning Feinds and devils and strange apparitions were seen by men and spake to them as they travelled an reg 25. A frost in England from the midst of September to the moneth of April an reg 38. XII King Richard the second IAck Straw was beheaded for Rebellion against the King anno regni 3. Wat. Tiler being arrested by the Mayor of the City for high Treason was slain in Smithfield and all the rest of the crew pardoned by the King There was a general Earthquake of the effects whereof the waters did partake insomuch that it made the ships in the havens to totter an reg 6. The nobles rose against the King and in Oxford the West and Southern Schollars did assail the Northern by reason whereof many murders were committed an reg 11. XIII King Henry the fourth IOhn Holland late Duke of Excester Thomas Holland Duke of Surrey Edward Duke of Aumarle John Montacute Earl of Salisbury with several other persons having conspired privily to murder the King were all put to death for their treason an reg 2. King Richard died in Pontefrad Castle he was buried at Langley an reg 3. A pestilence in London consumed above thirty thousand persons and not long afterwards there followed a hard frost which continued fifteen weeks an reg 11. XIV King Henry the fifth RIchard Earl of Cambridge Sir Thomas Grey and others were executed at Southampton for a conspiracy against the King an reg 2. The King fought the memorable battail at Agin Court in France and obtained a marvellous victory anno reg 4. Sir John Oldcastle having broke out of the Tower was taken by the Lord Powis and sent to London where being convicted by the Parliament he was carried to St. Giles in the fields where he was both hanged and consumed with fire an reg 6. XV. King Henry the sixth THere was a great Earthquake which continued for the space of two houres an reg 5. A Welchman murdered a Widow in White-Chappel and stole away her goods but afterwards coming by the place where he did the murther the women of the Parish with stones and sheeps-hornes and durt off the dunghills made an end of him an reg 8. The gate on London bridge with the Tower next to Southwark fell down and the two
farthest Arches of the said Bridge and no man perished anno reg 15. All the Lions in the Tower of London died an reg 16. The Postern of London by East-Smithfield against the Tower of London sunck by night and a great wind blew down almost one side of the street called the old change an reg 18. Eleaner Cobham Dutches of Glocester for sorcery received sentence of pennance from the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and on the seventeenth of November she came from Temple-Bar to Pauls with a Taper of wax in her hand which she offered at the Altar on the Wednesday following she went from Gracious street to Leaden-Hall and so to Algate and on the next Market day she went from Cheapside to St. Michaels in Conrnhil in form aforesaid an reg 20. The Commons of Kent did rise in great number one Jack Cade being their Captain these Rebels did great mischief but they submitted at last to the Kings mercy and Jack Cade was slain in the Wild of Sussex an reg 30. William Carton of London Mercer brought over into England from Germany the science of Printing which he practised afterwards at the Abby of St. Peters in Westminster an reg 38. XVI Edward the fourth MAny battails were fought betwixt King Edward and the adherents to King Henry the sixth in which King Edward still prevailed at the last King Henry was taken and sent to the Tower where he was murthered an reg 4. Some riotus persons that fired the gates of the City of London and would force their entrance into the City being apprehended the King caused the rich to hang by the purse and the poor by the neck an reg 12. George Duke of Clarence was drowned in a butt of Malmssey anno reg 18. XVII King Richard the fourth EDward the fifth being deprived of his life by his unnatural Uncle Ri. having raigned but two months some few daies his Uncle commonly called the usurper was proclaimed King and crowned at Westminster presently afterwards insued the death of the Duke of Buckingham who was beheaded at Salisbury for treason and on the year following was the battail at Bosworth field where Richard was slain himself and buried in the Grey Fryars Church at Leicester XVIII King Henry the seventh THe Sweating sickness began in the moneth of September which in six weeks time devoured a great number of people an reg 1. A commotion was made by the Commons in Cornwal upon the discontent of some subsedy which was granted to the King they came as far as Black Heath where three hundred of them were slain and fifteen hundred taken Prisoners the Lord Andely chief leader of them was beheaded on Tower hill an reg 10. Perkin Warbeck proclaimed himself King Richard the fourth second son to King Edward was taken being once pardoned before and executed at Tiburn an reg 11. XIX King Henry the eighth AN Insurrection of the Apprentises in London against Aliens for which divers of them were hanged with their Captain John Lincorn a Broker this being on the first of May it was called afterwards the ill May day anno regni 9. Richard Rice a Cook was boyled in Smithfield for poysoning divers persons at the Bishop of Winchesters house an reg 23. Many great personages were beheaded in this Kings daies and some of his own wives when he began to be weary of them XX. Edward the sixth THe Book of Common Prayers was read in English to the great contentment of the people an reg 2. The Commons made great commotions and rose against inclosures the Rebels in Norfolk and Suffolk were most formidable but being subdued by the Earl of Warwick Rob. Kett was hanged in Chains on the top of Norwich Castle and William his Brother was hanged on the top of Windham Castle an reg 3. XXI Queen Mary THe Popish Bishops were all restored an reg 1. Sir Thomas Wiatt having drawn forces together against the Queen and peace of the kingdome was beheaded anno reg 3. The French became Masters of Callice an reg 4. Many Protestants for their consciences did perish in the flames of Martyrdome during the raign of this Queen XXII Queen Elizabeth THe Book of Common Prayer was established and Mass clean suppressed an reg 1. The lofty spier of Pauls steeple which was two hundred foot high from the top of the Stone battlements was set on fire by lightning which fire ceased not till it came down to the roof of the Church and consumed all the bels and lead an reg 3. Sir Thomas Gresham did build the Royal Exchange at his own proper costs by the advice and incouragement of Queen Elizabeth an reg 8. The ground opened and certain rocks with a piece of ground removed and went forward for the space of four daies so that where pasture grounds was there was tillage and where tillage ground was there was pasture found in the place of it this was done neer Marlech in the County of Hereford an reg 13. Strange and numerous apparitions of great flies in Winter and terrible Earthquakes and a woman in London brought to bed of four children an reg 18. the like afterwards an reg 22. Mary Queen of the Scots was put to death an reg 31. and in the year following was the great victory against the Spanish Armado supposed to be invincible The Earl of Essex was beheaded the Earl of Southampton was also arraigned and found guilty of high treason an reg 43. XXIII King Iames. RObert Dove Merchant taylor gave means for ever for the toling of a Bell in Sepulchres Church to cause good people to pray for such prisoners as are to be executed an reg 2. The wonderful deliverance from the horrible gunpowder treason an reg 3. The great hard frost when boothes were set up on the River of Thames an reg 7. Sir Thomas Overbury was committed to the Tower where not long afterwards he was poysoned an reg 10. Prince Henry dyed on the sixth of Octob. 1611. and on the fourteenth of February following the Lady Elizabeth was married to the Palsgrave Sir Walter Raleigh that miracle of arms and arts was beheaded anno reg 16. XXIV King Charles KIng Charles was married to Henretta Maria sister to the King of France then living an reg 1. In this year the pestilence raged in London of which above five thousand died in one week The Earl of Castle-Haven being arraigned at the Kings Bench bar and found guilty of Rape and Sodomy was executed on Tower hill an reg 6. Mr. Pryn Doctor Bastwick and Mr. Burton were sentensed in the high Commission Court and ordered to be banished an reg 11. Ship-money this year was called upon to be paid which procured afterwards great divisions The King marched against the scots who would not endure any alteration in their religion The Scots in the second expedition having the better the King was enforced to call a Parliament an reg 15. The King and Parliament not agreeing the
battail of Edge hill was fought an reg 17. After many battels at Newbery Marston Moore Naseby and other places the King was quite worsted and enforced to fly to the Scots an reg 22. The King being sold to the English by the Scots was brought from the Isle of Wight and being tryed by a High Court of Iustice was beheaded before the gates of Whitehal an reg 23. XXV Oliver Cromwel Protector AFter the death of King Charles Oliver Cromwel having made himself famous by many great atchievements was chosen to be Generalissimo of the Common-wealth of England in the place of the Lord Fairfax and advancing into Ireland he took Drogheda by storm and pursuing his victories he became absolute master of that Nation anno 1649. and 1650. The great battail at Dunbar was fought where the Scots were totally overthrown two and twenty great guns taken and arms for fifteen thousand men an 1651. The arms of the Crown of England and statues of King Charles were put down by order of Parliament 1651. Mr. Love the Minister and Mr. Gibbons were beheaded both on Tower hill 1651. The great battail at Worcester where the young King of Scotland was overthrown an 1652. Many great battails at sea betwixt English and Hollanders 1652. and 1953. The Lord General Cromwel was declared and sworn Lord Protector of the Common-wealth of England Scotland and Ireland 1654. The Hollanders obtained peace of the English 1654. A BRIEF ABSTRACT OF All the wonders and remarkable passages since William the Conquerour till the Raign of King Charles Written for the benefit of posterity To the Reader REader I have taken pains to abstract out of the Chronicle all the remarkable wonders and passages of concernment from William the Conqueror to the raign of King Charles I hope thou art not so ignorant but that thou wilt find it and grant it useful for us and our posterity hereafter Vale. Wonders and remarkable passages William Conquerour An. Reg. 3 An. Dom. 1069 A Gelricus Bishop of Durham being accused of treason was imprisoned at Westminster An. Reg. 4 Such a dearth was in England that men did eat horses cats dogs and mans flesh An. Dom. 1070 An. Reg. 5 King William bereaved all the Monasteries and Abbies of England of their gold and silver sparing neither Challice nor Shrine An. Dom. 1075 An. Reg. 10 Walter Bishop of Durham bought of King William the Earldome of Northumberland wherein he used such cruelty that the inhabitants slew him An. Dom. 1076 An. Reg. 11 The earth was hard frozen from the middest of November to the midd'st of April An. Dom. 1077 An. reg 12 Upon Palm Sunday about noon appeared a blazing Star neer unto the Sun An. Dom. 1078 An. reg 13 This year King William builded the Tower of London An. Dom. 1079 An. reg 14 Thurstone Abbot of Glassenbury in his Church caused three monks to be slain and eighteen men to be wounded that their blood ran down from the Altar to the steps An. Reg. 15 This year was a great wind on Christmas day a great Earthquake and roaring out of the earth the sixth of April An. reg 20 There was a great floud so Pauls Church burnt that hills were made soft and consumed and with their fall overwhelmed many villages to the great amazement of all An. reg 21 In a province of Wales called Rose was found the Sepulchre of Gawen upon the sea shore who was sisters son of Arthur the Great king of Brittain being in length fourteen foot King William being at Roan in Normandy went with a great Army into France spoyling all things as he passed last of all he burned the city of Meaux with our Lady Church and two Anchorits that were inclosed there the king cheared his men to feed the fire and came himself so neer that with the heat of his harness he got a disease also the Kings horse leaping over a ditch did burst the inner parts of the King with the pain whereof he was sore afflicted and returned to Roan where shortly after he ended his life the ninth day of September in the year of our Lord 1087. when he had raigned 20. years eight months and sixteen dayes I would have the Reader understand that I set down nothing but things that are remarkable in this kings dayes nor in any kings dayes else and that is the reason that the date of years do not follow in order for I skip a great part of needless things because I would not be too tedious nor abuse thy patience too much William Rufus An. Reg. 4 Agreat tempest fell on St. Lukes day especially in Winchcomb where a great part of the Steeple was overthrown and in London the wind overturned 606. houses and the roof of Bow Church in Cheap-side wherewith some persons were slain An. Reg. 6 This year was a great famine and so great a mortality that the quick were scant able to burie the dead An. Reg. 11 All the land that sometimes belonged to Earl Goodwin by breaking in of the sea was covered with sands and is yet to this day called Goodwin sands An. Reg. 13 In the summer blood sprang out of the earth at Finchamsted in Barkshire King William on the morrow after Lammas day hunting in the new Forrest sir William Tirrel shooting at a dear at unawares hit the King in the brest that he fell down dead and never spake word his men and especially that Knight hid themselves but some came back again and laid his body upon a colliers cart which one poor lean beast did draw to the City of Winchester where he was buried he reigned twelve years eleven months lacking eight daies Henry Beauclark Henry the first An. Reg. 2 VVInchester and Glocester burnt An. Reg. 5 There appeared about the sun four circles and a blazing star An. Reg. 13 This year was a great mortality of men and murren of beasts An. Reg. 15 The City of Worcester was burnt the tenth of October the River Medway by no small number of miles d●d so fail of water that in the midst of the Channel the smallest vessels and boates could not pass the self same day the Thames did suffer the like want of water for between the Tower of London and the Bridge not onely with horses but also a great number of men and children did wade over on foot An. Dom. 1115 Chichester was burnt many storms and a blazing starr An. Dom. 1116 In March was exceeding lightning and in December thunder and hail and the moon at both times seemed to be turned into blood An. Dom. 1119 An. Reg. 20 King Henry having tamed the French men and pacified Normandy returned into England in which voyage William Duke of Normandy and Richard his son and Mary his daughter Richard Earl of Chester and his wife with many noble men and to the number of 160. persons were drowned An. Reg. 23 The City of Glocester burnt An. Reg. 32 The City of Rochester sore defaced
men afraid An. Reg. 4 An. Dom. 1277 There was a general Earthquake by force whereof the Church of Saint Michael of the Mount without Glassenbury fell to the ground An. Reg. 5 Michael Tony was hanged drawn and quarter'd for Treason Michaelmas Term was kept at Shrewsbury Reformation was made for clipping the Kings coyn for which offence 267 Jews were executed Edward the First An. Dom. 1281 An. Reg. 9 THere was such a Frost that five arches of London-Bridge and all Rochester-Bridge was borne down and carried away with many Bridges more An. Reg. 15 On New-years day at night as well through vehemency of the wind as violence of the Sea many Churches were overthrown and destroyed not only at Yarmouth Dunwich and Ipswich but also in divers other parts of England An. Reg. 16 An. Dom. 1288 The Summer was so exceeding hot that many men died with extremity thereof and yet Wheat was sold at London for three shillings four pence the Quarter and such cheapness of Beans and Pease as the like hath not been heard of An. Reg. 17 Great hail fell in England and after ensued great rain that the year following Wheat was raised from five pence the bushel to sixteen pence and so encreased yearly till it was lastly sold for twenty shillings the Quarter An. Reg. 19 The King banished all the Jews out of England giving them to bear their charges till they were out of the Realm the number of Jews then expulsed were 15. M. 9. persons An. Reg. 22 An. Dom. 1294 Three men had their right hands cut off for rescuing a prisoner from an Officer of the City of London An. Reg. 23 An. Dom. 1295 The water of Thames over-flowing the banks made a breach at Rother-Hith beside London The low ground about Bermondsey and Tothil was over-flowed An. Reg. 27 An. Dom. 1299 Fire being kindled in the lesser Hall of the Palace at Westminster the flame thereof being driven by winde fired the building of the Monastery next adjoyning which with the Palace were both consumed An. Reg. 33 An. Dom. 1305 William Wallace which had often times set Scotland in great trouble was taken and brought to London where he was hanged headed and quartered An. Dom. 1307 The King being vexed with a Bloody Flux departed this life the seventh of Iuly at Burgh upon the Sands in the year of our Lord 1307. when he had reigned thirty four years seven moneths and odd daies his body was buried at Westminster Edward Carnarvan An. Reg. 1 EDward Carnarvan so called being born at Carnarvan began his Reign the seventh of Iuly in the year 1307. he was fair of body but unstedfast in manners not regarding to govern the Common-wealth by discretion and Justice which caused great variance between him and his Lords Edward the Second An. Reg. 2 An. Dom. 1309 THe Lords envying Pierce of Gavestone Earl of Cornwall a stranger born banished him the Land An. Dom. 1309 An. Reg. 3 The King sent for Pierce of Gavestone out of Ireland and gave him the Earl of Glocesters Sister in marriage which caused him again to rise in pride scorning the Nobles of the Realm the Barons therefore declared to the King that except he would dispel the said Pierce from his company they would rise against him as against a perjured Prince whereupon once again he caused Pierce to abjure An. Dom. 1310 An. Reg. 4 Pierce of Gaveston returned into England and came to the Kings presence who forgetting all oaths and promises made to his Barons received him as a heavenly gift An. Reg. 5 The Church of Middleton in Dorsetshire was consumed with lightning the Monks being at Mattins An. Dom. 1311 The Barons of England being confederated against Pierce of Gaveston besieged him at the Castle of Scarborough where they took him and brought him to VVarwick Castle and caused his head to be stricken off An. Dom. 1314 THe King caused his Writs to be published for victuals that no Oxe stalled or corn-fed be sold for more then twenty four shillings no grass-fed Oxe for more then sixteen shillings a fat stalled cow at twelve shillings an other cow at ten shillings a fat mutton corn-fed or whose wooll is well grown at twenty pence another fat mutton shorn at fourteen pence a fat hogg of two years old at three shillings four pence a fat goose at two pence half penny in the City three pence a fat capon at two pence in the city two pence half penny a fat hen at one penny in the City one penny half penny four Pidgeons for one penny twenty four eggs a penny in the City twenty eggs a penny An. Dom. 1315 A Tanners Son of Exeter named himself the Son of Edward the First for the which he was hanged at Northampton An. Dom. 1316 The dearth encreased through the abundance of rain that fell in harvest so that a quarter of Wheat or Salt was sold for eleven shillings There followed this famine a grievous mortality of people so that the quick could hardly bury the dead the beasts and cattel also by the corruptness of the gross whereof they fed died horse-flesh was counted great delicates the poor stole fat dogs to eat some in holes and corners eat the flesh of their own children the thieves that were in prison did pluck in pieces those that were newly brought in amongst them and greedily devoured them half alive An. Dom. 1318 A great murrain of kine hapned dogs and ravens eating of the kine were poysoned and did swell to death so that no man durst eat any beef The King doting so much on the two Spencers as he did on Pierce of Gaveston maintaining wars against his Barons and his Barons against him was at last overthrown and taken prisoner the two Spencers hanged drawn and quartered as Traytors to the Commonwealth of England The King after he had reigned nineteen years six moneths and odd daies was deposed by consent of Parliament who elected Edward his eldest Son Edward the Third An. Reg. 1 EDward the Third about the age of fourteen years began his reign the 25 of Ianuary in the year of our Lord 1326. in feats of arms he was very expert at the beginning of his reign he was chiefly ordered by his Mother Isabell An. Dom. 1327 The Inhabitants of the Town of Bury besieged the Abbey burnt the gates wounded the Monks bare out all the gold and silver ornaments books Charters the assay to their coyn stamps and all other things appertaining to their coyn An. Dom. 1328 The 22 of September at night King Edward the second was cruelly murdered in the castle of Barkley by the practice of the Queen his wife and the Lord Mortimer and the Bishop of Hereford he was buried at Glocester An. Dom. 1329 By procurement of the old Queen Roger Mortimer and Edmond of VVoodstock Earl of Kent the Kings Uncle was beheaded at VVinchester An. Reg. 3 Roger Mortimor was taken by VVilliam Mountacute and sent to London where he was condemned
all the prisons in London were full of them divers of them were executed An. Dom. 1415 The King rode to Southampton where was discovered a great conspiracy against him by Richard Earle of Cambridge Sir Thomas Grey and Henry Scrope and others who were executed at Southampton An. Dom. 1416 The King entred the Sea with a thousand Sail and the third night after arrived at Normandy He laid siege to Hartslue which was yeelded to him he fo●ght the battel at Agent-Court where he had a marvellous victory An. Reg. 5 An. Dom. 1417 On Easter day at a Sermon in Saint Dunstones in the East of London a great fray hapned where many people were fore wounded and Thomas Pettwarden Fishmong slain The beginners of the fray was the Lord Strange and Sir Iohn Russel Knight through the quarrel of their two wives were brought to the Counter in the Poultry and excommunicated at Pauls-Cross An. Reg. 6 An. Dom. 1418 Sir Iohn Old-Castle being taken after he had broke out of the Tower was sent to London by the Lord Powes out of VVales whi●h Sir Iohn was convict by Parliament and sent to Saint Giles in the fields and was there hanged consumed with fire An. Reg. 7 An. Dom. 1419 The Parson of VVrotham in Norfolk which had haunted Newmarket-hith and there robbed and spoiled many was with his Concubine brought to Newgate at London and there died An. Reg. 9 At this time such was the general and capital command of the King of England in France as their own Chronicles testifie that in the Court of Chancery in Paris all things were sealed with the Seal of King Henry of England and the Great Seal of England was there new made and used wherein was the Arms of France England as the King sat in chair of State he held two Scepters in his hands in his right hand was a Scepter smooth and plain only the proportion of the French coyn commonly called the French crown and in his left hand he held a Scepter full of curious arts carved and vvrought vvith the Arms of England as is used in the English money and on the top thereof a Cross the French were much vexed thereat but knevv not hovv to help themselves An. Reg. 10 An. Dom. 1422 King Henry being at Boys at Vincent waxed ●●ck and died the last day of August in the year 1422. when he had reigned nine years five moneths and odd daies he was buried at VVestminster Henry of Windsor An. Reg. 1 HEnry the Sixth being an Infant of eight moneths old began his Reign the last of August in the year 1422. the governing of the Realm was committed to the Duke of Glocester and the guard of his person to the Duke of Exeter and to the Duke of Bedford was given the Regency of France An. Reg. 4 The morrow after Simon and Iudes day the Mayor caused a great watch to be kept with most part of the Citizens in armour to stand by the Duke of Glocester against the Bishop of VVinchester who lay in Southwark with a great power of Lancashire and Cheshire men but the matter was appeased by the Arch-bishop of Canterbury An. Reg. 5 The 28 of September was an earthquake which continued the space of two houres An. Reg. 6 From the beginning of April unto Hallow-tide was such abundance of rain that not only hay but corn also was destroyed An. Reg. 7 The Duke of Norfolk passing through London-Bridge his Barge overwhelmed so that thirty persons were drowned and the Duke with others that escaped were drawn up with ropes So under God the people stood their friend And sav'd them by a Rope that 's some mens end An. Reg. 8 A Brittain murdered a Widdow in VVhite-Chappel Parish without Algate and bare away her goods but being pursued he took succour in the Church of Saint George in Southwark from whence he was taken and forswore the Land but as he came by the place where he did the murder the women of the Parish with stones and sheeps-horns and dirt off the dung-hills made an end of him An. Dom. 1431 At Abbington began an Insurrection of certain lewd persons that intended to have wrought much mischief but the chief Author being Bailiff of the Town named William Mundevile a Weaver with some others were put to death An. Dom. 1432 The King of England crowned in Paris but within a while after lost all his Father got in France An. Dom. 1433 Four souldiers of Calice beheaded and a hundred and ten banished and before that time was banished one hundred and twenty An. Reg. 13 The Thames was frozen that the Merchants which came to the Thames mouth were carried to London by land An. Reg. 15 The gate on London-bridge with the Tower next to Southwark fell down and the two furthest arches of the said Bridge and no man perished An. Reg. 16 All the Lions in the Tower of London died An. Reg. 17 A great wind in London blevv down almost one side of the street called the Old-Change An. Dom. 1439 Sir Richard VVich Vicar of Hermetsworth in Essex was burnt on Tower-hill the 17 of Iune An. Dom. 1440 The 18 of Iuly the Postern of London by East-Smith-field against the Tower of London sunk by night An. Dom. 1441 A stack of wood at Bernards-Castle fell down and killed three men by the fall of a stair at Beford where the shire day was kept eighteen persons were slain An. Dom. 1442 Eleanor Cobham Dutchess of Glocester was cited to appear before Henry Chichely archbishop of Canterbury to answer certain matters of Necromancy Witchcraft Sorcery Heresie and Treason vvhere when she appeared the aforesaid Roger was brought forth to witness against her and said that she vvas the cause and first stirred him to labour in that art then she vvas committed to the ward of Sir Iohn Stuard Knight then vvas taken also Margery Gurdmain a Witch of Ely vvhose Sorcery and Witchcraft the said Eleanor had a long time used wherefore the said Witch vvas burned in Smith-field The ninth of November Dame Eleanor appeared before the archbishop and others and received sentence of Penance vvhich she performed on the 17 of November she came from Temple-Bar vvith a taper of vvax in her hand from Fleet-street to Pauls vvhere she offer'd her taper to the altar on Wednesday next she vvent through Bridg-street Grace-Church-street to Leaden-hall and so to Christ-Church by Algate on Friday she vvent through Cheap to Saint Michaels in Corn-hill in form aforesaid The eighteenth of November Roger Bolinbroke vvas arraigned dravvn from the Tower to Tyburn and there hanged and quartered An. Dom. 1445 On Candlemass Eve in divers places of England vvere heard terrible thunders vvith lightning whereby the Church of Baldock in Hartfordshire the Church of VValden in Essex and divers others vvere sore shaken and the Steeple of Saint Pauls in London about three of the clock in the afternoon vvas set on fire in the midst of the shaft but
and quartered as being actors with the Earl of Essex March the fifteenth a new Scaffold was carried from Leaden Hall in the night to the Tower hill and there set up by torch light The eighteenth of March Sir Charles Danvers and Sir Christopher Blunt Knights were upon the new scaffold beheaded Two men were set on the Pillory in Fleetstreet whipped with gaggs in their mouths and their ears cut off for attempting to have robbed a Gentlewoman in Fetter lane in the day time putting gaggs into the mouths of the servants of the house because they should not cry out one of these thieves was afterward hanged and quartered at Saint Thomas Watrings August the twenty sixth Desmond and an other Knight brought out of Ireland were sent to the Tower of London In November the Lady Mary Ramsey widow to Sir Thomas Ramsey sometime Mayor of London was buried in the Parish Church or Hospital of Christ-church by Newgate-market a charitable dole or armes was given for her on the same day in the afternoon at the Leaden Hall seventeen poor people being weak and aged were there among the sturdy beggars crushed and troden to death Lightning and Thunder often before Christmas and in the holydayes and an Earthquake at London on Christmas Eve at noon In the month of Ianuary news came out of Ireland that on Christmas day that the Spaniards and Irish were overcome and slain in great numbers and the English were victors The eighteenth of Ianuary at night Bonfiers were made with ringing of Bells for joy of the news out of Ireland the victory of our men against Tyrone Windsor Boate was cast away against Black Friers stairs by a tempest April the nineteenth Peter Bullock Stationer and one named Ducket for printing of books offensive against the Queen and State were hanged at Tyburn April the twentieth Stichborne William Kenson and Iames Page Seminary Priests were drawn to Tyburn and there hanged and quartered The last of Iune Atkenson a customer of Hull was set on the Pillory in Cheap and with him three other who had been brought thither on horseback with their faces towards the horse tail and papers on their heads they were there whipped on the Pillory and lost their ears by judgement of the Star-Chamber for slanderous words by them spoken against the Counsel The same day in the afternoon fell great lightning and thunder with hail-stones in many places of nine inches compass which in Sandwich in Kent lay a foot deep on the ground broke the glass windows of their Churches and many tiles off their houses some barnes were fired with lightning February the seventeenth William Anderson alias Richardson a Seminary Priest was drawn to Tyburn and there hanged and quartered for being found in England contrary to the Statute In the month of March the Q lying at Richmond dangeros sick strait watches were set in London with warding of the Gates Lanthornes with lights all the night hanged out of Windowes at which newes the people were sore perplexed Thursday the twenty fourth of March about two of the Clock in the morning deceased Queen Elizabeth at her Mannor of Richmond in Surrey being aged seventy yeers and had Reigned four and forty yeers five moneths and odd dayes whose Corps was privily convaied to White Hall and there remained till the twenty eight of Aprill and then buried at Westminster The same day aforesaid the Nobility and Councell of State with as great peace prudence and providence as the heart of man could imagine assembled themselves together and far beyond the general imagination of all men being a matter of remarkable conscernment took speedy order aswell for the instant manifesting the Queens death as in publishing to the whole Realme for their lasting comfort the true and lawfull Successour and about eleven of the clock the same Thursday in the forenoone which according to the computation of the Church of England is the last day of the yeer 1602. being accompanyed with the Lord Major Aldermen and Sheriffes of London and many other of most Reverend and Honourable quality at the Cross in Cheape Proclaimed Iames the Sixth of that name King Scotland to be the right King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the faith being lineally descended from Margaret the eldest daughter to King Henry the Seventh by Elizabeth his wife which was the eldest daughter of King Edward the fourth the said Margaret was married to King Iames the fourth of that name King of Scotland in the yeer of our Redemption 1503. who had Issue Iames the fifth Who was father to Mary Queen of Scotland and the said Mary was mother to Iames the Sixth Monarch of the Island of great Brittany and King of France and Ireland This forenamed Proclamation was most distinctly and audibly read by Sir Robert Cecill Principall Secretary unto Queen Elizabeth also the Lords and Privie Counsellors of Estate with great diligence send speedily Condinge Messengers to his Majesty into Scotland who manifested their whole proceeding with tender of their zealous love and duty and the peoples universall joy and great desire to see their King which his Majesty most graciously accepted approved all their proceedings and returned them all Princely thanks Authorizing the Lords and others late Privie Counsellours of Estate to the Queene to persist as they had begun until He came personally unto them This Change was very Plausable and well pleasing unto the Nobility and Gentry and generally to all the Commons of the Realm among whom the name of a king was to strange that few could Remember or had seen a King before except they were aged persons considering that the Government of the Realme had continued neer the space of fifty yeeres under the Reigne of two Queens which is the far greater part of an old mans age but tidings hereof being brought to the king in Scotland he called a Co●nsell to him and taking order for setling all things in his Realme of Scotland began his voyage towards England King Iames. An. Reg. 1 PResently upon the death of Queene Elizabeth of Famous memory the Nobility of this land and P●ivie Councellors of estate unto the said Queen accknowledged Iames the sixth then King of Scotland for their lawfull king and within six houres after her death the said Lords and Counsellors gave full satisfaction unto the people by three proclamations the first at the Court Gate the second at the Cross in Cheapside and the third at the Tower by the name of Iames the First King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith the King being then full thirty six yeers of age and Crouned King of Scots in his infancie began his Raign over the Isle of Great Brittany the 24. of March 1602. The Nobility and State aforesaid with ●ll speed sent Charles Piercy and Master Thomas Sommerset with Letters unto the King signifiying the death of the Queene and the tender of their duties love and alegian●e but Sir Robert Carie rid
Wednesday betwixt two and three of the clock he took his journey forth of London and came into York about seven of the clock the same day where he rested that night the next morning being Thursday betwixt two and three of the clock he took his jo●rney forth of York and c●me to London the same day be●wixt seven and eight of the clock where he rested that night the next morning being Friday betwixt 2. and 3. of the clock he took his journey towards Yorke and came thither the same day betwixt the howres of seven and eight in the afternoon so as he finished his app●inted journey to the admi●ation o● all men in five dayes acco●ding to hi● p●omise and upon Munday the twenty seventh of this moneth he went from Yorke and came to the Court at Greenwich upon Tueseday the twenty eight to his Majesty in as fresh and cheerfull manner as when he first began The second of Iuly 1605 seventeen Scottish Ministers contrary to the Kings former Exp●ess Comandment h●ld a Sollemne Assembly at Aberdine in Scotland who being Convented fo● the same before the Coun●●ll of Scotland utte●ly denied not onely their Lo●dships authority in that behalf but the Kings also saying that in matters Ecclesiasticall they neithe● owe no● ought to acknowledge themselves in any subjection either to the King or to any Temporall power and that all Sp●rituall difference ought to be tryed and determined by the Church as Competent Judges justifying their voluntary meeting to be good and warrantable by the word of God alleadging the severall Assemblies of the Apos●les without knowledge or con●ent o● any Temporall Es●ate for which Riot and for denying the Kings Supremacy in Causes Ecclesiasticall Six of the chief of them the tenth of Ianuary following at Blackness were ar●aigned and condemned of High Treason Iuly the eighth Proclamation was m●de against Pirates and other English Ma●iners and Souldiers who under pretence of Serving the Sta●es robbed divers English men and others who made complaint thereof to his Majesty Now this is the third Proclamation against Pirats William Calverley of Carverley in Yorkshire Esquire murdered two of his own children at home at his own ho●se then stab'd his wi●● in●o the body with full intent to have killed her and then instantly with like fury went from his house would have killed his childe at nu●se but was p●evented he was p●est to death at Yorke the fifth of March. Thomas Pearcy Robert Catesby and o●her● in the last yeer of Queen Elizabeths Raign by the Ins●igation of certain Jesuits practised with the King of Spain to send a well furnished Army upon England promising him great aide to entertain them at their arrivall at Milford Haven and to that end the King promised to send them fifty thousand pound for Levying of Horse and Foot and preparation in England for them of Ammunition but when this was in a maner concluded upon Queen Elizabeth died and the King of Spain upon certain knowle●ge that King Iames was establi●hed di●p●tched his Embassado●●●●n● Commi●sioners for England for con●●●mation o● a la●●ing Peace between them yet nevertheless the said Robert Catesby sent Thomas VVinter again to the King of Spain to Resollicite their former project but the King answered him Your old Queen is dead with whom I had warres and you have a King with whom I have ever been at Peace and amity and for continuance thereof I have sent my Commissioners and untill I see what will become thereof I will not hearken unto any other course whatsoever when VVinter returned and made this known unto Catesby Percey and the rest they began to cast about what might be done of themselves to the Advance of the Romane Catholike Religion but first they would see the event of the first Parliament if they would mittigate any former lawes and try what good the conclusion of Peace with Spain would do before they attempted any further but when they perceived that neither Parliament nor publi●ke peace so●ted in any part to their desires and that the peace concluded with Spain was rather a more ready means for the law to proceed against them then otherwise because the peace concerned onely the amity of christian princes for the general good of Christendome without any particular or private respect then Catesby told the rest he had a devise in his head that should free them and the rest of the Catholicks here in England from their oppressors and when he had found out fit Ministers for execution of his devise after they had taken oath and Sacrament for se●recie he told them he had devised the mean to blow up the Parliament house by undermining the same when the King and Queen and Prince and Commons were assembled which project they presently embraced and forthwith Pearcie hired lodgings close to the Parliament house and then they appointed miners who with great difficulty digged and undermined part of the wall but after a while they understood that the vante right under the Parliament house was to be let then Guido Faukes hired it this Guido Fawks was of late a Souldier in Flanders and for that purpose sent for who by consent of the rest changed his name and was called Iohn Iohnson Master Pearcies man after they had hired the vaute they secretly conveighed into it thirty and six barrels of powder and covered them over with billets and faggots About ten daies before the Parliament began an unknown party met with a servant of my Lord Mounteagles and delivered him a letter charging him speedily to deliver it to my Lord which he did when his Lord had read it and observed the dangerous contents with a special caveat not to appear the first day of Parliament he was amazed and forthwith delivered it to the Earl of Sallisbury the Kings chief Secretary and Counsello● of State when the Earl had judiciously observed the strange phrase and teno● thereof with the terrible threats therein against the whole state he acquainted the Lord Chamberlain therewith and then they shewed it to the Lord Admiral● the Earls of Worcester and Northampton who instantly consulted what was fittest to be done omitting neither time dilligence nor industry all which notwithstanding they could not as yet find out the depth of this mystery and were therefore much troubled in mind because the appointed day of Parliament drue near which was Tuesday the fifth of November the Saturday before the King being returned from hunting the said Lord acquainted his Highness with what had past and when his Majesty had well noted the strange contents of the letter which purported the suddain ruine of the state the King said that notwithstanding the slight regard that should be given to scattered Libels yet this was more quick then was usually in Libels and willed them to search in all places as well not dayly frequented as of usual repair and as conce●ning any forraign disturbance or inva●ion he well knew the force and preparation of all Ch●istian Nations
of England he died suddenly at the Counsel table April the twenty ninth proclamation was made commanding the oath of allegiance to be ministred to all persons that should come from beyond the seas onely to distinguish honest subjects from traiterous practisers and not for any point or matter in religion all known Merchants and others of honest state and quality was exempte from takeing this oath this proclamation was made by reason that many suspitious persons of base sort came dayly from beyond seas and refused to take the oath Iune twenty third Thomas Garnet a Jesuit was executed at Tyburne having favour offered him if he would have taken the oath of allegiance which he refused This Summer at Astley in Warwick shire by reason of the fall of the Church there was taken up the corps of Thomas Grey Marquess of Dorset he was buried the tenth of October 1530 in the twenty second year of the ●aign of Henry the eighth and albeit he had lain seventy eight yeers in the the Earth yet his Eyes Haire and flesh remained in a manner as if he had been newly buried For these five yeeres past great and manifold Roberies spoiles Piracies murders and Depredations within the Streights and elsewhere have been committed by severall Companies of English Pirats as well upon our own Nation as others but especially upon the Florentines and Venetians wherewith his Majesty was much grieved and for that cause published from time to time severall Proclamations denownsing the same offenders to be Rebells and therewithall gave order for their suppression and apprehensias Traiters and peace breakers but all this prevailed not for they still prevailed persisted and maintained their former villanies with which offenders there were some English Marchants who very cunningly underhand used Commerce Track and Trafficke for stollen goods to the great Cheri●●ing of those Malefactors and dishonour of this Nation for redresse whereof the King by Proclamation the eighth of Ianuary Prohibited from all manner of medling or dealing with them upon great penalties all English Marchants whatsoever Commanding the judge of the Admiralty to proceed severely in Justice against all such offenders and that from him there should be no appeal granted to any person touching the premises all which notwithstanding the number of Pirats still increased and did much damage to the English Marchants and to all other Nations there were Hollanders and Easterlings that at this time and before became fierce Pirats and held consort with the English Robbers viz. Ward Bishop Sir Francis Vorny and others whereupon the King of Spain sent certain Ships of Warr under the command of Don Lewis Faxardo who very pollitickly about the middle of Iuly came upon them at Tunis and sudenly burned twenty of their ships lying in Harbor at which time though Captain Ward escaped in person by being then a shore yet his great Strength and Riches perished in the fire with some of his Confederates December the two and twentieth Nineteen Pirates were executed at Waping some had been in consort with the English Pirates Sunday the nineteenth of February when it should have been low water at London-Bridge quite contrary to course it was then high Water and presently it ebbed almost half an houre the quantity of a foot and then suddenly it flowed again almost two foot higher then it did before and then ebbed again untill it came to its course almost as it was at first so that the next flood began in a manner as it should and kept its due course in all respects as if there had been no shifting nor alteration of Tydes all this hapned before twelve a clock in forenoone the weather being indifferent calme The thirteenth of Iune the King Queen and Prince with many great Lords and others came to the Tower to make triall o● the Lions single valour and to have the Lions skill a great fierce Bear that had killed a Childe but the Lyons being tryed by one and one at a time and lastly by two together wh●ch were bread in that open yard where the Bare was put loose for Combat yet would none of them assaile him but fled from him to their Dens after the first Lion was put forth then was there a Stone Horse put into the Bare and Lyon who when he had gazed upon them a while fell to grazing standing in the midst between them both and whereas at the first there was but two Mastives let in who fought sto●tly with a lion there was now six Dogs let in who flew all upon the Stone Horse being most in their sight at their first entrance and would soon have wearied the horse to death but that suddainly even as the King wisht there Entein th●ee stout Barewards who wonderous valliantly rescued the Horse and brought away the Doggs whilst the Lyon and the Bear stood staring upon them and the fifth of Iuly this Bare according to the kings Commandment was bayted to death by Dogges upon a Stage and the Mother of the murthered Child had twenty pound given her out of the money given by the people to see the death of the Bare Robert Allyley being Araigned at Newgate for fellony stood mute and and refused the ordinary triall whreupon as the manner is the Hangman came unto him to binde his hands but Allyley resisted and with his fist stroke him on the face in the presence of the Judges who presently Remembred that this priprisoner but the last Sessions before was there Convicted of Fellony and for the same had obtained the Kings Speciall pardon which pardons in generall are unto all persons but onely upon their good behaviour unto King and his Subjects and thereupon the Court gave judgment that for the blow he gave his hand should first be cut off and then his body to be hanged for that fact for the which he had his pardon according to which sentence he was presently executed at the Sessions Gate Thursday the third of May the French Queen was Crowned with all Solemnity in Paris and having been ten yeers before maried to the King and the next day was murthered in his Coach as he rode through Paris by a base villain that stabed him into the body twise with a long knife that he died instantly and his body was carried to the Loover presently upon the Kings death the Queen was made Regent during her sons minority viz. Lewis the thirteenth The twentieth of May being Sunday our King Queen and Prince the Duke of Yorke the lady Elizabeth and all the Lords and Ladies of the Court mourned in Black for the death of the French King Henry the fourth and about the end of Iune was he buried in Paris in as great Royalty as ever King of France upon the murrher of this French King the Lords and Commons of the house of Parliament of England humbly besought the King to have a more especiall care then formerly for the preservation of his Royall Person and also to the speedy order for the
avoiding of Emminent danger and keeping his subjects in their due obedience and forthwith the Commons of the Parliament for the manifestation of their alleigance love and duty they voluntarily of their own accord took the Oath of Allegiance and after them the Lords of the upper house did so likewise who ministred the same Oath to all their servants and followers and such as refused to take oath were put from their Lord Services and the Bishops in the Convocation House ordained that every Bishop in their severall visitations should minister the same Oath unto all their Clergie which they performed accordingly this oath was also ministred to others as followeth according to the Tenor of a speciall Statute made this Session of Parliament made in that behalf The fourth of Iune Proclamation was made commanding all Romane Priests and Iesuites and Seminaries to depart this Kingdom by the fourth day of Iuly next and not to return upon paine of the severity of the Law also by this Proclamation the King straitly commands all Recusants to return home to their dwellings not to come within 10 miles of the Court without speciall licence but to depart from London and the Court by the last day of this Moneth and to remain confined according to the Tenor of the Statute in that behalf provided Presently after that the Oath of Allegiance was ministred unto all officers Atturnies and Clarkes belong-to any of the Courts at Westminster Hall and the Exchequer and unto all Advocates and Proctors of the Spirituall Courts this Oath was also administred unto all Lawvers in the Inns of Court and Chancery and unto all Students and Schollers in both the Vniversities The appointed time now drew neer or Prince Henry to be created Prince of Wales and upon Thursday the last of May the Lo●d Mayor and the Aldermen being accompanied with 54 several Companies of Citizens of London in several Barges bearing armes distinguished by their proper Ensignes Banners and streamers in warlike manner and therewithal plentiously furnished with several sorts of excellent M●sick and had also to entertain the Prince divers pleasant and ingenious trophies upon the water all which in comely order went to Chelsea the Lord Mayor as Admiral going formost where from nine a clock in the morning till th●e● in ●h● afternoon they attended the coming of the Prince who could not come sooner by reason of the low ebb at which time the King came from Richmond being very honourably accompanied and attended and from Che●sea the Lord Mayor and Citizens conducted his Highness unto the Court at White Hall as they returned from Chealsea the citizens led the way and the Lord Mayor followed them going alwaies next the Princes Barge to see this joyful sight the people for seven miles space swarmed on both sides the River and the Thames was covered with Boates Barges and Lighters full fraught with men women and childred and upon Sunday the third of Iune the King made twenty five Knights of the Bath and the next day the King crowned the prince his eldest son Henry prince of Wales in the great chamber at Westminster being perormed with great magnificence and solemnity and with full consent of all the Lords spiritual and temporal and Commons of the Parliament being all there present the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of London were also present at this creation the princes titles were then proclaimed Viz. Henry prince of Wales Duke of Cornewal and Rotheser and Earl of Chester in honor of this creation there was the next night at the Court a most rich and royal mask of Ladies viz. the Queen the Lady Elizabeth daughter to our Soveraign Lord the King the Lady Arrabella the Countess of Arundel the Counress of Darbie the Countess of Essex the Countess of Dorset the Countess of Mountgomery the Visecounts of Haddington the Lady Elizabeth Gray the Lady Elizabeth Guilford the Lady Katherine Peter the Lady Winter the Lady VVindsor and upon Wednesday in the afternoon in the Tilt yard there were divers Earles Barons and others being in rich and glorious armour having most costly caparisons wonderous ri●hly embrodered with pearl gold and silver the like abillements for horses were never seen before presented their several ingenious trophies before the King Queen and Prince and then ran a tilt where there was a world of people assembled to behold them and that night there were other triumphs upon the water with ships of war and Gallies fighting one against an other and against a great Castle builded upon the water and after these battels then an houres space there were many strange and variable fire works in the Castle and in the ships and Gallies This year the King builded a most stately ship for war being in all respects the greatest and goodliest ship that ever was made in England and this glorious ship the King gave to his sonne Henry prince of VVales the prince named it after his own dignity and called it the prince The seventh of December Iohn Roberts a Benedickt Monk sometimes provincial of the Benidictans in England and Thomas Summers a Seminary were condemned at Newgate and hanged at Tyburne they having been before sundry times taken and bannished and yet presumed to return again and bere to practice against King and State Upon Newyears day at night the prince o● VVales being ac●ompanied with twelve others viz. Two Earles three Barons five Knights and two Esquires they performed a very stately mask in which was an excellent Sceane ingenious speeches and rare songs and with great variety of most delicate Musick The twentieth of April 1611. Sir Thomas Overburie was committed to the Tower and died there the fifteenth of September next following May the thirteenth being Munday in Whitson week at Windsor were enstalled Knights of the Garter Prince Charles Duke of York sonne to our soveraign Lord the King and Thomas Earl of Arundel and Robert Vi●●ount Rochester Wednesday the eighteenth of March 1611. Bartholomew Legate an obstinate Heretick and a strong Arian was burned in Smithfield and the eleaventh of April following viz. Edward Wightman an other perverse Heretick having refused more favour then he could desire or deserve was burned at Lichfield this Heritick would have made the people believe that he himself was the Holy Ghost and immortal with other vild opinions not fit to be mentioned amongst Christians May the twenty ninth 1612. Richard Newport and VVilliam Scot Seminaries were executed at Tyburne Iune the twenty fifth Robert Carliele and Iames Edwin were executed for murthering Iohn Turner fencer and the twenty seventh of Iune the Lord Sanquire was arraigned at the Kings Bench Bar for conspiring and hiring the said two persons to kill the said Turner the Lord confessed the Indightment and was executed upon a Gibber the 29 of Iune at Westminster In the months of October November and December there hapned great winds violent storms and tempests which caused much shipwrack upon the Ocean in havens and Rivers and did
Kingdom and not accusations against those who were then the principall Ministers of state dissolved the Parliament The contagion raging in London Michaelmas Terme was ordered to be kept at Redding and speciall Instructions were given to the Judges to put in execution the statutes against Recusants An. Dom. 1626 On the sixth of February the solemnity of his Coronation were celebrated And a Parliament was called again on the sixt of the same moneth where the King demanding a supply for monies and representing that on the yeer before the Fleet miscarried at Cuziz for wat of it Master Clement Cooke son to the Lord Cooke stood up and said it was better to dye by a forraign Enemie then to be destroyed at home at which most insolent words the King was much troubled and instead of satisfaction hearing of a Declaration that was then contriving by some busy heads he disolved that Parliament also This yeer the King of France seized An. Dom. 1527 on all the English ships which lay at Burdeaux and other places and then began an open war against England wherefore in the yeer following the Duke of Buckingham with ten of the Navy Royall and ninety Marchantmen set sayl from Portsmouth and landed at the Isle of Ree from whence in September following he was beaten off with the loss of 2000. common Souldiers and fifty Officers An. Dom. 1628 The Rochellers having sollicited the King of England whom they found to be powerfull at Sea for his assistance the King called another Parliament on the seventeenth of March where a bill being drawn up against Tunnage and Poundage which the King by no meanes would condescend unto the Parliament was adjourned the twentieth of Decemb. In the meantime the Duke of Buckingham being ready again to set sayl from Portsmoth was killed by Iohn Felton a discontented officer of the last yeers Army who for that offence was hanged up in chaines neer unto the place where the murder was committed The Duke being slain the Earl of Lindsey was chosen Admirall who found the Haven of Rochell so strongly barred that it was impossible for his Ships to force their way give relief unto the besieged who thereupon submitted to their King without delay In the yeer 1629. a peace was concluded betwixt England and the two Crownes of France and Spain The Parliament called on the yeer before was dissolved by the King who extreamly complained against the carriages of some men in the House of Commons who being examined by the Lord Treasurer were sent some of them to the Tower some to the Gatehouse and some to the Fleet. Charles Iames eldest son to the King was borne at Greenwitch May the thirteenth and dyed almost as soone as he was borne being first Christened by one of the Kings Chaplains An. Dom. 1630 Doctor Layton a Schotchman having wrote a Book inciting the people to kill all the Bishops had his nose slit his eares cropt and was stigmatized in the forehead Peter Paul Rubin the famous Painter having made overtures for a peace with Spain the said peace was afterwards proclaimed November the twenty seventh 1630. In which it was articled that the King of Spain should use all his power and interest with the Emperour for the restitution of the Palatinate to King of Bohemiah Charles Duke of Cornewall by birth was born at Saint Iame's May 19. 1630. An. Dom. 1621 On the twenty fifth of Aprill the Earl of Castle-haven being Arraignen at the Kings Bench Bar and found guilty of Rape and Sodomy was by his Peeres condemned and executed on the Tower Hill the fourteenth of May following On the 4. of Novem. the Queen was delivered of her eldest daughter who was baptized Mary An. Dom. 1632 The Church of Saint Pauls was this yeer begun to be repaired and on the second of December the King was visited with the small pox An. Dom. 1633 May the thirteenth the King went to Scotland attended with a gallant train and on the tenth of Iune he was crowned at Edenbrough and on the twentieth of Iuly returned safe to the Queen at Greenwitch This yeer the Arch Bishop of Canterbury Doctor Abbot died and Doctor Land then Bishop of London succeeded in his place On the thirteenth of October the Queen was delivered of her third son who was Baptized Iames and on the twenty fourth of the same moneth was Created Duke of York Orders were sent into Scotland for the observing of the Church Discipline as in England which was the the occasion of great tumults and the sad war that followed An. Dom. 1634 The Dutch this yeer began to incroach upon his Majesties Dominions by Sea which was defended by Grotius in his Book intituled Mare Liberum and answered by Master Selden in his book intituled Mare Clausum Writts being issued out to rayse money for a certain number of Ships to be set forth for the defence of the Nation which then was called Ship money some of the discontented members of the former Parliament were absolutely against it and it begat a great quarrell An. Dom. 1635 On the sixth of March 1635. William Iuxon Bishop of London was made Lord Treasurer On the eighth of Ianuary the Lady Elizabeth was borne who survived her father but dyed with hearts grief not long afterwards An. Dom. 1636 In September the Earl of Arundel was sent Ambassadour extraordinary to the Emperour This yeer 1636. Master Prin Doctor Bastwick and Master Burton in the moneth of Iune were sentenced in the high Commission Court and ordered to be banished c. Master Hamden refusing to pay Ship money sentence passed against him by twelve of the Judges who absolutely declared for the legality of it only Judge Hutton and Judge Crook dissented An. Dom. 1637 On the twenty third of Iune 1637. the Book of Common prayers being begun to be read in Scotland according to the Kings orders there began a great uprore all the Churches protesting absolutely against it whereupon by the Kings Command a Proclamation was published and severe penalties to be inflicted on the contemners of it but nothing would prevail whereupon the Marques of Hamilton was sent down to Scotland and a treaty there was but it took no effect for during the said treaty the Scots had provided all things necessary for war and not long afterward Episcopacy was there totally abollished This yeer on the seventeenth of March the Queen was delivered of a daughter who at the Font received the name of Ann. This yeer there were great contestations in Scotland two Petitions were presented against the Common prayer book Proclamations were made at Edinborough and severall places for preventing of disorders but to no effect for the Covenanters every where began to rayse Arms impose texes seise on the Kings Castles and prepare for war having chosen David Lesly an old Soldier for their Generall On the latter end of October the Queen mother came into England which many people looked upon as a forerunner of mischief
An. Dom. 1639 On the seventeenth of March 1639. The King set forth against the Scots attended with a Royall Army and on the seventeenth of Iune a generall accord was made at Barwick upon which the King presently disbanded his forces and returned to London whither he was no sooner come but the Scot did openly protest against the Pasification and retained the Officers of the Army in pay hereupon the King was inforced to call for the Lord Leievetenant out of Ireland whom not long afterwards he created Earl of Straford The Bishop of Canterbury reviving the antient Ceremonies was looked upon as addicted too much to to the Religion of Rome An. Dom. 1640 On the thirteenth of August 1640. Another Parliament assembled and the King finding that they had no desire to assist him with money to advance against the Scots but were ready to comply with them he dissolved that Parliament to the great grief both of City and countrey Iuly the eighteenth The Queen was delivered of a Son who was baptized Henry On the twentieth of August the King marched towards the North in his own person having received some large contributions from the Clergie and a very considerable number of the Gentry At Annick he understood of a defeat given by Generall Lesly to a party of his consisting of 3000. foot and 1200. Horse that Sir Iacob Ashley had deserted Newcastle and that the Scots had imposed a task of 350. pound a day on the Bishoprick of Dirham and 300. pound a day on the Countey of Northumberland which sad newes did much afflict him On the twenty fourth of Septem the Lords being assembled with the King at Yorke it was resolved that a Parliament should be called on the third of November following In the mean time the English to gain a cessation of Arms was inforced to yeeld to the Scots unreasonable propositions This Parliament by reason of the long Sessions of it being called the long Parliament being met Master Prin Master Burton and Doctor Bastwick were released of their Imprisonment having great dammages allowed them The Earl of Straford the Archbishop of Canterbury and Bishop Wren were impeached of High treason and to the Tower Sir Francis Windebank and the Lord Finch fled beyond the Seas and most of the Judges who had declared themselves for Ship money were voted delinquents Judge Barkely was arrested by the Usher of the Black Rod for high Treason as he sate one the Kings Bench. An. Dom. 1641 On the two and twentieth of March 1641 the tryall was of the Lord Straford which continued many dayes and having said as much for himself as man could speak and the King himself interceding for him it made his cause the worse and on Wednesday the twelft of May he was beheaded on Tower Hill On the second of May the Lady Mary was married to the Prince of Orange with great solemnity Three hundred thousand pounds was ordered for the Scotch Army to send them out of England to which they were a charge unsupportable The Parliament adjourned from the eight of September to the twentieth of October and on the tenth of August the king went to Scotland and came back to London on the beginning of November following About the latter end of October brake out the barbarous inhumane Rebellion in Ireland where above two hundred thousand persons were most barbarously murdered An. Dom. 1642 On the fourth of Ianuary 1642. the King attended with divers Gentlemen came into the house of Commons and seating him in the Speakers Chayre demanded five members of the house to be delivered to him whose names were Sir Ar. Hazelrig Master Denzill Hollis Master Prin Mr. Hamden and Master Sroud but finding they were not there he went into his coach for London being informed they were fled thither and made Proclamation for their apprehension which the Commons voted illegall and scandalous In February the King and Queen went to Canterbury with the Princes wife to the Prince of Orange the Queen understanding that the house intended to charge her with Treason went along with the Princesse her daughter into Holland Much about this time the Bishops were quite voted down The king coming back to Greenwitch went afterwards towards Yorke in the mean time the Parliament doth Seise upon the Magazine at Hull and Regiments of Horse and Foot are Listed and the Earl of Essex appointed to be Generall the noyse of whose preparations doth hasten the King from Yorke to Nottingham where he Sets up his sttandard and much encreaseth his Forces as he marcheth on Sunday October twenty third was the great Battaile fought at Edgehill the fight terrible and five thousand slain upon the place He afterwards marcheth towards London and at Brainford defeateth a Regiment of the Parliaments but finding how numerous the Earle of Essex Army was that lay betwixt Brainford and London he retired to his Winter quarters at Oxford An. Dom. 1643 On the latter end of February 1643. the Queen who had bin accused of pawning the Jewels of the Crown came to him and brought great supplies of powder Arms and Ammunition The ensuing Summer made the King master of the North and West Some few places onely excepted The Earl of Newcastle had cleared all beyond the Trent but Hull and Prince Rupert and Prince Maurice had redewced Bristol Exeter and all the Towns of any importance in the West Pool Lime and Plimotuh excepted but making some stay to reduce Glocester the Siege was raysed by the Earl of Essex and on the twentieth of September the famous Battaile of Newbery was fought where many were flain on both sides and on the next day Prince Rupert follow-the Reare of the Earle of Essex Army almost as far as Reading An. Dom. 1644 The K. being come to Oxford he Summoned a Parliament which appeared on the two and twentieth day of Ianuary and on the Sixteenth of the same moneth the Scots Army entred England consisting of eighteen thousand foot and two thousand horse at this time Newark being besieged by Sir Iohn Meldrum with an Army of seven thousand Prince Rupert with four thousand horse and one thousand foot doth raise the siege not long afterwards Latham house was relieved by him The Queen went from Oxford to the west of England April 16. where at Exceter she was delivered of a daughter Henretta who not long afterwards did follow her into France where she still remains on the yeer before she was brought to bed of a daughter at Oxford whose name was Katharine and died almost as soon as it was born The King having given a defeat to Sir William Waller at Cropredy Bridge advanced after the Earl of Essex and followed him so close that at last he forced him into Cornwal his horse taking the advantage of the night made a shift to escape but the foot came to capitulation and delivered up their Arms and Artillery there being nine thousand arms and forty nine pieces of excellent brass Ordnance the
into that liberty which I speak of they will never certainly enjoy themselves Sirs it was for this that I am hither come for if I would have given way to an arbitrary power that is to have all laws changed according to the power of the sword I needed not to have come here and therefore I tell you and I pray to God it be not laid to your charge that I am the Martyr of the people Introth sirs I should not hold you any longer I will onely say this to you that I could have desired some little time longer because I would put this which I have said in a little better order and have had it a little better digested then I have now done and therefore I hope you will excuse me I have now delivered my conscience and I pray God you take those courses that are best for the good of the kingdome and your own salvations Doctor Juxon Although it be very well known what your Majesties affections are to Religion yet because it may be expected that you should speak something to give satisfaction to the world therein I must beseech your Majesty to declare your self in that particular King I thank you heartily my Lord for this remembrance I had almost forgotten it in troth Sirs my conscience in religion is already as I think well known to all the world and therefore I declare before you all that I die a Christian according to the profession of the Church of Engl. as I found it left unto me by my Father and pointing to the Bishop of London this I do believe that this honest man will witnesse with me Then turning to the Officers he said Excuse me for the same I have a good Cause and a gracious God I will say no more On this the Bishop of London said unto him There is but one stage more this stage is full of noise and tumult it is but a short one but you may consider it will soon carry you from earth to heaven and there you will find an abundance of unrepented joy and comfort To this the King replied I passe from a corruptible to an incorruptible Crown where there is no disturbance no disturbance in the world The Bishop melting into tears assured him that he was exchanged from a temporall to an eternall crown a good exchange After this the King putting his hair under his cap after some short and fervent ejaculations in private with his hands and eyes lift up to heaven immediately stooped down and laid his neck upon the block and the King perceiving the Executioner prepared and armed to give the fatal blow said unto him Stay for the signe and after a very little pause stretching forth his hands the executioner at one blow severed his head from his body and even his enemies wept in private for what they had done in publick His body was put into a coffin covered with black velvet and carried from thence to his house at Saint Iamses where being embalmed and wrapped up in a sheet of lead it was exposed to the view of the people On Wednesday the 7 of Feb. his body was delivered to two of his servants to be buried at Windsor where the next day the Bishop of London the Duke of Richmond the Marquess of Hartford and the Earls of Lindsey and Southampton repaired and buried him in a vault in St. Georges Chappel it being the same vault where Henry the eight had beene heretofore interred The Life and death of Oliver Cromwel Lord Protector OLiver Cromwell was born in the town of Huntingdon he was descended from the family of the Williams in the Coun. of Glamorgan one whereof marrying with the onely child and daughter of the Lord Cromwell raised and beheaded by Henry the Eight the whole Family afterwards retained the Name of Cromwell which was thought more Honourable In the month of August 1649. Six moneths after the decease of King Charles Oliver Cromwell being chosen by the Parliament to be Governor of Ireland advanced into that Nation with a very gallant Army of Horse and Foot where having taken and besieged Dogheda by degrees became absolute master of that whole Nation In the same year Doctor Dorislaus who assisted at King Charles his death being sent as Agent into the Low Countreys was killed at the Hagne and Mr. Acham being not long afterwards sent as an Agent into Spain was killed at Madrid In the year 1650. the Common-wealth of England preparing to make war against the Scots Oliver Cromwell who for his many great services in the wars of England was made Lieutenant General was now chosen to be Generallissimo of the Armies of the Common-wealth of England in the place of the Lord Fairfax This year in the moneth of September was the famous battell of Dunbar where the English having totally overthrown the Scots did take ten Collonels 12 Lieutenant-collonels 9 Majors 47 Captains 72 Lientenants and eighty Ensignes two and twenty great Gunns and arms for fifteen thousand men In the same moneth Edenburgh and Leith were taken Col Eusebius Andrews being discovered to bring over Commissions to raise souldiers for the King of Scotland was condemned for it and beheaded on Tower hill Much about the same time Generall Blake at sea did ruine Prince Ruperts Fleet. In the year 1651. the Armes of the Crown of England were put down by order of Parliament and the Statues of King Chales were put down one of them at the old Exchange and the other at the west end of Pauls This year the Lord Saint Iohn and Mr. Walter Strickland were sent Ambassadors into Holland where they were much affronted by the English Royalists The Isle of Scilly was reduced and one Brown Bushell was beheaded at London a famous Royalist both by sea and land This year M. Love and Mr. Gibbons were beheaded on Tower-hill In the moneth of August the King of Scotland with an army of twelve thousand men did enter into England by the way of Carlile and on the third of September following was the battel at Worcester where the King of Scotland being over-powred lost the day where there were taken six Collonels of horse eight of foot thirty seven Captains of ho●se seventy three of foot seventy ●●x Standards ninty nine Ensignes one hundred fifty and eight Colours all the Canon the Royall Standard the Kings coach and horses the King himself made an escape strangely and in a disguise passed unknown into France This yeare the Isle of Iersie was taken and the Isle of Man reduced and not long afterwards the strong castle of G●ernsey was surrendred to the Pa●liament In the moneth of May 1652. was the first Sea-fight betwixt the Engglish and the Hollanders Generall Blake gave the first volley and let flie three guns at Van-trumps flag to which Van-trump answered by a shot from the stern of his ship backwards signifying his disdain to veyl his flag and instead of striking his main top-saile he caused a red flag of
with fire An. Reg. 33 A great fire beginning at Gilbert Beckers house in West Cheap consumed a great part of London from thence to Allgate An. Dom. 1135 An. Reg. 36 Worcester was sore defaced with fire An. reg 34 King Henry remaining in Normandy deceased the first day of December Anno 1135. when he had reigned 35. years four months his bowels brains and eyes were buried at Roan the rest of his body being powdered with salt and wrapped in bulls hides was buried at Reading King Stephen KIng Stephen was a man of noble parts and hardy passing comely of favour and personage he excelled in martial policy gentleness and liberality towards all men and although he had continuall war yet he did never burthen the Commons with taxes An. Reg. 1 Fire which began at London stone consumed eastward to Algate and westward to St. Pauls Church An. Reg. 2 An. Dom. 1137 Rochester was burnt with all the city An. Reg. 3 The Arch-Bishops Sea in York Saint Martins Church without the walls and the hospital with thirty nine Churches were burnt Saint Peters Church at Bath and all the city was burnt An. Reg. 5 Robert Earl of Glocester with a great power invaded the town of Nottingham and spoyled it the townesmen were taken slain or burnt in the Churches whereunto they fled An. Reg. 16 An. Dom. 1150 England was full of trouble and war set forth to fire and rapine th●ough the discord betwixt the king and certain Lords which took part with Henry Plantagenet An. Dom. 1154 This caused the king to be so willing to render up his crown and government to Henry Plantagenet only he had his honor gran●ed him so long as he lived King Stephen dyed the twenty fifth of October when he had reigned eighteen years ten months and odd dayes Henry the second An. Reg. 10 An. Dom. 1163 LOndon Bridge was new made of timber by Peter a Priest of Cole-Church An. Reg. 12 An. Dom. 1165 A great Earthquake in Ely Norfolk and Suffolk so that it overthrew them that stood upon their feet and caused the bels to ring in the Steeples An. Reg. 20 An. Dom. 1174 The City of Leicester burnt by the kings command the walls and castle rased and the inhabitants dispersed into other cities for disobedience towards the king the king of Scots taken prisoner led into Normandy and compounded for his ransome Christs Church in Canterbury burnt An. Reg. 26 The City of York was burned the Church of St. Andrews in Rochester was consumed with fire An. Reg. 31 The Abby of Glassenbury burned An. Reg. 32 A great Earthquake threw down many buildings among the which the Cathedral Church of Lincolne was rent in pieces Chichester city likewise was burnt An. Reg. 33 Neer unto Orford in Suffolk certaine fishers took in their nets a fish ●●●1 having the shape of a man which fish was kept by Bartholomew de Glanvile custos of the castle of Orford in the same castle for the space of six months and more for a wonder he spake not a word all manner of meat he would gladly eat but most greedy was he after raw flesh or fish at length he stole away from his keeper and ran to the sea again An. Reg. 34 The town of Beverly with the Church of St. Iohn there was burnt King Henry departed this life the sixth day of Iuly in the year of our Lord 1189. when he had reigned twenty four years seven months lacking eleven daies and was buried at Fonteverald in the Monastery of Nunns by him founded Richard Coeur de lion An. Reg. 1 IN this time were many outlawes and robbers among whom Robin Hood and little Iohn remained in the woods dispoyling and robbing the rich of their goods the said Robert maintained an hundred tall men and good Archers with such spoyles as he got upon whom four hundred men were they never so strong durst not give the onset poor mens goods he spared abundantly relieving them with that which he got from Abbies and houses of rich Earls An. Dom. 1191 The Jews of Norwich Saint Edmonsbury Lincoln Stamford and Lyn were robbed and at York to the number of five hundred besides women and children entred a tower of the castle which the people assayling the Jews cut the throats of their wives and children and cast them over the walls on the Christians heads the residue they locked up and burnt both the house and themselves Richard the first An. Dom. 1199 KIng Richard turned his armes against the Barons of Poicton that rebelled against him he set their Cities and Towns on fire spoiled their countrey and killed many of his adversaries at last came to the Dukedome of Aquit●●e and besieged the Castle of Chalne whereon Bertrane de Gordani smote him with a venomed dart and although the King won the Castle yet he lost his life for of this wound he died the sixth day of April in the year of our Lord 1199. when he had raigned 9 years 7 months and was buried at Founteverard his heart was buried at Roan and his bowels at Chalne King Iohn An. Reg. 4 An. Dom. 1202 HAil as big as hens eggs An. Reg. 7 The 14 of Ianuary began a frost which continued till the 22 of March so that the ground could not be tilled whereof it came to pass that in Summer following a quarter of wheat was sold for a Mark which in the daies of Henry the seventh was sold for twelve pence An. Reg. 8 Great thunder and lightning were seen so that many men and women were destroyed besides cattel and houses overthrown and burned corne in the fields was beaten down with hail-stones as big as Goose-eggs An. Reg. 9 The arches and stone bridge over the Thames at London was this year finished by Serle Mercer and William Alman then procurators or ●a●e●s of the bridge works An. Reg. 15 The tenth of Iuly at night the City of London upon the south side of the River of Thames with the Church of our Lady of the Cannons in Southwark being a fire an exceeding great multitude of people passing the b●idge sodainly the north-part by blowing of the south wind was also set on fire and the people which were even now passing the bridge perceiving the same would have returned but were stopped by the fire and it came to pass that as they protracted time the south end was fired so that people thronged between the two fires there came to aid them many ships and vessels into the which the multitude so undiscreetly pressed that the ships being drowned it was said there were destroyed about three thousand persons An. Reg. 17 Saint Edmonsbury consumed with fire It was reported that King Iohn was poysoned by a Monck but certain it is he dyed in the Castle of Newarck on the 19 of Octob. 1216. where the Captain of the Castle caused him to be imboweled and was conveighed to Worcester and there honourably buried when he had reigned seventeen years and five
months lacking eight dayes Henry of Winchester An. Dom. 1222 A young man was brought before the Arch-bishop of Canterbury who willed himself to be crucified and to be called Jesus and an old woman that had bewitched the young man to such madness procured her self to be called Mary the mother of Christ they were both closed up between two walls of stone where they ended their lives in misery The Citizens of London falling out with the Bailiffe of Westminster and the men of the Suburbs at a game of wrastling made a great tumult against the Abbot of Westminster for the which their Captain Constantine with some others were hanged the rest had their feet and their hands cut off Henry the third An. Reg. 13 An. Dom. 1230 GReat thunder and lightning which burnt many houses and slew both men and beasts An. Reg. 15 Upon the day of St. Paul when Roger Niger Bishop of London was at Masse in the Cathedral Church of S. Paul suddainly the weather waxed dark and a horrible thunder-clapp lighted on the Church the same was shaken as if it would have fallen and out of a dark cloud came such a flash of lightning that all the Church seemed to be on fire all the people thought they should have been burned and ran all out of the church and being astonished fell upon the ground voyd of all understanding none of all the multitude tarried in the Church save the Bishop and one Deacon which stood still at the high Al ●●● An. Dom. 1233 The seventh of April there appeared as it were four suns besides the natural sun of a red colour and a great circle of Christal colour An. Reg. 17 The morrow after Saint Martins day began thunders very horrible which lasted fifteen daies An. Reg. 19 This year was a great dearth and pestilence so that many poor people died for want of victuals An. Dom. 1235 The Jewes of Norwich stole a boy and circumcised him and had an intent to have crucified him at Easter for which fact they were convicted An. Dom. 1236 The Thames overflowed the banks so that in the great Pallace of Westm●nster men did row with Wherries in the midst of the Hall An. Dom. 1237 Ottobon a Cardinal came into England as a Legat from the Pope this year passed stormy and troublesome weather and very unhealthful An. Dom. 1238 Ottobon being lodged in the Abby of Osney the Scholars of Oxford slew his Master-cook and the Legat for fear got him into the Steeple of the Church where he stayed till the Kings Officers coming from Abingdon conveied him to Wallingford where he accused the misdoers Otho de Killeney a Standard bearer to the Scholers was taken and put into prison with twelve others who not long after went from Saint Pauls Church to the Legats house bare footed and bare headed where they asked him forgiveness A Scholer of Oxford enterprised to kill the king in his chamber at Woodstock was taken and pulled to pieces with horses An. Dom. 1240 The Stone work and Bulwork which the King caused to be builded by the Tower of London was shaken by a tempest and an Earthquake together that it fell down but the King commanded that the same should be builded again many strange fishes came to shore whereof forty were Sea Bulls and one of a huge bigness passed through the Bridge of London unhurt till he came to the Kings house at Mortlack and there he was killed An. Dom. 1241 An. Reg. 26 The Jews were constrained to pay 20000 marks or else to be kept in perpetual imprisonment The walls and bull-works that were newly builded about the Tower of London were again thrown down by an Earthquake An. Dom. 1263 The Thames overflowed the banks about Lambeth and drowned houses and fields the space of six miles in the great Hall at Westminster men took their horses backs An. Reg. 31 The Church of Saint Mildred in Canterbury and a great part of the City was burnt An. Reg. 32 A great plague was in England An. Reg. 32 The Town of New-Castle upon Tine was burned Bridge and all An. Reg. 33 By a strange Earth-quake tops of houses were thrown down walls did cleave the heads of Chimneys and Towers were shaken An. Reg. 34 In October the Sea flowing twice without ebbe did make such a horrible noyse that it was heard into England a great way besides this in a dark night the Sea seemed to be on a light fire and the waves to fight one against another so that the Marriners were not able to save their ships and at Winchelsea besides cottages for salt and fither-mens houses bridges and mills above three hundred houses with certain Churches through the violent rising of the Sea were drowned An. Dom. 1255 142 Jews were brought to Westminster which were accused for crucifying a child at Lincoln eighteen of them were hanged the rest remained long prisoners An. Reg. 43 A Jew at Tewksbury fell into a Privy upon the Saturday and would not be helped out because it was his Sabbath wherefore Richard of Clare Earle of Glocester kept him there while Munday at which ●ime he was dead An. Dom. 1263 In the 10 year of Richard the Emperour there was a Blazing-star seen three moneths at this time there was a Schisme among the Princes Electors in Germany An. Dom. 1264 There was slain of Jews in London to the number of 700. their wares spoiled and their Synagogues defaced a multitude more of them because one Jew would have forced a Christian man to have paid more then two pence for the usury of twenty shillings the week An. Dom. 1268 Variance fell between the fellowship of Gold-smiths and Taylors of London causing great mischief to be done and many men slain for which Riot twelve of the chief Captains were hanged An. Dom. 1269 The river of Thames was so hard frozen from Saint Andrews tide to Candlemas that men and beasts passed over from Lambeth to Westminster the Merchandize was carried from Sandwich and other Havens to London by Land An. Dom. 1271 The Steeple of Bowe in Cheap fell down and slew many people men and women An. Dom. 1272 In Iune began a great riot in Norwich through the which the Monastery of the Trinity was burned whereupon the King rode down and making enquiry for the chief doets thereof caused thirty of them to be condemned hang'd drawn quarter'd and their Quarters to be burned King Henry died on the sixteenth of November in the year of our Lord 1272. when he had reigned 56 years and 28 daies and was buried at Westminster he built a great part of the Church King Edward sir-named Long-shanks An. Reg. 2 An. Dom. 1274 THis year fell a great variance at Oxford between the Northern men and Irish men wherein many of the Irish men were slain An. Reg. 3 An. Dom. 1276 On Saint Nicholas day even were great Earthquakes Lightnings and Thunder with a great Dragon and a Blazing-star which made many
and hanged An. Dom. 1335 The Sea banks broke in all through England but specially in the Thames so that all the cattel and beasts near thereunto were drowned An. Dom. 1339 A sudden undation of water at New-Castle upon Tine bare down part of the Town wall where an hundred and twenty men and women were drowned An. Dom. 1350 In Oxfordshire near Chippingnorton was found a Serpent having two heads and two faces like women one face attired of the new fashion of womens attire and the other face like the old attire and wings like a B●tt An. Reg. 25 Men and women perished in divers places with Thunder and Lightning Fiends or Devils and strange apparitions were seen by men and spake unto them as they travelled An. Reg. 36 A great dearth and pestilence in England in which died Henry Duke of Lancaster who was buried at Leicester An. Reg. 38 A great winde in England overturned houses and Church-steeples An. reg 37. A Frost in England lasted from the midst of September to the moneth of April An. Reg. 51 King Edward ended his life at his Mannour of Shene the 21 day of Iune in the year of our Lord 1377. when he had reigned fifty years four moneths and odd daies he was buried at Westminster King Richard of Bourdeaux An. Reg. 1 RIchard the Second the Son of Prince Edward being but eleven years old began his Reign the 21 of Iune in the year of our Lord 1377. in bounty and liberality he far passed all his Progenitors but for that he was young was most ruled by young counsel and regarded nothing the counsel of the sage and wise men of the Realm This thing turned the Land to great trouble and himself to great misery An. Dom. 1388 Iack Straw was beheaded for Rebellion against the King Wat Tyler arrested by the Mayor of the City of High-Treason was slain in Smithfield and all the rest of the crew pardoned by the King An. Reg. 6 A general Earthquake the 21 of May and a water-shaking which made the ships in the Haven to totter An. Reg. 7 Iohn Bale brought to Saint Albans was hang'd drawn and quarter'd Iohn Rawe Captain of the Rebels in Suffolk was hang'd and quarter'd An. Reg. 9 The 18 of Iuly was an Earthquake An. Reg. 11 An. Dom. 1390 The Nobles rise against the King In Oxford the Welsh and Southern Scholars assailed the Northern whereby many murders were committed An. Dom. 1391 The good man of the Cock in Cheap a Brewer at the little Conduit was murdered in the night by a Thief who came in at the gutter window as it was known long after by the same thief when he was condemned for felony His wife was burned in Smithfield and his three men hanged wrongfully An. Dom. 1397 The Earl of Arundel with many more were put to death for that they rebuked the King in matters of State something liberally An. Dom. 1398 Thomas Arundel Arch-bishop of Canterbury was banished the Realm An. Dom. 1399 Iohn of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster deceased and was honourably buried in Saint Pauls Church An. Reg. 23 The King exacted great sums of money of seventeen Shires of the Realm and laid to their charges that they had been against him with the Duke of Glocester the Earls of Arundel and Warwick wherefore he went about to induce the Lords both spiritual and temporal to make a submission by writing acknowledging themselves to be Traitors to the King though they never offended him Moreover he compelled them to set their hands to blanks to the end that so often as it pleased him he might oppre●● them An. Reg. 23 But all this made nothing for him but all against him for within a while after he was sent to the Tower till the next Parliament which was begun the morrow after Michaelmas-day at which time he resigned all his power and Knightly title to the Crown of England and France to Henry Duke of Hereford and Lancaster when he had reigned twenty two years three moneths and odd daies Henry the Fourth Henry of Bollengbrook An. Reg. 1 HEnry the Fourth son to Iohn of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster was made King of England more by force then by lawful succession or election He began his Reign the 29 of September in the year 1399. An. Reg. 2 The King caused the Blanok Charters to be burnt made to King Richard Iohn Holland late Duke of Exeter Thomas Holland Duke of Surrey Edward Duke of Awmarl Iohn Mountecute Earl of Salisbury Thomas Spencer Sir Ralph Lumley Sir Thomas Blunt Sir Benedict Cely Knights with others conspired against King Henry and appointed privily to murder him but their Treason was found out and they were all put to death King Richard being in Pomfret-Castle died the fourteenth day of February his body was brought to London and so through the City of London to St. Pauls Church bare-faced three daies for all beholders from thence he was carried to Langley and there buried An. Dom. 1402 Certain men affirmed that King Richard was alive for the which a Priest was taken at Warwick who was drawn hanged and quarter'd Walter Waldock Prior of Lawd was likewise hanged and headed and eight grey Friers hanged and headed at London of the which one Richard Fresby Doctor of Divinity was drawn and hanged Sir Roger Claringdon Knight a Esquire and a Yeoman were beheaded at London and divers grey Friers hanged and beheaded and two at Leicester all these had published King Richard to be alive An. Dom. 1407 A Pestilence in London consumed above thirty thousand An. Dom. 1408 A Frost lasted fifteen weeks An. Dom. 1409 Henry Earle of Northumberland and the Lord Bardolph came into England with a great company pretending by Proclamation to deliver the people from the great oppression that they were burdened with but by Sir Thomas Rokebey Sheriff of York-shire he was encountred at Bramhammoor and there slain the Lord Bardolph was likewise wounded to death An. Dom. 1412 After the fortunate chances hapned to King Henry being delivered of all civil division he was taken with sickness and yeelded to God his spirit the 20 of March 1412. when he had reigned thirteen years six moneths and odd daies he was buried at Canterbury Henry of Monmouth An. Reg. 1 HEnry the Fifth began his Reign the 20 of March in the year 1412. This Prince exceeded the mean stature of men he was beauteous of visage his neck long body slender and lean his bones small nevertheless he was of marvellous great strength and passing swift in running An. Dom. 1413 Sir Iohn Old-Castle for divers points touching the Sacrament before the Archbishop of Canterbury the Bishop of London VVinchester and others was convicted and committed to the Tower of London out of the which he brake and fled An. Dom. 1414 Certain adherents of Sir Iohn Old-Castle assembled them in Thickets field near London but the King being warned took the field before them and so took of them such numbers that
was buried at Westminster in the new Chappel which he caused to be builded he left issue Henry Prince of Wales who succeeded in the Kingdome Lady Margaret Queen of Scots and Lady Mary promised to Charles King of Castile Henry the Eighth An. Reg. 1 HEnry the Eighth at the age of eighteen years began his reign the 22 of April Anno 1590. of personage he was tall and mighty in wit and memory excellent the third of Iune he married Lady Katherine his first wife who had been late wife to Prince Arthur deceased On Midsommer day the King and Queen were crowned at Westminster An. Dom. 1510 Sir Richard Emson Knight and Edmond Dudley Esquire who had been great Councellors to King Henry the seventh were beheaded on Tower-hill the eighteenth of August An. Dom. 1515 Richard Hunne a Merchant-Taylor of S. Margarets Parish of Bridge-street who had been put in the Lollards Tower about the end of October was now the fifth of December found hanged in the same place and after burned in Smithfield An. Dom. 1517 The Thames was frozen that men with horse and carts might pass betwixt Westminster and Lambeth An. Dom. 1517 An. Reg. 9 On May-eve was an insurrection of young men and Apprentices of London against Aliens of the which divers were hanged vvith their Captain Iohn Lincorn a Broker the residue Ill May-day to the number of four hundred men and eleven vvomen tyed in ropes all along one after another in their shirts came to Westminster-hall vvith halters about their necks and vvere pardoned An. Dom. 1518 Many died in England of the svveating sickness and especially about London wherefore Trinity Term was one day at Oxford and then adjourned to Westminster An. Dom. 1521 The 27 of May was Edward Duke of Buckingham beheaded King Henry wrote a book against Luther and therefore the Pope named him Defender of the Faith An. Dom. 1524 In December in the City of Coventry Francis Philip Christopher Pickering and Anthony Mainle intended to have taken the Kings treasure of his Subsidy as the same came towards London therewith to have raised men and to have taken the Castle of Killingworth and then to have made wars against the King for the which they were drawn hanged and quarter'd at Tyburn the other of their conspiracy were executed at Coventry An. Dom. 1526 The eleventh of February four Merchants of the Still-yard did penance at Pauls and Doctor Barnes bare a faggot An. Dom. 1527 An. Reg. 19 In November December and Ianuary fell abundance of rain that thereof ensued great floods which destroyed corn-fields pasture and beasts then was it dry till the twelfth of April and from that time it rained every day and night till the third of Iune Such a scarcity of bread was then at London and all England over that many died for want of succour The bread-carts coming from Stratford to London were met by the way and the people were ready to p●ll it out of the carts insomuch that the Mayor and Sheriffs were forced to go and rescue the same and see the carts brought to the markets appointed Wheat was then at fifteen shillings the quarter shortly after the Merchants of the Still-yard brought from Dansk such store of wheat and rye that it was better cheap in London then in any part of the Realm beside An. Reg. 23 Richard Rice a Cook was boiled in Smithfield for poysoning divers persons at the Bishop of Winchesters house The eleventh of April seven men with their horses and a ferry man were drowned at Lambeth Thomas Bilney was burned at Norwich An. Reg. 24 An. Dom. 1532 The 25 of May was taken between London and Greenwich two great fishes called Hurlepools Five men were hanged and quarter'd at Tyburn for coyning and clipping of money A great fish was taken at Blackwall which was brought to Westminster to the King An. Reg. 26 The 15 of May was a great fire at Salters Hall in Bredstreet The fourteenth of August was a great fire at Temple-bar the sixteenth of August was the Kings Stable burned at Charing-cross wherein were burned many great horses and great store of hay An. Dom. 1537 The Prior of the Charter-house at London the Prior of Beval the Prior of Exham Reynolds a Brother of Simon and Iohn Hail Vicar of Thisleworth were all condemned drawn and hanged and quarter'd at Tyburn the fourth of May. The eighteenth of Iune three Monks of the Charter-house of London Exmewe Middlemore and Nidigate were hanged and quarter'd at Tyburn The 22 of Iune Doctor Iohn Fisher Bishop of Rochester was beheaded on the Tower-hill The sixth of Iuly Sir Thomas Moor was beheaded on Tower-hill Within a while after the Lady Ann Queen was had to the Tower and there for things laid to her charge was shortly after beheaded The nineteenth of May the Lord Rochford Brother to the said Queen Henry Norrice Mark Smeton William Brierton and Francis Weston all of the Kings Privy Chamber about matters touching the Queen were put to death In the beginning of October at an Assise for the Kings subsidie kept in Lincolnshire the people made an insurrection and gathered nine and twenty thousand persons together against those the king did send the Duke of Suffolk the Earl of Shrewsbury and the Earl of Rutland with a strong power whereof when the Rebels heard they desired pardon brake up their Army and departed home but their Captains were apprehended and executed The ninth of October a Priest and a Butcher were hanged for speaking in the behalf of the Lincolneshire men they were hanged at VVindsor After began an insurrection for the sames causes in York-shire the people gathered to the number of forty thousand against those Rebels the king sent the Duke of Norfolk the Earl of Shrewsbury and the Marquess of Exceter with a great Army with whom a battel was appointed to be fought on the Eve of Simon and Iude but there fell such rain the night before that the two armies could not meet whe●eupon they desired the D. of Norfolk to sue to the King for a pardon and that they might have their liberties whi●h the Duke promised and rid post to the king then lying at Windsor to know his pleasure and so appeased them Ask that was the chief in this rebellion came to London and was not onely pardoned but rewarded with gifts the king dealt with this Ask as his Father did with Perkin Warbeck let him alone a while to see what he would do and these kings did but just play with these miscreants as the cat playes with the mouse for they were both of them hanged The twelfth of December the Thames being frozen the king and Queen Iane rode through London to Greenwich The third of February was Thomas Fitz Garret son and heir to the Earle of K●ldare beheaded and five of his Uncles drawn hanged and quartered at Tiburn in this moneth Nicholas Musgrave Thomas Gilby and others stirred a new rebellion and besieged the City of
such continual lightning and thunder that the like hath not been seen nor heard by any man living An. Dom. 1564 In the moneth of December was driven or the shore at Grimsby in Lincolnshire a monstrous fish in length nineteen yatds his tail fifteen foot broad and six yards between his eyes The twentieth of September rose great floods in the Thames that the marshes were overflowed and many cattel drowned The seventh of October all the North parts of the element seemed to be covered with flames of fire proceeding from the North-East and North-West towards the midst of the firmament and descended West The twenty first of Decemb. began a frost which continued so extremely that on New-years even people went over and along the thames on the yce from London-bridge to Westminster some played at the Foot-ball divers of the Court being there at Westminster shot at the Butts upon the Thames and people both men and women went on the yce in greater numbers then in any street in London On the third day of Ianuary it began to thaw and on the fifth day was no yce to be seen between London-bridge and Lambeth which sudden thaw caused great floods and high waters that bare down bridges and houses and drowned many people in England especially in York-shire it bore away Owse bridge and many other bridges The sixteenth of Iune began a tempest about nine a clock at night so great a tempest of lightning and thunder with showres of hail which continued till three of the clock in the next morning so terrible that at Chelmesford in Essex five hundred acres of corn was destroyed the glass windows of the East side of the town were beaten down and on the West and South-sides of the Church were beaten down with all the tiles of their houses besides divers barns and chimneys with the battlements of the Church which were overthrown the like harm was done in many other places as at Leed Crainbrook and Dover This year by the commandment of the Councel divers musters of light horsemen on sundry daies and in divers places about the City of London were taken by the Mayor and other Commissioners for that purpose But thus it happen'd on the eighth day of October that Sir Richard Mallory riding through tower-street toward the tower-hill there to take muster as was appointed he was met by Sir Francis Iobson then Lievtenant of the tower and by him forbidden to enter the Hill with the Sword before him whereunto no answer was made by the Mayor but the Sword was violently seized upon by the Lievtenant and his men and defended by the Officers of the Mayor so that the Lievtenant called for more Officers and assistance out of the tower and the Mayors Officers were minded to raise tower-street and some of the City so there was like to have been a great tumult but the Lord Mayor caused proclamation to be made that no man should draw a weapon or strike a stroke but every man to depart home horse-men and all till they were again warned to appear which was on the same day seventh night being likewise Munday and the fifteenth day of Octoher they did there appear before the Mayor and did muster in the very place where they were appointed where by the Councels appointment the Mayor had the Sword peaceably born before him as had been accustomed An. Reg. 8 The twenty fourth of December there arose a great storm of winde by whose rage the Seas and thames overwhelmed many persons and the great gates at the West end of Saint Pauls Church in London by force of the winde were blown open An. Dom. 1596 About this time Sir Thomas Gresham built the Royal Exchange by the advice of Queen Elizabeth at his own proper cost and charges a fit meeting place for Merchants who in former times used to meet in Lombard-street An. Reg. 9 The 22 of April by great misfortune of fire in the town of Ossestry in Wales to the number of two hundred houses besides cloth corn and cattel were consumed The seuenteenth of May in the town of Milnal in Suffolk thirty seven houses besides ba●ns and stables were consumed with fire in the space of two houres An. Reg. 9 After a dry Summer followed a sharp Winter which caused such a scarcity of fodder and hay that in divers places the same was sold by weight for five pence the stone there followed also a great dearth of corn On the twenty eighth of March the Queen sent three of her Ships to Sea to wit the Antelope the Swallow and the Aid and one Bark against the Subjects of King Philip who fought with eleven Sail and brought home great treasure Within a while after they fought with fourteen Sail more whereof six of them were sent into the river of thames An. Dom. 1568 The Gravesend Barge was cast away and a many boats beside through a tempest The eleventh of October were taken in Suffolk at Downham-bridge seventeen monstrous fishes some of them twenty seven foot in length two miles from Ipswich The twenty seventh of Ianuary a French man and two English men were drawn from Newgate to Tyburn and there hanged the French man was quartered for coyning of gold counterfeit the English men the one had clipped silver the other for coyning tin-money The plague encreasing Michaelmas term was adjourned unto Hillary term An. Reg. 12 The Queen caused the Earl of Northumberland and the Earl of Westmerland for rebellion in the North to be proclaimed traytors and forthwith prepared an Army to suppress them the twenty fourth of November The two Earls were overthrown and fled into Scotland The other rebels were taken by the Earl of Sussex The fourth and fifth of Ianuary did suffer at Durham to the number of sixty six Constables and others among whom an Alderman of the town and one Parson Plumtree then George Bowers Marshall did see them executed in every town and other places betwixt New-castle and Wetherby about six miles in length and four miles in bredth The 22 of February Leonard Dacre having raised a number of people the Lord Hunsdon setting on him with a company of valiant Souldiers slew many of his people and forced him to fly into Scotland On Good-Friday the twenty seventh of March Simon Digby Iohn Fulthroppe Esquire Robert Pennieman Thomas Bishop Gentleman were drawn from the Castle of York and there hanged headed and quartered The seventeenth of April the Earl of Suslex with the Lord Hunsdon Master William Drury High Marshal of Barwick with all the Garrison and power of the same began a journey into Scotland and enter'd into Tividale burnt overthrew and spoiled all the Castles towns and villages before them till they came to Craling Sir Iohn Foster with a Garrison enter'd Scotland burnt and spoiled Cargeln there both the Armies met and overthrew all that came before them till they came to Godworth the Lievtenant returned to Barwick the 22 of April The Lord Scrope Warden
many grains to the number of eighty spread from the body like the branches of a tree was from the snout to the end of the longest grain seventeen inches having four issues in the grains from whence dropped forth a red water the body in bigness round about was three inches and a half the coller was very like the coller of a Mackarel this monstrous worm crawling about to have got away was stabbed in with a dagger and died which after being dried was shewed to many Honourable persons of the Realm The eighteenth of Iune one Elks Clark for counterfeiting the Queens Sign Manual to a presentation of the Parsonage of All-Saints in Hastings directed to the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury or to his Commissary General the Diocess of Chichester being void that he might be instituted Parson there was drawn hanged and quartered at Tyburn In the moneth of Iuly divers trayterous persons were apprehended and detected of most wicked conspiracy against her Majesty and also of minding to have stirred up a general Rebellion through the whole Realm for joy of whose apprehension on the fifteenth of the same moneth at night the Citizens of London caused the Bells to be rung and Bonfires to be made and also banqueting every man according to his ability some in their houses some in the streets with singing of Psalms and praising God for preserving her Majesty and the people of this land which doings of the Citizens were so well accepted of her Majesty as by letters to them directed may appear The seventh of September certain of these wicked subjects were indicted First For intending treason against the Queens own person Secondly For stirring Civil Warre within this Realm and thirdly For practising to bring in a Forraign Power to invade the Realm Seven of them appeared at Westminster on the thirteenth of September who all pleaded guilty and were condemned On the eighteenth of September the other seven were likewise arraigned who pleaded not guilty but were found guilty and were condemned These traytors fourteen of them in all were executed in Lincolns-Inn fields on a Scaffold of timber made strongly for that purpose even in the place where they had used to meet and to confer on their trayterous practises there were they hanged drawn and quartered seven of them on the twentieth of September to wit Iohn Ballard Priest Adam Babington Esquire Iohn Savage Gentleman Richard Barnwel Gentleman Chidrick Titchburn Esq Charles Tylney Esquire Edward Abbington Esquire the other seven were also executed on the 21 of September to wit Thomas Salisbury Esquire Henry Dunne Gentleman Edward Iones Esquire Iohn Travers Gentleman Iohn Charnock Gentleman Richard Gage Gentleman Ierom Bellamy Gent. The eighth of October Iohn Low Iohn Adams and Richard Dibdail being before condemned of treason in being made Priest by order of the Bishop of Rome were drawn to Tyburn and there hanged and quartered The eighth of February being Wednesday according to sentence lately given by the Nobility Mary Stuart Queen of Scots about ten of the clock before noon was executed and suffered death by beheading on a Scaffold set up on purpose at the great end of the Castle of Fodringay in the presence of George Talbot Earl of Shrewsbury Henry Grey Earl of Kent principal Commissioners and others the Gentlemen of the country near adjoyning to the number of three hundred all her apparrel was burned but her body with the head was honourably buried at Peterborow on the first day of August next following Munday the twenty fourth of February a man was hanged for Felony at Saint Thomas a Watrings being begged of the Surgeons for an Anatomy after he was dead to all mens thinking cut down and stripped laid naked in a chest thrown in a cart and so brought from the place of execution through the Borough of Southwark and the City of London to the Chyrurgeons Hall in London near unto Aldersgate the chest being then opened the weather being extreme cold he was found to be alive and lived till thursday next following and then died The twenty third of February a Gunpowder house at Redriff was blown up and much harm done An. Dom. 1588 Great provision was made this year both by Sea and Land to withstand the invasion of the Spanish Armado against the Realm for besides the general forces of the Land appointed to be mustered and put in readiness in several Shires for the defence of the Land there was also a Levy made of two several Armies the one to make a body of a Camp to reside at Tilbury in Essex to encounter with the Enemy if he should attempt to land in any place of that country whereof the Earl of Leicester Lord Steward of her Majesties houshold was Lievtenant General as also of the armies levied against Forraigne Invasion the other to be imployed for the Guard of her Majesties person under the charge of the Right Honourable the Lord Hunsdon Lord Chamberlain to her Majesty the Camp at Tilbury consisting both of Horsemen and Foot-men raised out of all Shires were of Lancers two hundred fifty three of light Horsemen seven hundred sixty nine of Foot-men twenty two thousand the Army for the Guard of her Majesties person four hundred eighty one light Horsemen one thousand four hundred thirty one Footmen thirty four thousand and fifty The Navy set forth and armed for the Seas consisted partly of her Majesties ships partly of her Subjects which were furnished out of the Port-towns whereunto they belonged 269 Of this Navy the chiefest and greatest part was under the charge of the Lord Charles Howard of Essingham Lord Admiral of England and were addressed to encounter with the Spanish Fleet the rest of the Ships were assigned unto the Lord Henry Seimour Admiral of the Fleet to guard the Narrow Seas and to stay the iss●ing out of the ships and vessels prepared by the Duke of Parma at Dunkirk The twenty third of May the Lord Admiral c●me to Plimouth with the Fleet aforesaid finding there Sir Francis Drake in a readiness with more then 50 ships and Pinnaces the twenty fourth of Iune the Lord Admiral issued out towards Plimmouth he divided her Majesties ships into three parts viz. Sir Francis Drake in the Revenge he being Vice-Admiral with other towards the Islands of Scilly Iohn Hawkins Rear-Admiral in the Victory with other toward the Isle of Ushent and the Lord Admiral with the rest remaining in the Sleeve appointed other there all to discern if the Spanish forces did any way pass The nineteenth of Iuly intelligence was brought to the Lord Admiral by a pyrat Pinnace whose Captaine was Thomas Fleming that the Spanish Fleet was descried and that it was neer The twentieth of Iuly the Lord Admiral made toward the sea and the same day had sight of the Spanish Fleet in number by estimation one hundred fifty eight sails the Lord Admiral cast about towards the land to interrupt them from landing and having got the wind of them followed them
close all that night and so continually from place to place until the second of August in which space having by the power of God wonderfully overcome them he returned to Margaret in Kent now the Camp being kept at Tilbury in Essex under the charge of the Earl of Leicester the ninth of August her Majesty repaired thither where all the whole camp being set in order of Battalia she passed through every rank of them to their great rejoycing and lodged that night and the night following in the house of Master Edward Rich in the Parish of Hornedon on the next morning she returned to the camp and on the twelfth returned to Saint Iame's and shortly after the camp was dissolved Sunday the twentieth of August Master Nowel Dean of Pauls at Pauls Cross in the presence of the Lord Mayor and the Aldermen in scarlet all the Companies in their liveries preached moved them to give God thanks for the great victory given to our English Nation by the overthrow of the Spanish Fleet. August the twenty sixth at the Sessions nere unto Newgate were condemned eight men for being made Priests beyond the seas and remaining in this Realme contrary to the statute four temporal men for being reconciled to the Church of Rome and four others for releiving the others September the second at night a fierce fire brake out over against the Dutch Church in London to the great terror of the whole City but by the burning down of one house and pulling down some other the fire was quenched September the eighth the Minister at Pauls Cross moved the people to give God thanks for the overthrow of our enemies the Spaniards and there were shewed eleaven Ensignes or Banners taken in the Spanish ships by our men and on the next morning hanged on London Bridge towards Southwark where then the faire was kept being our Lady day October the eighth a stable was burned with the number of twenty horses at Drury house neer the Strand An. Reg. 32 November the nineteenth was this year kept holy day through the Realme with Sermons singing of Psalmes Bonefires and much rejoycing and thanksgiving unto God for the overthrow of the Spaniards our enemies upon the seas and a sermon at Pauls Cross tending to that end November the twenty fourth being Sunday the Queens Majesty having attendants upon her the privie counsel and other of the Nobility honourable persons as well spiritual as temporal in great number all on horseback did ride in a Chariot Throne the Lord Mayor and Aldermen attending her with all the companies in their Liveries stood along to Pauls Church where she heard a Sermon preached by Doctor Pierce Bishop of Salisbury and then went to the Bishops Palace where she dined and returned to Somerset house by torch light Ianuary the fifth at night a great wind in the North-east overturned trees and did great harm in many places February the first two souldiers were set on the Pillory at Leaden-Hall where they stood for the space of three houres the one had his ear nayled the other his tongue pierced with an aul which aul remained in his tongue till he was taken from the Pillory for abusing their Captains with bad words About this time Francis Ket Master of Art of Wimondham for holding divers detestable opinions against Christ our Saviour was burnt neer to the City of Norwich February the fifth two Souldiers were hanged on trees at the miles end for being mutinous April the fourteenth Philip Earl of Arundel was arraigned at Westminster of high treason and found guilty by his Peers and had judgement accordingly April the eighteenth Sir Iohn Norris and Sir Francis Drake with six of her Majesties ships twenty ships of war and an hundred fit for burden having in them a choice company of Knights Captains Gentlemen and souldiers departed from Plimouth and the twenty third of the same arrived at the Groin the twenty sixth they took the lower town with great store of Ordinance victuals cables and other furniture for shipping about the sixth of May they fought with the Spaniards at Borges Bridge where the enemy fled with the loss of seven hundred men the lower town of Groine was burned and the ninth of May our fleet set sail the Earl of Essex Sir Philip Butler and Sir Roger Williams met the Fleet so that on the sixteenth the whole navie arived at Phinicha where they set to land and the same day won both town and castle after this they divided the Armie whereof part matched with Sir Iohn Noris by land to Lisbon the rest with Sir Francis Drake passed by sea to Cascales the twenty fourth our men entred the suburbs of Lisbone where they obtained rich spoyles and plenty of every good thing the twenty seventh the Army left Lisbone and came to Cascales without any great fight or skirmish where they took the town and then returned for England but landing at Vigoe they took the town and wasted the Countrey The twenty first of Iune Sir Francis Drake arrived at Plimouth and the third of Iuly Sir Iohn Norris with the rest of the Fleet arrived there also the two Generals being offended one with the other The first of August at night was the greatest lightning and thunder that ever was seen or heard of any man living and yet but small hurt done God be praised The sixth of November Lodowick Grevil of Warwickshire Esquire was brought from the Tower of London to Westminster and there at the Kings Bench Bar for murder and other notorious crimes wherewith he was charged arraigned and found guilty but standing mute had Judgement to be pressed to death which was performed in the Goal of the King Bench in Southwark on the fourt●enth of November on the which day for the same fact his man was hanged at the Court Gate at Westminster An. Reg. 23 In this moneth of November the Citizens of London were o●ten●i●es affrighted by fire first on the twentieth about four a clock in the morn on Fish-street Hill where one fair house was burn●d to the ground and some people in helping to quench it were consumed and the houses next adjoyning to it Also the one side of Saint Leonards was sore spoiled On the twenty two of November at night about eleven of the clock one othe● house over against the first was in great danger but soon slaked On the twenty sixth about one of the clo●k in the morn one other house and some people were burnt and many other houses near about were spoiled The fifth of Ianuary about five a clock in the evening before Twelfth day began a terrible tempest of wind in the South-west which continued with great vehemency till about eleven a clo●k at night this in the City of ●ondon blew the tiles off mens houses and caused them to fear the overthrow of their houses the lesser West-gate of Saint Pauls next to the Bishops Palace was broken with bolts and locks and strong bars of iron
books and on the twenty third they were all arraigned found guilty and had judgement the last of March Henry Barrow and Greenwood were brought to Tyburne and there hanged the sixth of April About the same time Henry a principal penner and publisher of books intitled Martin Marre Prelate was apprehended at Stebbenheath by the Vicar there and sent to prison in the moneth of May he was arraigned at the Kings Bench Bar condemned of fellony and afterwards conveighed from the Kings Bench to Saint Thomas watrings and there hanged this pernitious book much troubled the people Iuly the nineteenth the Court of Assise was kept in Saint George's fields in a tent there set up on purpose many prisoners were arraigned nineteen were burnt in the hand but none executed this assise was made an end the same day which was thought to have lasted three daies but the justices made hast away for fear of being infected with the pestilence This year no Bartholomew fair was kept because of the sickness The whole number buried this year within the City of London the Suburbs and other places adjoyning as well of the plague as other diseases from the twenty first of the moneth of December in the year 1592. until the nineteenth of December 1593. was as followeth within the walls of all diseases 8598. whereof the plague 5390. without the walls and in the liberties 9295. the plague 5285 so that within the City and liberties of all diseases 17863. whereof of the Plague 10675. February the eighteenth Harrington a seminary was drawn from Newgate to Tyburn and there hanged and cut down alive he strugled with the hangman but was quartered The last of February Rodoreck Lopez a Portugal as it was said professing Phisick was arraigned at the Guild-Hall in London and there found guilty and had judgement of high treason for conspiring her Majesties destruction by poyson In this moneth of March were many great stormes of winde which overturned trees houses steeples and barnes in Worcester shire in Bewdley Forrest many Oakes were overthrown in Horton wood of the said shiere more then one thousand five hundred Oakes overthrown in one day In Stafford shiere the shaft of the steeple in Stafford town was rent in pieces along through the midst and thrown upon the Church wherewith the said roof was so broken that one thousand pound would not make it good houses and barnes were overthrown in most places in that shiere in Canck Wood more then three thousand trees were overthrown more then fifty steeples in Staffordshire were blown down The eleventh of April was a great raine which continued more then twenty four houres and withall a great north wind April the fourteenth a woman was burnt in Smithfield for killing her husband May the second came down great flouds by reason of suddain showers of hail and rain that had fallen which bare down houses iron mills provision of coles prepared for those mills and likewise cattel Iune the seventh Doctor Lopez and two other Portugals were drawn from the Kings Bench in Southwark to Tyburn and there hanged and quartered This year in the moneth of May fell many great showers of rain but in the moneths of Iune and Iuly much more for it commonly rained day and night till Saint Iame's Eve and on Saint Iame's day it began again and continued two daies after notwithstanding there followed a fair harvest in the month of August but in September great raines rai●ed high waters such as stayed the Carriages and bore down b●idges as at Cambridge Ware and elsewhere so that grain grew to be of a great price as a strike or a bushel of rie five shillings of wheat six seven or eight which dearth hapned more by meanes of transporting by our Marchants then the unseasonableness of thew eather December the thirtieth a woman was burnt in Smithfield for coyning of money February the tenth two Captains named York and Williams were executed at Tyburn for fellony February the tenth Southwel a Jesuite that long time had laine in the Tower of London was arraigned at the Kings Bench Bar he was condemned and on the next morrow drawn from Newgate to Tyburne and there hanged and quartered This year by reason of the late transportation of corn into forraign countries it was grown here to an excessive rate so as in some parts of the realm from fourteen shillings to four marks the quarter C●r●ain men for coyning were hanged also a Scrivener in Holbourn was hanged and quartered for taking the great Seal of England from the old Patent and putting the same to a new On the twenty ninth of Iune being Sunday in the after noon a number of unruly youths were gathered together on Tower hill being blamed by the warders of Tower street ward who willed them to seaver themselves and depart from thence these youths threw stones at them and drave them back into Tower street and were hartned on by a souldier who sounded a trumpet but the trumpeter and many other of them being taken by the Sheriffs of London and committed to prison about seven a clock the same night Sir Iohn Spencer Lord Mayor rode to the Tower hill attended by his Officers and some others to see the hill cleared of all the tum●ltuous people where about the middle of the hill some Warders of the Tower with the Lieutenants men told Sir Iohn that the sword ought not to be born up there and two or three cat●hing at it some bickering was there insomuch that the sword bearer was hurt amongst them but the Lord Mayor seeing the hill cleared of all trouble rode back and the sword bearer bearing up the sword Iuly the twenty second in the presence of the Earl of Essex and others sent from the Queen were arraigned at the Guild Hall five of those unruly youths that were on the Tower hill apprehended they were condemned and had judgement to be hanged and quartered were on the twenty fourth day of the same month drawn from Newgate to the Tower hill and there executed An. Reg. 38 February the twentieth five men for cousning and counterfeiting of Commissions were set on the Pillory in West Cheap some of them had their ears nayled and some cut off some that had before lost their ears were burnt on their cheeks and foreheads In the moneth of May fell continually rain every day or night whereby the waters grew deep brake over the high waies namely betwixt Ilford and Stratford the Bow so that the market people riding towards London hardly escaped but some were drowned also toward Lambeth in the high way people not on horseback were born on mens b●cks and rowed in Wherries in Saint Georges fields Robert Earl of Essex and Charles Haward high admiral of England embarked with one hundred fifty ships on the first of Iune weighed An●hor and hoisted up sailes and took their way from Plimmouth towards Spain and wone Cadiz and returned with great booties and spoiles Sunday the eight day of
thousand and five hundred were taken prisoners and six men of war were sunk the English pursued their victory to the very mouth of the Texell and blocked up the Hollanders in their own ports In the mean time on the beginning of July Gen. Cromwell called another Parliament which by reason of the sudden and unexpected dissolution of it was called the short Parliament On the latter end of this moneth there was a memorable fight betwixt the Dutch and the English during the time of a treaty betwixt both Nations this battel was fought with admirable resolution on both sides The fight began in the evening which though but short was very smart The Dutch in the night-time being recruited with five and twenty gallant ships did fall of themselves the next morning on the English fleet with a great deal of gallantry and resolution In this fight Admirall Van-trump was slain there were twenty men of War of the Hollanders sunk or burnt in this fight Of the English there were slaine outright eight Captains and five hurt the Triumph and the Andrew two Frigots were sorely put to it and received great dammage in their sails and rigging The Hollanders seeing so great a number of their ships lost did face about and did bear away with al the sail they could make unto the Texell and the Engl. not judging it expedient to ingage too far upon them did set saile with the whole Fleet towards Yarmouth to dispose of such ships as were disabled and to put their wounded men on shore The Pa●liament before mentioned being conceived too weak to go on with the management of the great and high affairs of State it was dissolved on the 12 of Decemb. following And presently afterward the Lord G. Cromwell was declared sworn Lord Protector of the Common-wealth of England Scotland and Ireland at Westminster in the presence of all the Judges the Barons of the Exchecquer and the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the city of London At this time certain Articles were presented which he took a solemn oath according to his custome to see them kept protesting moreover that he would mind nothing so much as the good of the Common-wealth and the glory of God Presently after this he was proclaimed Protector at the Palace-yard in Westminster and at the old Exchange by the Lord Mayor His Highness being now where he would be desired to know the affections of the people A report was raised that a great part of the army was discontented at his inauguration unto his new dignities whereupon the disaffected in severall counties thinking to joyn with them did take up arms and finding the succourse promised and expected to stand out against them they cryed out they were betrayed and most of them being taken were sent to forreign plantations On this account Sir Henry Slingsby was taken prisoner in York-shire beheaded afterwards upon another account of the same nature M. Penruddock M. Luces M. Thorpe M. Kensey M. Graves who cryed out much against Sir Ioseph Wagstaffe were condemned and executed in Wiltshire Much about the same time Mr. Peter Vowel was hanged at Charing-cross and on the same monday M. Iohn Gerrard and the brother to the Portugall Ambassadour were beheaded on Tower-hill On the third of September another Parliament was assembled which was dissolved again on the January following This year the Marquess of Leda came over in a magnificent manner as an Ambassadour from Spain but his Highness at that time having no desire to make any alliance with Spain did conclude a peace with the Crown of France This year on the latter end of December a gallant Fleet under the command of Generall Pen and Generall Venables did put forth to sea who on the tenth of May following arrived at Iamaica the design having miscarryed as Sancto Domingo in Hispaniola On the fifth of April the articles of peace were signed and delivered on the behalf of the two Nations of England and Holland the Protector to testifie his joy did most sumptuously intreat the Holland Ambassadours This year the Highlanders in Scotland disdaining the subjection of Generall Middleton but Generall Monk falling into the North of Scotland did give them so full a charge on the latter end of July that he absolutely defeated them and made them incapable of ever appearing in arms again An. Dom. 1655 This year his Highness constituted Major Generals for the preservation of the peace of the Common-wealth in the respective Counties of this Nation whose power appearing to be of too great a latitude they were afterwards disinvested of it The Lord Bulstrode Whitlock was sent Ambassadour into Sweden where he entred into a close league with that nation Generall Blake arriving with his fleet at Sunis sent unto the Governour of the place to demand satisfaction for some English ships which the pirats in those parts had taken away which being denied he came with the Vice-admirall and Rear-admirall within musket shot of the Castle on which he incessantly fired and on the other forts whilest the other ships took the opportunity to fire part of the Turkish Navy then riding in the Haven This was so well performed that in four hours space nine great vessels were burnt down to the very keels the English losing but five and twenty men and five and forty wounded Hereupon the King of Tunis sought to the English for peace and restored the prisoners which Blake had demanded for little or nothing The Lord Willougby of Parham the Lord Newport Mr. Seamor and M. Newport were sent to the Tower upon the suspition of a new Conspiracy His Highness going into S. Iamses Park for his recreation had his coach ready for him which was drawn with six Flanders horses he undertook to drive the coach himself but the horses impatient of his command did flie forth and threw him out of the coach-box on the ground being much hurt and bruised Not long afterwards his eldest son had a fal from his horse and did break his leg of which he still goes lame His Highness sent twelve good men of War well manned and well provided with all necessaries to Iameica with Colonel Humpheries Regiment not long afterwards Gene. Pen and after him General Venables arrived from Iameica who had not the same countenance from his Highness as when they did put forth to sea In the yeer 1656 Seven Spanish Ships comming from Lime in the Indies most richly laded were incountred in the way by Generall Montague about nine leagues from Cadis The fight was violent and the rather because it was known with what mettall the Ships of Spayn were laded In the fight the fortune of England easily prevailed there was one Ship burned another sunk two were taken and two run a ground one got away with a Portugall prize In the ship that was burned was Marquess of Budex his wife and one daughter In another of the Ships that were taken was the young Marques his brother and a sister
in Art or Wealth or Industry to render it illustrious On Tuesday November 23. the Effigies with all the solemnity and Pageantry that could be was brought in a stately Charriot from Somerset house to Westminster Abby and that day and many weeks afterwards the people in great multitudes came to behold it and with their hats off did reverence to it in the same place where before the Alter stood in the Temple of God but this blind superstition had its period in the moneth of May following at the time of the restauration of the long Parliament who having taken away the power from the son might well pull down the image of his Father Not long afterwards his Highness was advised by his Counsel to choose a Parliament it being conceived to be the onely way to establish himself in the affections of the people Writs therefore were issued for a free Parliament which met on the seven and twentieth of Ianuary next en●●ing where the death of the two speakers Mr. Chalonel Cruse a person of admirable knowledge and integrity and Mr. Lis●eho●e Long Recorder of London we●e the forerunners of the short life of that Parliament and of the short government of the Protector himself In this Parliament the Lady Mary Hewyt sister to the Earl of Lindsey and the Relict of Doctor Iohn Hewyt not long before beheaded petitioned the grand Committee of the whole House for grievances against the High Court of Justice for taking away the life of her deer husband but some Members of the House of Parliament who were present at the reading of it did declare themselves to be concerned in it and alledged that it was the priviledge of a Member of Parliament not to be petitioned against any where nor to seek redress from any Court but from the Parliament it self the Petition therefore was returned from her to the Committee with that intimation After this and several other Petions of a high nature for unjustly apprehending and detaining men Prisoners in the Tower and for the bannishing and the selling of several Gentlemen to the Barbadoes for slaves for which Serjeant Maeynerd was ordered to bring in a Bill for prevention of the like Tyranny in the future the accounts of the Common-wealth was called for and a Committee being appointed to examine them it was found that in the last five years the Common-wealth was much in arrears and by the ill mannagement of those who were intrusted with the receipts and disbursements of the money they were run in debt no less than five and twenty hundred thousand pounds At the last some transactions in the Army being taken into consideration and it being voted that all Officers of the Army should repair to their several charges and that they should hold no meeting during the sitting of Parliament but by the consent o● the Protector and both Houses and that none should be in office but such onely as world subscribe not to interrupt either house of Parliament in their proceedings it wrought so much upon the spirits of some of the Commanders that not long afterwards the Parliament was dissolved and a period given to the Government of the Protectorship THE RESTAURATION Of the Long PARLIAMENT THe long Parliament being dissolved in the year 1653. by the Lord Oliver Cromwel were now encouraged by the Lord Fleetwood and many other of the Commanders to return to exercise of their former power and promised the uttermost assistance of the Army therein and accordingly on the seventh of May 1659. some forty of them or thereabouts did meet in the painted Chamber from whence having the Mace carried before them they passed into the house where a Declaration was passed that all such as shall be imployed in any place of power in the Common-wealth be persons fearing God and faithful to the Common-wealth After this they chose a Counsel of State consisting for the most part of their own Members There being at the same time many Members of the same Parliament in London and some of them in the Hall they endeavoured to go up into the House but were not permitted by the Souldery amongst these Members was Sir George Booth who being of a high spirit and discontented at it did speak some words very hastily which as rashly afterwards he did put in practise The Parliament removed Col. Berkstead from being Leiutenant of the Tower many Petitions and complaints being preferred against him and Col. Fitz was chosen to supply his place A pardon was pulished for the most part of whatsoever had been acted from the interruption of the Parliament in April 1659. until the new convention of them on the ninth of may 1659. In the Moneth of Iune Leiu General Fleetwood was made Commander in chief of all the forces in England and Scotland the Lord Henry Cromwel was removed from his command in Ireland and Commissioners were appointed to govern that Nation in his place The Militia of the City of London and of the respective countries were revived and the Commissioners for the Militia of the three Nations were signed and delivered by the Speaker of the Parliament and ordered so to continue In the month of Iuly there was a whisper throughout the Nation that now was the time for a free Parliament and for the taking off the Taxes from the shoulders of the oppressed whereupon there began to be a general insurrection almost all England over but it was quickly supposed by the vigilance and the industry of the County Troops The insurrection which was most great and dangerous was in the Northwest of England where in the Counties of Lancashire and Cheshire and parts adjoyning Sir George Booth had drawn together an Army of four thousand persons some of them both Commanders and others having been actually in the service of the King of Scotland and the King his Father against these the Lord Lambert marched with an Army consisting of about seven thousand horse and foot and having given them a great rout at Winnington bridge he totally dispersed them Sir George Booth was taken afterwards at Newport Pagnel being disguised in the habit of a Lady from whence being sent to London with a strong guard he was en●ounterd in the way by a party of Colonel Hackers Regiment who did conveigh him prisoner to the Tower of London where for the present he continueth having been oftentimes examined by Sir Arthur Hazelrige Sir Henry Vane and others A Proclamation was agreed upon that if Iohn Mordant Esquire Son to the Earl of Peterborough Major General Massy Charles Stuart Earl of Litchfield of the family of the Duke of Ritchmond Sir Thomas Leventhop Knight William Compton Son to the Earl of Northampton Thomas Fanshaw son to Sir Thomas Fanshaw Knight and Major General Brown do not render themselves to the Parliament upon the seventeenth of September or to the Counsel of State they shall be accounted guilty of the treasonable crimes that are charged against which time is not expired at the ending of this History it being Thursday September 8. in the year 1659. To begin the year the Army submitted to the Parliament who sate again at Wewminster the nine Commanders whose Commissions were made void on the twelfth of Octob. were all commanded to depart to their houses most remote from London if otherwise they were found to stay there to be secured Sir Henry Vane was required to go to his house at Raby in the County of Durham and Major Salloway was committed prisoner to the Tower General Monck being on his march to London according to the desire of Parliament Mr. Scot and Mr. Luke Robinson were sent to congratulate him the Parliament conferred on him for his remarkable service a thousand pound a year and the Lord Mayor called a Common-Counsel where it was ordered that three of their Members should be sent unto him to acquaint him how sensible they were of the great service which he had performed for the good of the City and Common-wealth for which they were resolved at his coming to the City to give him some testimony of their gratitude On the eighteenth of this moneth the Parliament resolved upon Commissioners for the great seal and Judges of the several Courts of Justice in Westminster Hall as also of Judges for the Court of Admiralty and for the probate of Wills The City of Excester and Count of Devonshire have declared for the recelling of the Members that were secluded in the year 1648. which on wednesday last was delivered by Mr. Bamphield recorder of Excester to Mr. Speaker and it is informed that other Counties are adjoyning with them in a petition to the same effect The End
and Condemned Henry Garnet Provinciall of the Iesuites in England for being acquainted with the Gunpowder plot and consealing the same for the which he was condemned to be Drawn Hanged and Quartered and his head to be set upon London B●idge and according to that Sentence he was Executed the third of May at the West end of Saint Pauls Church where he acknowledged the greatnesse of his offence in consealing the treason and besought all Catholikes to forbear and desist from Treason and all other violent attempts whatsoever against Kings and Princes saying that all such practises were utterly against the Catholike Religion The twenty nine and thirtieth of March the winde was extreame violent so as it caused much Shipwrack upon the Coasts of England France and the Low Countreyes in brought in the Sea and drowned much Cattell and in Picardie neer Dyope it blew down a steeple which Slew sourscore persons in the fall thereof in Flanders and up towards Germany there were many Churches Townes Windemills and Trees blown down and the eighth of Iune following it rayned twenty four houres and the next day there arose great land floods which carried away Mills Trees and Houses made new Currants where never any was before it carried away great store of Cattell Timber and other things from off upland grounds The tenth of Iune Proclaimation was made for the banishing of all seminaries Jesuites and Roman-priests The fifteenth of Iuly the wife of Richard Homewood of East Grimsteed in Sussex without any known cause murdered her own three children and threw them into a pit and then cut her own throat likewise The twentieth of Ianuary it pleased God to send a mighty westwind which continued sixteen houres which brought in the sea by reason whereof and of high spring-tides both which encountred the land waters after a great raine which caused the River of Severn beginning as far as the Mount in Cornwal to overflow her banks all along on both sides up into Somerset shire and Glocester-shire in some places the water overflowed the banks three foot in other places five foot and some places seven foot by reason of which suddain inundation much people and cattle were drowned many Churches and villages borne down and spoyled and some utterly destroyed and in Wales in several places it did great harme in manner as aforesaid the like before was never known Maundy Thursday the second of April there hapned great inundations of water in Kent Essex Suffolk and Norfolk and the seventeenth of April there arose in the City of Coventry a most strange and dreadful inundation November the twenty sixth proclamation was made concerning the Earl of Tyrone Terconnel and others of Ireland signifying their purpose and practise to exterpit the English Nation out of Ireland and to confer and yield the kingdome of Ireland to the Pope and Tyrones soliciting forraign Princes to attempt the conquest thereof The twentieth of December proclamation was made to apprehend the Lord Maxwel who wounded the porter and so brake prison out of Edenborough Castle this Lord Maxwel ayded Iames Mackdonel to escape likewise December the eighth begun a hard frost and continued till the fifteenth of the same and then thawed and the twenty second of December it began again to freez very violently so as some persons went halfe wap over upon the ice and the thirtieth of December many people went quite over in many places and so continued till the third of Ianuary the people passed dayly between London and the Bank-side at every half ebb for the floud removed the ice and forced the people dayly to seek new paths except onely between Lambeth and the ferry at Westminster by which it became very firme passage untill the great thaw and from Sunday the tenth of Ianuary untill the fifteenth of the same the frost grew extreame so as the ice became firme and removed not and then all sorts of men women and children went boldly upon the ice in most parts some shot at pricks others bowled and daunced with other variable pastimes by reason of which concourse of people were many that set up boothes and standings upon the ice as fruit-sellers victuallers that sould beer and wine shoomakers and a barbers tent every of them had fire near unto them the fifteenth of Ianuary it began somewhat to thaw and so continued four daies together yet nevertheless the great ice upon the Thames held firm and passable and became somewhat smooth like as in the last great frost in the year 1564. which before were very craggy and uncertain the nineteenth of Ianuary the frost began again but not so violently until Sunday the twenty fourth of Ianuary and held on until the thirtieth of the same the first of February the ice began to break by little and little and the next day in the afternoon all the ice was gone and quite dissolved so as no sign remained thereof Many bridges were spoiled by this frost and much fowle pe●ished especially small birds which in many places were found frozen to death this frost was more grievous in France and Ireland then in England February the ninth Sir Iohn Ramsey Knight Baron of Barnes Viscount Hadington married Elizabeth the eldest daughter of Robert Earl of Sussex the King gave her in marriage and at dinner he drank to the Bride and the Bridegroom in a fair cup of gold which he gave him and with it six hundred pound a year pension out of the Exchequer to the longest liver of them both this the King did do to reward his faithful service against the dangerous treason of Earl Gowry in Scotland March the tenth was laid the first stone for the new building of Algate but it was not fully finished till the next year after this ouldgate was taken down and finished at the charges of the Citizens April the eleaventh George Iervas a Seminary was drawn to Tyburn and there executed April the eleaventh being Munday the quarter Sessions was held at Edmonsbury and by negligence an out malthouse was set on fire from whence in most strange and suddain manner through fierce winds the fire came to the farther part of the town and as it went left some streets and houses safe and untouched the flame flew cleare over many houses near unto it and did much spoile to many fair buildings fardest off and ceased not untill it had consumed one hundred sixty houses besides others and in dammage of wares and household goods to the full value of threescore thousand pound the King shewed a great deal of kindness to the distressed inhabitants as in giving them five hundred load of Timber to repair their houses as in preferring their best means to raise their general and particular estates and in giving them a new Charter the Knights and Gentlemen likewise of the County performed great kindness unto the townsmen the City of London gave freely towards their relief April the nineteenth at White-Hall dyed Thomas Earl of Dorcet Lord High Treasurer