Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n high_a king_n treason_n 3,177 5 8.6712 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A34797 The interpreter, or, Book containing the signification of words wherein is set forth the true meaning of all ... words and terms as are mentioned in the law-writers or statutes ... requiring any exposition or interpretation : a work not only profitable but necessary for such as desire thoroughly to be instructed in the knowledge of our laws, statutes, or other antiquities / collected by John Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1658 (1658) Wing C6644; ESTC R31653 487,806 288

There are 10 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

used in our vulgar talk for the petit Sessions which are yearly kept for the disposing of Servants in service by the Statute anno 5 Elizabeth cap. 4. See Recognisance Statute sessions otherwise called Petit Sessions are a meeting in every Hundred of all the Shires in England where of custome they have been used unto the which the Constables do repair and others both Housholders and servants for the debating of differences between Masters and their Servants the rating of Servants wages and the bestowing of such people in Service as being fit to serve either refuse to seek or cannot get Masters anno 1 Eliz. cap. 4. Statu'o stapulae is a writ that lyeth to take his body to Prison and to seise upon his Lands and goods that hath forfeited a bond called Statute staple Regist orig fol. 151. a. Statutam de laborariis is a writ Iudicial for the apprehending of such labourers as refuse to work according to the Statute Reg. judi fol. 27. b. Statuto Mercatorio is a writ for the imprisoning of him that hath forfeited a bond called the Statute Merchant untill the debt be satisfied Regist origin fol. 146. b. and of these there is one against Lay persons ubi supra and another against Ecclesiastical 148. Stavisaker staphis agria vel herba pedicularis is a medicinable herb the kind and vertues thereof you have set forth in Gerards Herbal lib. 1. cap. 130. The seed of this is mentioned among drugs to be garbled anno 1 Jacob. ca. 19. Stenrerie is used for the same that Stannaries be in the statute anno 4 H. 8. cap. 8 See Stannaries Sterling Sterlingum is a proper epitheton for mony currant within the Realm The name groweth from this that there was a certain pure Coyn stamped first of all by the Easterlings here in England Stows Annals pag. 112. The which I rather believe because in certain old Monuments of our English and broken French I find it written Esterling so Roger Hoveden writeth it parte poster annalium fol. 377. b. M. Skene de verborum sipnific verbo Sterlingus saith thus Sterling is a kind of weight containing 32 corns or grains of wheat And in the Canon law mention is made of five shilling sterling and of a merk sterling ap 3. de arbitriss c. constituit 12. de procurator And the sterling peny is so called because it weighs so many grains as I have sundry times proved by experience and by the law of England the peny which is called the sterling round and without clipping weigheth 32 grains of wheat without tails whereof twenty make an ounce and 12 ounces a pound and eight pound make a gallon of wine and eight gallons maketh a bushell of London which is the eighth part of a quarter Hitherto M. Skene Buchanan lib. 6. saith that the common People think it so termed of Sterling a Town in Scotland Our Lyndwood saith that it is called sterling of the bird which we call a sterling which as he noteth was ingraven in one quarter of the coin so termed cap. Item quia de testamentis vaerb Cent. solides in Glos Stews are those places which were permitted in England to women of prosessed incontinency for the proffer of their bodies to all commers it is derived from the French Estuves i. thermae vaporarium Balneum because wantons are wont to prepare themselves to these venerous acts by bathing themselves And that this is not new Homer sheweth in the 8 book of his Odiss where he reckneth hot bathes among the effeminate sort of pleasures Of these stewes see the statute anno 11 Hen 6. ca. pri Steward See Seneschall and Stuward Steward of the Kings house an 25 Ed. 3. statute 5. cap. 21. Stily ard Guilda Theutonicorum anno 22 H. 8. ca. 8. et anno 32 ejusdem ca. 14. is a place in London where the fraternity of the Easterling Merchants otherwise the Merchants of Hawnse and Almain an pri Ed. 6. cap. 13. are wont have their abode See Geld. It is so called of a broad place or Court wherein Steel was much sold upon the which that house is now founded Nathan C●itraeus See Hawnse Stone of wool Petra lanae see Weights See Sarpler It ought to weigh 14 pounds yet in some places by custome it is more See Cromptons Justice of peace f. 83. b. Straife aliâs Stray See Estry Straits anno 18 H. 6. ca. 16. Streme works is a kind of work in the Stanaries for saith M. Camden titulo Cornwall pa. 119. Horum Stanario●um five metallicorum operum duo sunt genera Alterum Lode-works alterum streme works vo cant Hoc in lecis inferioribus est cum Fossis agendis stanni venas sectantur et fluvierum alveos subinde defl ctunt illud in locis aeditiorsbus cum in montibus puteor quod Shafts vcc in t in magnam attitudinem defodiunt et cuniculos agunt These you may read mentioned an 27 H. 8. cap. 23. Stirks Strip See Estreapement SU Suard aliâs steward senescallus seemeth to be compounded of Steed and ward and is a word of many applications yet alway signifieth an officer of chief account within the place of his sway The greatest of these is the Lord high Steward of England whose power if those Antiquities be true which I have read is next to the Kings and of that height that it might in some sort match the Ephori amongst the Lacedemonians The custom of our Common-wealth hath upon great consideration and policie brought it to passe that this high Officer is not appointed for any long time but only for the dispatch of some especiall businesse at the arraignment of some Nobleman in the case of treason or such like which once ended his Commission expireth Of the high Steward of Englands Court you may read Cromptons Jurisd f. 28. I have read in an antient Manuscript of what credit I know not that this Officer was of so great power in antient times that if any one had sought justice in the Kings Court and not found it he might upon complaint therof made unto him take those Petitions and reserving them to the next Parliament cause them there to be propounded and not only so but also in the presence of the King openly to rebuke the Chancellor or any other Judge or officer whom he found defective in yeilding Justice And if in case the judge or Officer so reprehended did allege that his defect grew from the difficultie of the case insomuch as he durst not adventure upon it then the case being shewed and so ●ound the Lord Steward together wich the Constable of England there in the presence of the King and Parliament might elect five and twenty persons or more or fewer according to their discretion and the case or cases in question some Earls some Barons some Knights some Citizens and Burgesses which upon deliberation should set down what they thought just and equal and their decree being read and allowed by Parliament did
mind cap. 28. where he saith That contracts be some naked and sans garnment and some furnished or to use the literal signification of his word apparelled but a naked Obligation giveth no action but by common assent And therefore it is necessary or needfull that every Obligation be apparelled And an obligation ought to be apparelled with these sive sorts of garnements c. Howbeit I read it generally used for a warning in many places and namely in Kitchin fol. 6. Garnisher le court is to warn the Court. And reasonable garnishment in the same place is nothing but reasonable warning and again fol. 283. and many other Authors also But this may be well thought a Metonymy of the effect because by the warning of parties to the Court the Court is furnished and adorned Garrantie See Warrantie Garter Garterium cometh of the French Jartiere or Jartier i. periscelis fascia poplitaria It signifieth with us both in divers Statutes and otherwise one especiall Garter being the ensigne of a great and Noble Society of Knights called Knights of the Garter And this is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Poeta among the Graecians was Homer among the Romans Virgil because they were of all others the most excellent This high order as appeareth by M. Camden pag. 211. and many others was first instituted by that famous King Edward the third upon good successe in a skirmish wherin the Kings Garter I know not upon what occasion was used for a token I know that Polydore Virgil casteth in another suspition of the originall But his grounds by his own confession grew from the Vulgar opinion yet as it is I will mention it as I have read it Edward the third King of England after he had obtained many great victories king John of France king James of Scotland being both prisoners in the Tower of London at one time and king Henry of Castile the Bastard expulsed and Don Pedro restored by the Prince of Wales did upon no weighty occasion first erect this order in Anno 1350. viz. He danceing with the Queen and other Ladies of the Court took up a Garter that happened to fall from one of them whereat some of the Lords smiling the king said unto them That ere it were long hee would make that Garter to be of high reputation and shortly after instituted this order of the Blew Garter which every one of the order is bound dayly to wear being richly decked with Gold and precious stones and having these words written or wrought upon it Honi soit qui maly pence which is thus commonly interpreted Evill come to him that evil thinketh But I think it might be better thus Shame take him that thinketh evill See knights of the Garter M. Ferne in his glory of generosity agreeth with M. Camden and expressier setteth down the victories whence this order was occasioned whatsoever cause of beginning it had the order is inferior to none in the world consisting of 26. martial and heroical Nobles whereof the king or England is the chief and the rest be either Nobles of the Realm or Princes of other Countries friends and confederates with this Realm the Honour being such as Emperours and kings of other Nations have desired and thankfully accepted it he that will read more of this let him repair to M. Camden and Polydore and M. Ferne fol. 120. ubi supra The Ceremonies of the chapter proceeding to election of the investures and robes of his installation of his vow with all such other Observations see in M. Segars new book intituled Honour militarie and civill lib. 2. cap. 9. fol. 65. Garter also signifieth the principall kings at Armes among our English Heralds created by king Henry the fifth Stow. pag. 584. Garthman anno 13 R. 2. stat 1. ca. 19. anno 17. ejusd ca. 9. Gavelet is a special and antient kind of Cessavit used in Kent where the custome of Gavell kind continueth whereby the tenent shall forfeit his Lands and tenements to the Lord of whom he holdeth if he withdraw from him his due rents and services The new Expounder of Law Termes whom read more at large I read this word anno 10. Edw. 2 cap. unico where it appeareth to be a Writ used in the Hustings at London And I find by Fleta that it is used in other liberties as the Hustings of Winchester Lincolne York and the Cinque ports lib. 2. cap. 55. in principio Gavelkind is by M. Lamberd in his exposition of Saxon words verbo Terra et scripto compounded of three Saxon words gyfe cal cin omnibus cognatione proximis data But M. Verstegan in his restitution of his decayed intelligence cap. 3. called it Gavelkind quasi give all kind that is give to each child his part It signifieth in our Common law a custome whereby the Land of the Father is equally divided at his death amongst all his Sons or the Land of the Brother equally divided among the Brethren if he have no issue of his own Kitchin fol. 102. This custome is said to be of force in divers places of England but especially in Kent as the said Authour reporteth shewing also the cause why Kentish men rather use this custome than any other Province viz. because it was a composition made between the Conquerour and them after all England beside was conquered that they should enjoy their ancient customes whereof this was one For. M. Camden in his Britannia pag. 239. saith in expresse words thus Cantiani eâ lege Gulielmo Normanno se dediderunt ut patrias consuetudines illaesas retinerent illamque imprimis quam Gavelkind nominant Haec terrae quae eo nomine censentur liberis masculis ex aequis portionibus dividuntur vel faeminis si masculi non fuerint adding more worth the noting viz. Hanc haereditatem cùm quintum decimum annum attigerint adeunt sine Domini consensu cuilibet vel dando vel vendendo alienare licet Hac filii parent thus furti damnatis in id genus fundis succedunt c. This custome in divers Gentlemens lands was altered at their own petition by Act of Parliament anno 31 H. 8. cap. 3. But it appeareth by 18 H. 6. cap. pri that in those dayes there were not above thirty or fourty persons in Kent that held by any other Tenure See the new Terms Gavelet and Gavelkind Gawgeour gaugeator seemeth to come of the French Gawchir i. in gyrum torquere It signifieth with us an Officer of the Kings appointed to examine all Tunnes Hogsheads Pipes Barrels and Tercians of Wine Oil Honey Butter and to give them a mark of allowance before they be sold in any place And because this mark is a circle made with an iron Instrument for that purpose It seemeth that from thence he taketh his name Of this Office you may find many Statutes the first whereof is anno 27 Ed. 3. commonly called the Statute of provision or Purveyours cap. 8. GE Geld signifieth with the
Chief Justice of England with three or four Justices assistants four or five as Fortescue saith cap. 51. and Officers thereunto belonging the Clerk of the crown a Praenatory or Protonotary and other six inferior Ministers or Atturneys Camb. Britan. pag. 112. See Latitat How long this Court was moveable I find not in any Writer But in Brittons time who wrot in K. Ed. the 1. his dayes it appeareth it followed the Court as M. Gwin in his said preface well observeth out of him See Justice of the Kings Bench. Kings silver is properly that money which is due to the King in the court of Common Plees in respect of a licence there granted to any man for passing a fine Coke vol. 6. fol. 39. a. 43. b. Kintall of woad iron c. is a certain waight of Merchandize to the value of an hundred or somthing under or over acording to the divers uses of sundry nations This word is mentioned by Plowden in the case of Reniger Fogassa KN Knave is used for a man-servant anno 14 Edward 3. stat 1. ca. 3. and by M. Verstigans judgement in his restitution of decayed intelligence ca. 10. is borrowed of the Dutch enapa cnave or knave which signifie all one thing And that is some kind of officer or servant as scild-knapa was he that bore the weaon or shield of his superiour whom the Latins call Armigerum and the Frenchmen Escuyer Knight miles is almost one with the Saxon Cnight i. administer and by M. Camdens judgement pag. 110. derived from the same With us it signifieth a Gentleman or one that beareth arms that for his vertue and especially martiall prowesse is by the King or one having the Kings authority singled as it were from the ordinary sort of Gentlemen and raised to a higher account or step of dignity This among all other Nations hath his name from the horse because they were wont in antient time to serve in warres on horseback The Romans called them Equites The Italians at these dayes term them Cavallieri The Frenchmen Chevalliers The German Reiters The Spaniard Gavellaros or Varones à Cavallo It appeareth by the Statute anno 1 Ed. 2. cap. 1. that in antient times Gentlemen having a full Knights fee and holding their land by Knights service of the King or other great person might be urged by distress to procure himself to be made knight when he came to mans estate for the answerable service of his Lord in the kings wars To which point you may also read M. Camden in his Britann pag. 111. But these customs be not now much urged this dignity in these dayes being rather of favour bestowed by the Prince upon the worthier sort of Gentlemen than urged by constraint The manner of making knights for the dignitie is not hereditarie M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 111. shortly expresseth in these words Nostris verò temporibus qui Equestrem dignitatem suscipit flexis genibus educto g'adio leviter in humero percutitur Princeps his verbis Gallicè affatur Sus vel sois Chevalier au nom de Dieu id est Surge aut Sis eques in nomine Dei The Solemnity of making knights among the Saxons M. Stow mentioneth in his Annals pag. 159. See the privileges belonging to a Rnight in Ferns Glorie of Generosity pag. 116. Of these Knights there be two sorts one Spiritual another Temporal Cassanaus in gloria mundi parte 9. Considerat 2. of both these sorts and of many subdivisions read him in that whole part The Temporal or second sort of Knights M. Fern in his Glory of generosity pag. 103. maketh threefold here with us Knights of the Sword Knights of the Bath and Knights of the Soverain Order that is of the Garter of all which you may read what he saith I must remember that mine intent is but to explain the terms especially of our common Law Wherefore such as I find mentioned in Statutes I will define as I can M. Skene de verbor significat verbo Milites saith that in the antient Laws of Scotland Freeholders were called Milities which may seem to have been a custom with us also by divers places in Bracton who saith that Knights must be in Juries which turn Freeholders do serve Knights of the Garter Equites Garterii are an Order of Knights created by Edward the third after hee had obtained many notable victories King John of France and King James of Scotland being both his prisoners together and Henry of Castile the Bastard expulsed out of his Realm and Don pedro being restored unto it by the Prince of Wales and Duke of Aquitane called the Black Prince who for furnishing of this Honourable Order made a choice out of his own Realm and all Christendome of the best and most excellent renowned Knights in Vertues and Honour bestowing this dignity upon them and giving them a Blew Garter decked with Gold Pearl and precious Stones and a Buckle of Gold to wear daily on the left legge only a Kirtle Crown Cloak Chaperon a Coller and other stately and magnifical apparel both of stuff and fashion exquisite and heroical to wear at high Feasts as to so high and Princely an Order was meer Of which order he and his successours Kings of England were ordained to be the Soveraigns and the rest fellows and brethren to the number of twentie six Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. prim cap. 20. I have seen an antient monument whereby I am taught that this Honorable Company is a College or a Corporation having a Common Seal belonging unto it and consisting of a Soveraign Gardian which is the King of England that alwayes governs this order by himself or his Deputy of twenty five Companions called Knights of the Garter of fourteen secular Chanons that be Priests or must be within one year after their admission 13. Vicars also Priests and 26. poor Knights that have no other sustenance or means of living but the allowance of this house which is given them in respect of their daily Prayer to the Honour of God and according to the course of those times of Saint George There be also certain officers belonging to this order as namely the Prelate of the Garter which office is inherent to the Bishop of Winchester for the time being the Chancellor of the Garter the Register who is alwaies Dean of Windsor The principal King at Armes called Garter whose chief function is to mannage and marshal their Solemnities at their yearly Feasts and installations Lastly the Usher of the Garter which as I have heard belongeth to an Usher of the Princes Chamber called Blacke rod. There are also certain ordinances or Constitutions belonging unto this Society with certain forfeitures and sometime penances for the breakers of them which constitutions concern either the Solemnities of making these Knights or their duties after their creation or the Privileges belonging to so high an order but are too large for the nature of this poor Vocabularie
domini si quem habuerit accedat c. And to help this probability I find that the Steward of a manner is termed serviens manerii Coke Vol. 4. Copihold cases fol. 21 a. Then is there a Sergeant at arms serviens ad arma whose Office is to attend the person of the King An. 7 H. 7. ca. 3. to arest Traitors or men of worth or reckning that do or are like to contemn Messengers of ordinary condition for other causes and to attend the Lord high Steward of England sitting in judgement upon any Traitor and such like pl. cor lib. 3. cap. pri Of these by the Statute anno 13 R. 2. cap. 6. there may not be above thirty in the Realm This sort is called del espee In the custumary of Nor. car 5. which read There be also some two of these Sergeants of the Parliament one for the upper another for the lower house whose Office seemeth to serve for the keeping of the Doors and the execution of such Commandements especially touching the apprehension of any offender as either house shall think good to enioyn them See Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. nono See also Vowels aliâs Hookers book of the order of the Parliament There is one of these that belongeth to the Chancery who is also called a Sergeant of the Mace as the rest may be because they carry Maces by their office He of the Chancery attendeth the Lord Chancellor or Keeper in that court for the means to call all men into that Court is either by this Officer or by sub poena West pa. 2. Symb. tit Chauncery Sect. 17. Then be there Sergeants that be the chief officers in their several functions within the Kings houshold which be chief in their places of which sort you may read many named in the statute anno 33 H. 8 cap. 12. There is also a more base kind of Sergeant of the Mace whereof there is a troop in the City of London and other Towns corporate that serve the Maior or other head Officer both for mesnial attendance and matter of Justice Kitchin fol. 143. And these are called Serviontes ad clavam New book of Entries ver scire facias in Mainperners fol. 538. cap. 3. Sergeantie Serriantia commeth of the French Sergeant i. satelles and signifieth in our Common law as service due to the King from his Tenent holding by such service For this service cannot be due to any L. from his Tenent but to the King only And this is either grand or petit as you shall find at large set down in Chivalry Of this also you may read Bra. l. 2. c. 16. c. 37. n. 5.4 et Brit. c. 66. n. 1. et 2. See Servies M. Skene de ver signif calleth this Sergeantery defining and dividing it as we do in England Servientihus as certain writs touching servants and their Masters violating the statutes made against their abuses which see in the Regist. orig fo 189. et 190 et 191. Service servitium though it have a general signification of duty toward them unto whom we owe the performance of any corporal labor of function yet more especially in our Common law it is used for that service which the Tenent by reason of his fee oweth unto his Lord. And so doth it signifie among the Feudists also For Hotoman thus defineth it Servitium est munus obsequit clientelaris verbo Servitium De verbis feudal or rather declareth it so to be defined lib. feud 2. titulo 51. Sect. 8. It is sometime called servage as anno 1 R. 2. cap. 6. This service is either military and noble commonly called Knights service or clownish and base commonly called Soccage of both which read Chiry as also scecage And Bracton lib. 2. ca. 16. Service is divided by Britton into personal and real cap. 66. where he maketh wards mariages homage Reliefs and such like to be real services personal I imagine may those be called that are to be persormed by the person of the Tenent as to follow his Lord into war c. The Civilians divide munera in this sort either in personalia or patrimonalia Then Bracton ubi supra num 7. distributeth servitium in intrinsecum extrinsecum aliâs forinsecum medium Servitium intrinsecum is that which is due to the capital Lord of the Mannro Forinsecum is that which is due to the King and not to the capital Lord but when he goeth in his own person to serve or when he hath satisfied the King for all services whatsoever And again in the same place he saith it is called Fornisecum quia fit capitur foris sive extra servitium quod fit Domino capitali See Forein service Of this read him ubi supra more at large and Fleta lib. 2. cap. 14. § Continetur Servitia quae nec intrinseca necforinseca sunt Bract. handleth in the same Chapter nu 8. saying thus sunt etiam quaedam consuetudines quae nec dicuntur intriasecae nec forinsecae sed sunt quaed im servitia concomitantia sicut servitia regalia militaria etiambemagia adeo in cbartis non sunt exprimendae Quia si homagium praecesseris et regale servitium sequitur exinde quod ad capitalem Dominum pertinebit Relivium et custodia et maritagium sive servitium sit militare vel seriantia propter exerci●um c. Here then Relief Ward and Mariage be those services which he calleth nec intrinseca nec forinseca sed concomitantia Service is also divided into frank service and base or villeinous service the one Bracton calleth liberum servitium the other servitium villanum or villenagium lib. 2. cap. 8. num pri This villenagium is Soccage in base tenure as to dung the Lords ground to serve him so many daies in harvest to plash his hedges c. or else copyhold All other services seem to be frank Service consiste●h some in seisance some in render Perkins Reservations 696. Service seemeth also to be divided into continual otherwise annual and casual or accidental An example of the sormer is the seisin of rent and of the other seisin of Relief Sir Edward Cokes Reports lib. 4. Bevils case fol. 9. a. See Copy hold See Soccage See Ayd Service secular anno 1 Ed. 4. cap. 1. which may be contrary to spiritual viz. the service divine commanded to spiritual men by their founders Servitours of Bills seem to be such servants or messenger of the Marshal belong-to the Kings Bench as were sent abroad with Bills or Writs to summon men to that Court being now more ordinarily called Tipstaffs Servitiis acquietandis is a Writ judicial that lyeth for one distreined for services by Iohn which oweth and performeth to Robert for the acquital of such services Register judicial fol. 27. a. et 36. b. Sessions Sessiones signifieth in our Common law a sitting of Justices in Court upon their commission as the Sessions of oyer and terminer pl. cor fol. 67. Quarter Sessions
Prison at that time or otherwise at their will So that he which is so bayled shall not be said by the Law to be at large or at his own liberty see Lamberts Eirenal l. 3. cap. 2. pag. 330. Bayl is also a certain limit within the Forest accordingly as the forest is divided into the charges of several foresters Crompton in the Oath of the Bow-bearer fol. 201. See Maynprise Bayliff ballivus commeth of the French bailif i. diacetes nomarcha praefectus provinciae and as the name so the office it self in antient time was very answerable to that of France and Normandy for as in France there be sixteen Parliaments Lupanus de magistratibus Francorum lib. 2. cap. Parlamentum which be high Courts whence lieth no appeal and within the precincts of those several parts of that kingdom that belong to each Parlament there be severall provinces unto which within themselves Justice is ministred by certain officers called Bayliffs So in England we see many severall Counties or Shires within the which Justice hath been ministred to the inhabitants of each Countie by the officer whom we now call Sheriff or Vicount one name descending from the Saxons the other from the Normans And though I cannot expressely prove that this Sheriff was ever called a Bayliff yet it is probable that that was one of his names likewise because the County is called many times Balliva that is a Bavliwick as namely in the return of a writ with Non est inventus he writeth thus A. S. infra scriptus non est inventus in Balliva mea post receptionem hujus brevis Kitchin returna brevium fo 285. And again in Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 33. num 3. And anno 5 Eliz. cap. 23. and anno 14 Edw. 3. stat 1. cap 6. And I think the word Bayliff used ca. 28 of Magna charta compriseth as well Sheriffs as Bayliffs of Hundreds as also anno 14 Edw. 3. stat 1. ca. 9. But as the Realm is divided into Counties so every County is again divided into hundreds within the which it is manifest that in antient time the Kings subjects had justice ministred unto them by the severall Officers of every Hundred which were called Bayliffs as those officets were and are in France and Normandie being chief officers of justice within every Province Lupanus de Magistratibus Francorum lib. 2. cap. Baltvi and the Grand Custumary of Normandie cap. 1. And that this is true among many others I bring Bracton for my witness lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 34. un 5. where it appeareth that Bayliffs of Hundreds might hold plee of Appeal and Approvers But sithence that time these Hundred Courts certain Franchises excepted are by the Statute anno 14 Ed. 3. stat 1. cap. 9. swallowed into the County Courts as you may read in County and Hundred And the Bayliffs name and Office is grown into such contempt at the least these Bailiffs of Hundreds that they are now but bare Messengers and Mandataries within their liberties to serve Writs and such base offices their office consisting in three points only which see in Cromptons Justice of Peace fol. 49. a. Yet is the name still in good esteem some other way For the chief Magistrates in divers Towns Corporate be called Bailiffs as in Ipswich Yarmouth Colchester and such like And again there be certain to whom the Kings Castles be Cōmitted which called are Bailiffs as the Bailiff of Dover Castle These ordinary Bailiffs are of two sorts Bailiffs Errant Bailiffs of Franchises Bailiffs Errant Ballivi itinerantes be those which the Sheriff maketh and appointeth to go hither thither in the County to serve writs to summon the County Sessions Assises such like Bailiffs of Franchises Ballivi Franchesiarū aut libertatū be those that are appointed by every Lord within his liberty to do such offices within his Precincts as the Bailiff Errant doth at large in the County Of these read S. Thomas Smith de re Anglo lib. 2. c. 16. There be also Bailiffs of the Forest Manwood par 1. pa. 113. There be likewise Bayliffs of Husbandry belonging to private men of great Substance who seem to be so called because they dispose of the under Servants every man to his labour and task check them for misdoing their businesse gather the profits to their Lord and Master and deliver an account for the same at the years end or otherwise as it shall bee called for The word Bayliff or Ballivus is by Rebuffus derived from Baal i. dominus quia Ballivi dominantur suis subditis quasi eorum magistri domini Rebuf in constit regias de senten excutionis art 7. glos 1. The office or duty of a Bailiff of a mannor or Houshold which in antient time seemeth to have been all one Fleta well describeth li. 2. ca. 72. 73. This word is also used in the Canon Law ca. dilecto de sentent excom in sexto c. 1. de paenis in Clement where the Glossographer saith it is a French word signifying as much as praepositus and Balia or Bativatus is used among our later interpreters of the Civil and Canon law for Provincia as Balliva here in England is used for a County or Shire Balkers See Conders Ballivo amovendo is a writ to remove a Bailiff out of his office for want of sufficient living within his Bayliwick Reg. or fo 78. Bane seemeth to signifie the destruction or overthrow of any thing Bract. l. 2. tract 8. ca. 1. nu 1. as he which is the cause of another mans drowning is said there to be Labane i. Malefactor In that Bracton in the place aforesaid prefixeth a French article to this word it should seem by his opinion that the word is French but I find it not in any French writer that ever I read Baneret banerettus in M. Skenes opinion seemeth to be compounded of baner and rent whom read more at large of this verbo Baneret de verbo sign But our M. Camden rather draweth the word from the German Bannerheires Britan. pag. 109. in meo libro S. Thomas Smith de republ Angl. li. c. 18. saith That Baneret is a Knight made in the field with the ceremony of cutting off the point of his Standard and making it as it were a Banner and they being being Ba chelors are now of greater degree allowed to display their armes in a banner in the Kings army as Barons doe M. Camden ubi supra hath these words of this matter Baneretti cum vasullorum nomen jam desierat à baronibus secundi erant quibus inditum nomen à vexillo Concessum illis erat miliaris virtutis ergo quadrato vexillo perinde ac barones uti unde equites vexillarii à nonulllis vocantur c. Of creating a Knight baneret you may read farther in M. Segar Norrey his book lib. 2. c. 10. That they be next to Barons in dignity it appeareth by the Statute anno 14 R.
licence Register original fol 298. a. Safe conduct See Saulf conduct Salus is a coyn of Gold stamped by King Henry the sixth in France which only coyn with another of Blanes of eight pence a piece was current in those places of France where King Henry was obeyed Stowes Aunals pag. 589. Safe pledge Salvus plegius is a surety given for a mans apparence against a day assigned Beacton lib. 4. cap. 2. nu 2. where it is also called certus plegius Sailing ware anno prim R. 3. cap. 8. Sak See Sac. Sakeber in Britton cap. 15. et 29. seemeth to be he that is robbed or by theft deprived of his goods with whom Bracton also agreeth lib. 3. tracta 2. cap. 32. nu 2. in these words Fartum vero manifestum est ubi latro deprehensus sit seisitus de aliquo latrocino se Hondbabende et Backberend et insecutus fuerit per al●quem cujus res illa fucrit qui dicitur Sacaburthe c. or Sathaber as Stanford calleth it pl. cor lib. pri cap. 21. The interpretation of this word I find not Only M. Skene de verbo interpretatio ne verbo Sacreborgh thinketh it should rather be written Sackerborgh of Sacker i. Securus and Borgh i. plegius signifying a sure cautioner or surety which one findeth to another for theft or slaughter whereof he offereth to accuse him judicially For in this case it behoveth the pursuer to oblige or bind himself into the hands of the Officer or before a ludge competent with Sicker Borg or sure caution that he will pursue in form of Law And by this means it may be that the accuser was wont with us to be called Sakbere of a circumstance because in this case he was surely bound to pursue Sycker is also an old English word signifying as much as sure secure or certain and see Borowe Salet is a head-piece anno 4 et 5. Phil. et Mar. it seemeth to come from the French Salut i. Salus Salmon sewse seemeth to be the young fry of Salmon quasi salmon issue anno 13. Rich. 3. stat pri cap. 19. Salva Gardia is a security given by the King to a stranger fearing the violence of some of his subjects for seeking his right by course of Law the form whereof see in the Register original fol. 26. a. b. Sanctuarie Sanctuarium is a place privileged by the Prince for the safeguard of mens lives that are offenders being foanded upon the Law of mercie and upon the great reverence honour and devotion which the Prince beareth to the place wherunto he granteth such a privilege Of this you may read a sufficient treatise in Stawnf pl. cor lib. 2. cap. 38. This seemeth to have taken beginning from the Cities of refuge which Moyses appointed them to flye unto for safegard of their lives that had by casualtie slain a man Exodus cap. 21. In bastardly imitation whereof first the Athenians then Romulus erected such a place of immunity which they and he after them called Asylum Polydor Virg de inventione rerum li. 3. cap. 12. The Emperours of Rome made the places of their own statues or Images a place of refuge as appeareth Cod. lib. 1. titulo 15. De iis qui adstatuas consugium as also the Churches codem titulo 12. De iis qui ad ecclesias confugiunt c. But among all other nations our anci-ne Kings of England seem to have attributed most to these Sanctuaries permitting them to shelter such as had committed both felonies and treasons so that within forty dayes they acknowledged their fault and so submitted themselves to banishment during which time if any man expelled them if he were Lay he was excommunicated if a Clerk he was made irregular But after forty daies no man might relieve them Stawnf ubi supra See of this the new book of Entries verb. Sanctuary and Fleta lib. 1 cap. 29. And how by degrees they have been taken away you may read partly in him and partly in the statutes a. 26 Hen. 8 cap. 13. et anno 28 ejusdem cap. 7. et anno 32 ejusd cap. 12. et anno 33 ejudsem cap. 15. et anno pri Ed. 6. cap. 12. et anno 2 ejusdem cap. 2. et cap. 33. et anno 5 ejusdem cap. 10. See Abjuration Salarie salarium is a recompence or consideration made to any man for his pains or industry bestowed upon another mans businesse So called as Pliny saith qui tam necessarium quam sat homini The word you have anno 23 Ed. 3. cap. pri Salmon pipe anno 25 H. 8. cap. 7. is an engine to catch Salmons and such like Fish Sandal anno 2 Rch. 2. cap. 1. is a merchandize brought into England And it seemeth to be a kind of wood brought out of India For Sandal in French so signifieth and in Latin it is called Santalum Sarkling time or time of sarcling Seemeth to be all one with hey seel Or the time when the Country man weedeth his Corn. And it proceedeth from the Latin sarculore to rake or weed Or from the French Sarcler which hath all one signification Sarplar sarpleralana is a quantity of VVooll This in Scotland is called Serpliathe and containeth fourscore stone for the Lords of the Councel in anno 1527. decreed four Serpliathes of packed wool to contain sixteenscore stone of wool by the traffique of Merchants now used The Merchants use to fraught for their goods to Flanders by the Sack to France Spain and England by the Tunne and to Danken and the Eastern Seas by the Serpliath Skene de verborum significatione verbo Serpliat e with us England a load of wooll as I have been informed consisteth of eighty Todde each Todde consisting of two stone and each stone of fourteen pound And that a Sack of wool is in common account equal with a Load and a Sarplar otherwise called a pocket is half a Sack Further that a pack of wooll is a Horse load which consisteth of seventeen stone two pounds Fleta lib. 2. cap. 12. saith that all our English measures are compounded of the penny sterling which weigheth 32. VVheat corns of the middle sort and that two of those pence make an ounce and twelve ounces a pound in weight or twenty shillings in number and that eight pound of VVheat maketh a jallon or a gallon as we now call it and eight gallons a bushell and eight bushels a common quarter Also that fifteen ounces of the quantity aforesaid do make a Mérchants pound And that 12. such pounds and a half make a stone and that fourteen stone make a waigh and that two waighes or twenty eight stone make a sack of Wool which ought to weigh a quarter of Wheat and that 12 Sacks make a Last So that a weigh and a Sarpler seemeth to be all one but that the Sarpler is the case and the weigh respecteth the quantity of the Wooll it self and that a load and a sack is all one Saunkefin is a
proferre est testimonium legalium hominum qui contractui inter eos habito interfuerint praesentes producere Fleta lib. 2. cap. 63. § Nullus And secta is used for a witnesse Idem lib. 4. cap. 16. § final Habes tamen sectam unam vel plures c. Secta ad justiciam faciendam is a service due for a mans fee to be persormed being by his fee bound thereunto Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 6. Secta unica tantum facienda propluribus haereditatibus is a Writ that lyeth for that Heir that is distreined by the Lord to more sutes than one in respect of the Land of divers Heirs descended unto him Register original folio 177. a. Sectis non faciendis is a VVrit that lyeth for one in wardship to be delivered of all sutes of Court during his wardship Register origin fol. 173. b. See other use of this writ eodem fol. 174. touching women that for their Dower ought not to perform sure of Court Secunda superoneratione pasturae is a writ that lyeth where measurement of pasture hath been made and he that first surcharged the common doth again furcharge it the measurement notwithstanding Register original fo 157. Old nat br fol. 73. Secundarie secundarius is the name of an Officer next unto the chief Officer as the Secundary of the fine Office the Secundary of the Counter which is as I take it next to the Shyreeve in London in each of the two Counters Secundary of the Office of the privy seal anno 1 Ed. 4. cap. 1. Secundaries of the Pipe two Secundary to the remembrancers two which be Officers in the Exchequer Camden pag. 113. Securitatem inveniendi quòd se non divertat ad partes exteras sine licentia Regis is a writ that lyeth for the King against any of his subjects to stay them from going out of his Kingdom The ground whereof is this that every man is bound to serve and defend the Common-wealth as the King shall think meet Fitz. nat br fol. 85. Securitate pacis is a writ that lyeth for one who is threatened death or danger against him that threateneth taken out of the Chancery to the Shyreeve whereof the form and farder use you may see in the Register orig fo 88. b. and Fitz. nat brev fo 79. Se defendendo is a plee for him that is charged with the death of another saying that he was driven unto that which he did in his own defence the other so assaulting him that if he had not done as he did he must have been in peril of his own life Which danger ought to be so great as that it appear inevitable As Stawnford saith in his plees of the Crown lib. 1. cap. 7. And if he do justifie it to be done in his own defence yet is he driven to procure his pardon of course from the Lord Chanceller and forfeiteth his goods to the King As the said Author saith in the same place Seignior Dominus is borrowed of the French seigneur It signifieth in the general signification as much as Lord but particularly it is used for the Lord of the see or of a Mannor even as Dominus or senior among the Feudists is he who granteth a fee or benefit out of the Land to another And the reason is as Hotoman saith because having granted the use and profit of the land to another yet the property i. Dominium he still reteineth in himself See Hotoman in verbis Feudal verbo Dominus Senior Seignior in grosse seemeth to be he that is Lord but of no mannor and therefore can keep no Court. Fitz. nat br fol. 3. b. See Signorie Seignourage anno 9 H. 5. stat 2. cap. 1. seemeth to be a regality or Prerogative of the King whereby he challengeth allowance of gold and silver brought in the Masse to his Exchange for coyn Seignorie Dominium is borrowed of the French seigneury i. ditio dominatus Imperium principatus potentatus It signifieth peculiarly with us a Manor or Lordship Seignorie de soke mans Kitchin fol. 80. Seignorie in grosse seemeth to be the Title of him that is not Lord by means of any Manor but immediately in his own person as Tenure in capite whereby one holdeth of the King as of his Crown is seignorie in grosse because it is held of the King for the time being and not of the King as of any honour manor c. Kitchtn fol. 206. See Seignior Seisin seisina is borrowed of the French seisine i. possessio and so it signifieth in our Common law and to seise is to take possession Primier seisin prima seisina is the first possession See Primier seisin Of the French word seisir is made a Latine seisire used by the Canonists cap. Clericis § Nos igitur non semel de immunitate Ecclesiae num 6. as also the Civilians Guido Pap. singulo 865. Seisire est etiam possessionem tradere Tiraquellas in Tractatu Le mort saisit le vif pag. 53. num 3. Seisin with our Common Lawyers is two fold seisin in fact and seisin in Law Perkins Dower 369.370 Seisin in fact is when a corporal possession is taken seisin in Law is when something is done which the Law accounteth a seisin as an Inrollment Seisin in Law is as much as a right to Lands and Tenements though the Owner be by wrong disseised of them Perkins Tenent per le courtesie 457.478 And it seemeth by Ingham that he who hath had an hours possession quietly taken hath seisin de droit de claim whereof no man may disseise him by his own force or subtilty but must be driven to his action § Bref de novel disseisin Sir Edward Cook lib. 4. calleth it seisin in Law or seisin actual fol. 9. a. The Civilians call the one civilem possessionem the other naturalem Seisiua habenda quia Rex habuit annum diem vastum is a Writ that lyeth for delivety of seisin to the Lord of his Land or Tenements that formerly was couvicted of felony after the King in the right of his Prerogative hath had the year day and waste Reg. orig fol. 165. a. Selion selio is borowed of the French sello i. terra elata inter duos sulcos in Latine Porca in English a Ridge or land It signifieth even so with us also and is of no certain quantity but sometime containeth half an Acre sometime more and sometime less West parte 2. symbol titulo Recovery sect 3. Therefore Crompton in his jurisdictions fol. 221. saith that a selion of Land cannot be in demand because it is a thing uncertain Seneshall senescallus is a French word but borrowed from Germany being as Tilius saith compounded of Scal i. servus aut officialis and Gesnid i. familia we English it a Steward As the high Seneshall or Steward of England pl. cor fo 152. High Seneshall or steward and South Seneshall or Understeward Kitchin fol. 83. is understood for a steward or understeward
of Courts Seneshat de l'hostel de Roy Steward of the KINGS Houshold Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 102. Senescallo Mareshallo quod non teneant placita de libero tenemento c. is a writ directed to the Steward or Marshal of England inhibiting them to take cognizance of any action in their Court that concerneth either Freehold debt or Covenant Register original fol. 185. a. 191. b. Senie aliâs Sene sena is a leaf of a medicinable herb that bringeth forth stalks of a cubit high purging Phlegmatick Cholerick and also Melancholick humours without great violence The farther use whereof you may read in Gerrards Herbal lib. 3. cap. 8. This is mentioned among other Drugs and spices to be garbled anno 1 Jac cap. 19. Septuagesima is a Sunday certain and alwaies the third Sabbath before Shrove sunday from the which until the Octaves after Easter the solemnizing of mariage is by the Canon laws forbidden The reason whereof is given for that all this time until Easter is a time of mourning for the fall of Adam and for the misery of man thereof insuing And Easter with the Octaves thereof is a time of Christs glorification and so of ours also in him for his and by him our conquest over death and sin And that therefore all carnal affection onght during that space to be wholly mortified in us See Quinquagesima see Advent see Rogation week Sequitur sub suo periculo is a writ that lyeth where a summons adwarrantizandum is awarded and the Sheriff returneth that he hath nothing whereby he may be summoned For then goeth out an Aliâs and Pluries And if he come not at the Pluries then shall go out this writ Old nat br fol. 163. Sequestration sequestratio is a separating of a thing in controversie from the possession of both those that contend for it And it is double voluntary or necessary Voluntary is that which is used by the consent of each party Necessary is that which the Judge of his Authority doth whether the parties will or not It is used also for the act of the ordinary disposing of office the goods and chattels of one deceased whose estate no man will meddle with Dyer fol. 232. num 5. fol. 256. num 8. fol. 160. num 42. fol. 271 num 26. as also in the gathering of the fruits of a Benefice void to the use of the next Incumbent anno 28 H. 8. cap. 11. Fortescue cap. 50. and in divers other cases Sequestro habendo is a writ judicial for the dissolving of a seqnestration made by the Bishop at the Kings commandement of the fruits of a benefice thereby to compell the Parson to appear at the sute of another for the Parson upon his appearance may have this writ for the release of the sequestration Register judicial fol. 36. a. Sergeants servians commeth of the French sergeant i. satelles accensus a man of the Guard a kind of Souldier so called because he was sepè accitus ad res necessarias in exercitu peragendas Calepin M. Skene de verb. signif verb. Serjeant hath these words Sergeant commeth from Sergent quae est vox composita de Serrer quod est inclndere gent. quod pro gente populo vel plebe usurpatur Itaque Serjandus disitur qui jussu magistratus quemlibet de populo reum crimints in carcerem corjicit seu includit This word Sergeant is diversly used in our Law and applyed to sundry offices and callings First a Sergeant at Law or of the Coyfe is the highest degree taken in that profession as a Doctor in the Civil law And to these as men best learned and best experienced of all others is there one Court severed to plead in by themselves and that is the Court of Common pleas where the Common law of England is most strictly observed These are made by the Kings mandat or VVrit directed unto them commanding them upon a great penalty to take upon them that degree by a day certain therein assigned Dyer fol. 72. num 1. see Counte And of these one is the Kings Sergeant being commonly chosen by the King out of the rest in respect of his great learning to plead for him in all his causes as namely in causes of treason pl. cor li. 3. ca. pri And of these there may be more if it so please the King This is called in other Kingdomes Advocatus Regius Cassan de consuet Burgund pag. 850. VVith what solemnity these Sergeants be created read Fortescue cap. 50. This word Sergeant seemeth to be used in Britton for an Officer belonging to the County who in his first Chapter speaking of Appeals made before the Coroner hath these words in effect And then let the Coroner cause his appeal to be entred and the names of his sureties And afterward let commandement be given to the Sergeant of the County where the felony was committed that he have the body of the persons appealed at the next County And it is probable that this Officer was all one with him whom Bracton in his fifth book cap. 4. num 2. calleth Servientem Hundredi of whom he hath these words Post probationem defaltae faciet serviens Hundredi incontinenti summonitionem vel affidet partibus diem si praesentes sint ad proximum Comitatum c. This is like to be the same Officer which in antient time was called the Bayliff of the Hundred who as is declared in Bayliff had the like authority in his Hundred that the Shyreeve had in the County though inferiour to him and to be controlled by him as appeareth by divers antient presidents set down by Kitchin in his Tractat of Returns in Court Hundred Court-Baron c. I read also in Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. cap. 28. Of the Kings Sergeant who is like to be also an Officer in the County in these words speaking of a woman ravished and what she ought to do for the pursute of the Ravisher sic ire debet ad prepositum Hundredi ad servientem Domini R●gis ad coronatores ad Vicecomitem ad primum comitatum faciat appellum suum And again eod l. c. 32. in these words si sine secta cognoverit se inde esse latronem coram vicecomite vel coronatore vel serviente Domini Regis c. And again lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 4. num 8. in these words Quid si servien Domini Regis dederit partibus diem ad Comitatum c. And by Fleta it seemeth that this Term was general to the Shyreeve Coroner and Bayliffs of Counties who in his sixt book cap. 3. § 1. hath these words Com. quis igitur senserit dominum suum vel euriam suam sibi de recto defecisse tunc ost ense hoc Vicecomiti statim praecipiat ballivo Hundredi vel iteneranti vel alteri servienti Regis quòd assumptis sibi l beris legalibus hominibus de viceneto illo ad curiam illius
Councellors as the case may require Solet et debit See debet solet Solidata terrae See Farding deal of land Solace anno 43. Elizabeth cap. 10. Sommons aliâs summons summonitio commeth of the French semondre i. vocare It signifieth in our Common law as much as vocatio in jas or ciatio among the Civilians And thence is our word somner which in French is semoneur i. vocator monitor The Customary of Normandy for our summons hath semonse ca. 61. summons of the Exchequer anno 3 Edw. 1. cap. 19. anno 10. ejusdem cap. 9. How summons is divided and what circumstances it hath to be observed See Fleta li. 6. cap. 6 7. Sollutione feods militis Parlamenti and solutione feodi Burgen Parlamenti be Writs whereby Knights of the Parliament may recover their allowance if it be denied an 35 H. 8. ca. 11. Sontage Stow. pag. 284. is a task of forty shillings laid upon every Knights fee. Sorting Kersies 3 Jacob. cap. 16. Sothale is a kind of entertainment made by Bayliffs to those of their hundreds for their gain Which sometime is called Filctable Of this Bracton lib. 3. tractat 1. cap. prim hath these words De Ballivis qui faciunt cervicias suas quas quandoque vocant sothail quandoque fictale ut pecunias extorqueant ab iis qui sequntur Hundreda sua et Balvas suas c. I think this should rather be written Scotale See Scotale Southvicont Sub vicecomes is the undersheriff Cromptons Jurisd fol. 5. Sowne is a verb neuter properly belonging to the Exchequer as a word of their Art signifying so much as to be leviable or possible to be gathered or collected For example Estreats that sown not are such as the Sheriff by his industry cannot get and Estreats that sown are such as he can gather anno 4 H. 5. cap. 2. SP Speaker of the Parliament is an Officer in that high Court that is as it were the common mouth of the rest and as the honourable assembly consisteth of two Houses one called the Higher or Upper House consisting of the King the Nobility and Kings Councell especially appointed for the same the other termed the Lower or Common House containing the Knights of the Shires the Citizens Barons of the Cinque Ports and the Burgesses of Borough Townes so be their also two Speakers one termed the Lord Speaker of the Higher House who is most commonly the Lord Chancelor of England or Lord Keeper of the Great Seal the other is called the Speaker of the Lower House And the duties of these two you have particularly described in M. Vowels alias Hookers Book intituled The order and usage of keeping the Parliament Speciall matter in evidence See Generall Issue And Brook tit Generall issue and speciall evidence Spiritualities of a Bishop spiritualia Episcopi be those profits which he receiveth as he is a Bishop and not as he is a Baron of the Parliament Stawnf pl. cor fol. 132. The particulars of these may be the duties of his Visitation his benefit growing from ordering and instituting Priests prestation Money that subsidium charitativum which upon reasonable cause he may require of his Clergie Johannes Gregorius de Beneficis cap. 6. num 9. and the Benefit of his Jurisdiction Joachimus Stephanus de Jurisdict lib. 4. cap. 14. num 14. for these reckoneth Exactionem Cathedratic quartam Decimarum mortuariorum et oblationum pensitationem subsidium obaritativum celebrationem Spuedi collationem viatici vel commeatus oum Episcopus Romam proficiscitur jus Hospitii Litaniam et Processionem Spickenard spica nardi vel nardus is a medicinal herb whereof you may for your further instruction read Gerards Herball lib. 2. cap. 425. The fruit or eare of this for it bringeth forth an care like Lavender is a drug garbable anno 1. Jacob. cap. 19. Spoliation spoliatio is a writ that lyeth for an Incumbent against another Incumbent in case where the right of Patronage commeth not in debate As if a Person be made a Bishop and hath despensation to keep his Rectory and afterward the Patron present another to the Church which is instituted and inducted The Bishop shall have against this Incumbent a writ of Spolatio in curt Christian Fitzherbert nat br fol. 36. See Benevolence SQ Squalley anno 43. Elizab. b. cap. 10. Squyres See Esquires ST Stable stand is one of the four Evidences or presumptions whereby a man is convinced to intend the stealing of the Kings Dear in the Forest Manwood parte 2. of his Forest Lawes cap. 18. num 9. the other three be these Dogdrawe Backbear Bloudy hand And this Staplestand is when a man is found at his standing in the Forest with a Crosse bowe bent ready to shoot at any Deer or with a long Bowe or else standing close by a Tree with Greyhounds in a lease ready to slip Idem eodem Stalkers a kind of net anno 13 R. 2. stat 1. cap. 20. et anno 17. ejusdem cap. 9. Stallage Stallagium commeth of the French Estaller i. merces expenere expedire explicare It signifieth in our Common law money paid for pitching of stalls in Fair or Market See Scavage This in Scotland is called stallange Skene de verbor signific verbo Stallangiatores And among the Romans it was termed Siliquaticum à siliqua primo et minimo omnium pondere apud●llam nationem Stannaries stannaria commeth of the Latin stannum i. tynne signifying the Mines and works touching the getting and purifying of this mettall in Cornwal and other places Of this read Camden Britan. pag. 119 The liberties of the stannarie men granted by Edw. 1. before they were abridged by the Statute anno 50 Edw. 3. see in Plowden casu Mines fol. 327. a. b. Staple Stapulum signifieth this or that Town or Citie whether the Merchants of England by common order or commandement did carry their wools wool-fells cloathes lead and tinne and such like commodities of our land for the utterance of them by the great The word may probably be interpreted two waies one taking it from staple which in the Saxon or old English language signifieth the stay or hold of any thing Lamberd in his Duties of Constables num 4. because the place is certain and setled and again from the French estape i. forum vinarium because to those places whither our English Merchants brought their commodities the French would also meet them with theirs which most o all consisteth in Wines But I think this latter the truer because I find in the Mirrour of the world written in French these words A Calais y avotte Estape de le laine c. Which is as much to say as the staple for wools c. You may read of many places appointed for this staple in the statutes of the Land according as the Prince by his Councel thought good to alter them from the second year of Ed. 3. cap. 9. to the fifth of Ed. the sixth cap. 7. VVhat
defined as when a servant killeth his Master or a VVife her Husband or when a secular or religious man killeth his Prelate to whom he oweth faith and obedience And in how many other cases petit treason is committed see Cromptons Iustice of peace And this manner of treason giveth forfeiture of Escheats to every Lord within his own fee anno 25 Edw. 3. cap. 2. Of treason see Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 3. nu pri et 2. Treason compriseth both high and petit treason anno 25 Ed 3. stat 3. ca. 4. Treasure trove Thesaurus inventus is as much as in true French Tresor trouve i. treasure found and signifieth in our Common law as it doth in the Civil law id est veterom depositionem pecuniae cujus non extat m●m●●ia ut jam dominum non habcat l. 31. sect prim de acquir rerum Dom. Neer unto which definition commeth Braction lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 3. num 4. And this trea●ure ●ound though the Civil law do give it to the finder according to the law of nature yet the law of England giveth it to the King by his Prerogative a● appeareth by Bracton ubi supra And therefore as he also saith in the 6 Chapter it is the Coroners office to enquire thereof by the Country to the Kings use And Stawnford pl. cor lib. prim cap. 42. saith that in antient times it was doubtfull whether the concealing of treasure found were felony yea or not and that Bracton calleth it gravem praesumptionem et quasi crimen furti But the punishment of it at these daies as he proveth out of Fitzh Abridgement pag. 187. is imprisonment and fine and not life and member And if the owner may any waies be known then doth it not belong to the Kings Prerogative Of this you may read Br●ton also cap. 17. who saith that it is every Subjects part as soon as he hath found any treasure in the Earth to make it known to the Coroners of the County or to the Bailiff c. See Kitchin also fol. 40. Treasurer thesaurarius commeth of the French treserier i. quaestor praefectus fisci and signifieth an Officer to whom the treasure of another or others is committed to be kept and truly disposed of The chiefest of these with us is the Treasurer of England who is a Lord by his Office and one of the greatest men of the Land under whose charge and government is all the Princes wealth contained in the Exchequer as also the check of all Officers any way imployed in the collecting of the Imposts Tributes or other Revenues belonging to the Crown Smith de Repub. Anglor lib. 2. cap. 14. more belonging to his Office see anno 20 Edw. 3. cap. 6. et anno 31 Henr. 6. cap. 5. et anno 4 Edw. 4. cap. prim et anno 17 ejusdem cap. 5. et anno prim R. 2. cap. 8. et anno 21 Henr. 8. cap. 20. et anno pri Ed. 6. cap. 13. Ockams Lucubrations affirm that the Lord chief Iustice had this authority in times past and of him hath these words Iste excellens Sessor omnibus quae in inferiore vel superiore schaccio sunt prospicio Adnutum ipsius quaelibet officia subjects disponuntur sic tamen ut ad Domini Regis utilitatem justo perveniant Hic tameninter caterae videtur excellens quod potest his sub testimonio suo breve domini Regis f●cere fieri ut de thesauor quaelibet summa libixetur ved us computetur quod sibi ex Domini Regis mandato pranoverit computandum vel si maluerit breve suum sub aliarum testimonio faciet de his rebus This high Officer hath by varetie of his Office at this day the nomination of the Eschetors yearly throughout England and giveth the places of all Customers Controllers and Searchers in all the Ports of the Realm He sitteth in the Chequer Chamber and with therest of the Court ordereth things to the Kings best benefit He with the Barons may by Statute stall debts of three hundred pounds and under And by Commission from his Majesty he with others joyned with him letteth leases for lives or years of the lands that came to the Crown by the dissolution of Abbies He by his Office giveth warrant to certain men to have their wine without impost He taketh declaration of all the mony paid into the Receipt of the Exchequer and of all Receivers accompts Then is there a Treasurer of the King houshold who is also of the Privy Councel in the absence of the Steward of the Kings Houshold hath power with the Controller and the Steward of the Marshalsea without commission to hear and determine treasons misprisions of treasons murder homicide and blood shed committed within the Kings Pallace Stawnfopl cor l. 3. c. 5. In the statute an 28 R. 2. c. 18. et 11 H. 7. ca. 16. mention is made of the Treasurer of Calis In Westm. 2. cap. 8. of the Treasurer of the Exchequer et anno 27 Edw. 3. stat 2. cap. 18. et anno 35 Eliz. cap. 4. of the Treasurer of the Navy or Treasurer of the wars or garrisons of the Navy anno 39 El. 7. Treasurer of the Kings Chamber anno 26 H. 8. cap. 3. et anno 33 ejusdem cap. 39. Treasurer of the wars anno 7 Henr. 3. cap. prim anno 3. Honr. 8. cap. 5. Treasurer for the Chancery West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 152. Treasurer of the Kings Wardrope anno 15 Edw. 3. stat prim cap. 3. et anno 25 ejusdem stat 5. cap. 21. whose office you have well set out in Fleta lib. 2. cap. 14. Treasurer of the County for poor Souldiers anno 35 Eliz. cap. 4. And most Corporations through the Kingdom have an Officer of this name that receiveth their rents and disburseth their common expences Treat commeth of the French traire i. emulgere and signifieth in the Common law as much as taken out or withdrawn As a Iurour was challenged for that he might not dispend forty pounds and for that cause he was treat by the Statute Old nat br fol. 159. that is removed or discharged Bread of treat anno 51 H. 3. Statute of Bread c. what it signifieth I cannot learn Trespasse Transgressio is a French word signifying a much as Mors obitus excessus The reason whereof I take to be because in interpretation it is a passage from one place or estate to another for in Britton cap. 29. I find trespassants for passengers In our Common law and language it is used for any gransgression of the law under treason felony or misprission of treason or of fe●ony or may be gathered out of Stawnf pl. cor fol. 38. where he saith that for a Lord of the Parliament to depart from the Parliament without the Kings license is neither treason nor felony but trespals And again fol. 31. saying that where it was wont before the Statute made anno prim Edw. a