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A58387 Reflections upon the opinions of some modern divines conerning the nature of government in general, and that of England in particular with an appendix relating to this matter, containing I. the seventy fifth canon of the Council of Toledo II. the original articles in Latin, out of which the Magna charta of King John was framed III. the true Magna charta of King John in French ... / all three Englished. Allix, Pierre, 1641-1717.; Catholic Church. Council of Toledo (4th : 633). Canones. Number 75. English & Latin. 1689 (1689) Wing R733; ESTC R8280 117,111 184

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〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Kings or Emperors believing that the Name of Kings left them in some dependence upon the Empire of the East this obliged the Emperors of the West to take upon them the Title of Emperor to intimate their independency upon the Princes of the East Which Title the Emperors of the West having afterwards made use of as a pretence to raise themselves above the rest of the Princes of Europe the Western Kings did the same which the Emperors of the West had done before to assert their Independency For not only the Kings of England but some other Western Kings have taken upon them the Title of Emperors Alphonsus VI King of Spain took upon him this Title by a Concession from Pope Vrban II because he had suppressed the Mosorabick-Office Alphonsus VII and VIII assum'd the same Titles and Alphonsus VIII was Crowned in that quality by Raymond Arch-Bishop of Toledo in the Church of Lions with the consent of Pope Innocent II as is reported by Garibay lib. 8. hist cap. 4. We find that Peter de Clugny writes to this Alphonsus as Emperor of Spain Epist 8. And long time before these Princes it is certain that the Kings of the Goths since Richaredus had taken to themselves the Title of Flavians in imitation of the Roman Emperors as may be seen in the Councils of Toledo Yet Philip II having demanded this Title in 1564 of Pope Pius IV it was refused him The Kings of Lombardy had assum'd the Title of Flavians even since Autlaric according to the Account given us by Paul Diacon lib. 3. cap. 8 which they did to shew that they were Emperors in their own Lands and Territories and that they acknowledged no Soveraign or Superior And it seems that in Process of Time some Western Kings affected that Title for the same reason and were the rather perswaded so to do because some Canonists and Lawyers have impudently maintained That the Kings of Spain France and England were Subjects of the Emperors of the West Glossa in cap. Venerabil de Elect. in verbo transtulit in caput Venerabil qui filii sint legitimi Bartolus in caput hostes ff de captivis Alciat lib. 2 disjunct c. 22. Baldus in cap. 1 de Pace juramento fervando in usibus Feudorum Tho he contradict himself by asserting elsewhere That the King of France is not subject to the Emperor And thus much for the first Illusion some make use of to perswade us that the Kings of England possess the same Rights as the Emperors A second which seems to have some more Ground is this They say that as the Emperors that were after Vespasian had the Right to divide the Empire and to settle it by their Wills on their Heirs the Kings of England having done the like it appears thereby they were in Possession of the same Right the Emperors had to this purpose they alledge the last Will of William the Conqueror in favor of his Son William Rufus But nothing can be more vain than this Objection 1. We cannot deny but that the Election of Kings took Place during the Reign of the Saxons not that they did it with that Freeness as to prefer the Uncle before his Nephew that was under Age ' tho the Kings Son and the youngest Brother before the Eldest 2ly It is true that William the Conqueror did act in an extraordinary manner in disposing of his Kingdom in Favor of William Rufus in the same way as one disposeth of a Conquest and this in prejudice to Robert his Eldest Son as was also done by William Rufus But these two Princes dying without Heirs Henry who had Married the Daughter of King Alexander of Scotland who had the Rights of the Saxon Kings and who in Consideration of that Marriage renounced the Rights he might pretend to England as heir Presumptive of the Saxon Kings having obtain'd the Government by the Right of his Wife the Laws recovered their Strength and Things returned to their antient Channel as they were in the time of the Saxons So that it appears that it is Folly for any one to imagine that the Kings of England may alienate their Estates as a private Person can alienate his Inheritance This was evident in the case of King John who was opposed by the whole State for pretending to subject the Crown of England to Pope Innocent III. And indeed if we consider the Thing in it self and according to the unanimous Opinion of all Lawyers these last Wills can really be of no Force without the consent of the States to authorize them as we find that the same did intervene in both the fore-mentioned Cases The reason whereof is invincible forasmuch as all States do not consider their Kings as Proprietors of their Kingdoms but only as publick Ministers who are intrusted with a Jurisdiction and Administration for the Good of the publick And this is the Title by which even Conquerors themselves are at last obliged to hold their Authority They tell us in the 3d place that the Kings of England entitling themselves Kings by the Grace of God it appears that their Power being come from God cannot be limited by their Subjects over whom God has set them A wonderful way of arguing and never known till these our Times at least it is evident that he who has defended Nicholas de Lyra against Burgensis hath made a very different use of these words Dei Gratia by the Grace of God wherewith the Kings of the North prefac● their Titles from what some now a days make of it For he maintains that it is the Character of a limited and temper'd Government see how he expresseth himself upon the 8. ch of the 1 Book of Kings Titulus Imperatoris modo regendi vitiato that is to say illimitato as he expresses himself before contradicit nam titulus ejus est N. Dei gratia Romanorum Rex semper Augustus hoc est Reipublicae non privatae accommodus Ita aliorum Regum Protestationes sunt sub Dei gratia quae vitiatum Principatum non admittit The very Title of the Emperor saith he is a Contradiction to an Arbitrary and Unlimited kind of Government for his Title is N. by the Grace of God King of the Romans always Augustus that is enlarger of the Empire which implies that his Government is accommodate to the Common good and not his Private Interest So likewise we find that the Protestations of other Kings are under Dei Gratia the Grace of God which doth not admit of Arbitrary Government There remain but two difficulties more the first is this Several Members of the Church of England having perswaded the People that a necessity was laid upon them to suffer all from the Hands of their Kings The Kings of England have accordingly usurped those Rights and were actually in possession of them when the same began to oppose themselves to King James this is that they call a right of Prescription They consider the
paying Relief or making fine The Guardian of an Heirs Land shall take the reasonable Issues Customs and Services without destruction or waste of his Men or Goods And if such Guardian make destruction and waste he shall lose the Wardship and the Guardian shall keep in repair the Houses Parks Ponds Pools Mills and other Appurtenances to the Estate out of the Profits of the Land. And shall take care that the Heirs be married without disparagement and by the Advice of their near Kindred That a Widow shall give nothing for her Dower or Marriage after the death of her Husband but shall be suffered to dwell in her Husband's House Ninety days after his death within which time her Dower shall be assigned her and she shall immediately have her Marriage and her Inheritance The King nor his Bayliff shall not seize any Land for debt if the Debtors Goods be sufficient nor shall the Debtors Sureties be distrain'd upon when the Debtor himself is able to pay the Debt But if the Debtor fail of payment the Sureties if they will may have the Debtors Lands till the Debt be fully satisfied unless the Principal Debtor can shew that he is quit against his Sureties The King shall not allow any Baron to take Aide of his free Tenants but for the Redemption of his Person for the making his Eldest Son a Knight and towards the Marriage of his Eldest Daughter once and hereunto he shall have but a Reasonable Aid That none shall do more Service for a Knights Fee than is due for the same That Common Pleas shall not follow the King's Court but shall be holden in some certain Place And that Recognitions be taken in their proper Counties and after this manner viz. That the King shall send two Justices four times a year who together with four Knights of the same Shire chosen by the Shire shall take Assizes of Novel disseisin Mordancester and Darrein presentment nor shall any be summoned hereunto but the Jurors and the two Parties That a Freeman shall be amerced for a small fault after the manner of the fault and for a great fault according to the Greatness of the fault saving his Contenement A Villain also shall be amerced saving his Wainage and in like manner a Merchant saving his Merchandise by the Oath of good Men of the Vicinage That a Clerk shall be amerced according to his Lay-see in manner aforesaid and not according to his Ecclesiastical Benefice That no Town be amerced for not making Bridges nor Banks but where they have been of old time and of Right ought to be That the measure of Wine of Corn and the breadth of Cloth and the like be rectified and so of Weights That Assizes of Novel Disseizin and Mordancester be abbreviated and so of other Assizes That no Sheriff shall entermeddle with Pleas of the Crown without the Coroners and that Counties and Hundreds shall be at the ancient Farms without any Encrease except the King 's own Demesn Mannors If any Tenant of the King die the Sheriff or other the Kings Bayliff may seize and enroll his Goods and Chattels by the view of lawful Men but yet so as that nothing thereof be taken away till it be fully known whether he owe any clear debt to the King and then the Kings Debt shall be paid and the Residue shall remain to the Executors to perform the Testament of the Dead And if nothing be owing to the King all the Goods shall go to the use of the dead If any Free-man dye Intestate his Goods shall be distributed by his nearest Kindred and Friends and by the view of the Church Widows shall not be distrain'd to marry if they are minded to live unmarried provided they find Sureties that they will not marry without the King's Assent if they hold of the King or without the Consent of their Lords of whom they hold No Constable or other Bayliff shall take any Man's Corn or other Chattels but he shall forthwith pay for the same unless he may have respit by consent of the Seller That no Constable shall distrain any Knight to give Money for the keeping of his Castle if he himself will do it in his own proper Person or by another sufficient man if he may not do it himself for a reasonable Cause And if the King lead him in his Army he shall be discharged of Castleward for the time No Sheriff or Bayliff of the King nor any other person shall take the Horses or Carts of any Free-man to make carriage without his leave The King nor his Bayliffs shall not take any Man's Wood for Castles or other Occasions but by License of him whose the Wood is That the King do not hold the Lands of them that be convicted of Felony longer then a year and a day after which they shall be delivered to the Lord of the Fee. That all Wears from henceforth be utterly put down in Thames and Medway and throughout all England That the Writ called Precipe be not from henceforth granted to any person of any Freehold whereby a Freeman may lose his Court. If any be disseiz'd or delay'd by the King without Judgment of Lands Liberties or other his Right he shall forthwith have restitution and if any Dispute arise upon it it shall be determin'd by the Judgment of the Five and twenty Barons And such as have been disseiz'd by the King's Father or his Brother shall have Right immediately by the Judgment of their Peers in the King's Court. And if the King must have the Term of others that had taken upon them the Cross for the Holy Land the Archbishop and Bishops shall give Judgment therein at a certain day to be prefixt without Appeal That nothing be given for a Writ of Inquisition of Life or Member but that it be freely granted without price and be not denyed If any hold of the King by Fee-farm by Socage or Burgage and of any other by Knight's Service the King shall not have the Custody of the Heir nor of his Lands that are holden of the Fee of another by reason of such Burgage Socage or Fee-farm Nor ought the King to have the Custody of such Burgage Socage or Fee-farm and no Freeman shall lose his Degree of Knighthood by reason of petty Serjeanties as when a Man holds Lands rendring therefore a Knife an Arrow or the like No Bayliff shall put any man to his Law upon his own bare saying without faithful Witnesses That the Body of a Free-man be not taken nor imprisoned nor that he be disseiz'd nor Out-law'd nor Exil'd nor any way destroyed Nor that the King pass upon him or imprison him by force but only by the Judgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land. That Right be not sold nor delay'd nor denyed That Merchants have liberty to go and come safely to buy and sell without any manner of Evil Tolls by the Old and Lawful Customs That no Escuage or Aid be
shall be present or before Stephen Archbishop of Canterbury if he can be there and those that he shall call to him and if he cannot be present Matters shall proceed notwithstanding without him so always that if one or more of the said Five and twenty Barons be concern'd in any such Complaint they shall not give Judgement thereupon but others chosen and sworn shall be put in their room to act in their stead by the residue of the said Five and twenty Barons If we have disseiz'd or esloin'd any Welshmen of Land Franchises or of other things without lawful judgment of their Peers in England or in Wales they shall forthwith be restored unto them and if Suits arise thereupon right shall be done them in the Marches by the Judgment of their Peers of English Tenements according to the Law of England and of Tenements in Wales according to the Law of Wales and Tenements in the Marches according to the Law of the Marches And in like manner shall the Welsh do to us and our Subjects As for all such things whereof any Welshmen have been disseiz'd or esloyn'd without Lawful Judgment of their Peers by King Henry our Father or by King Richard our Brother which we have in our hands or which any others have to whom we are bound to warrant the same we will have respit till the common Term be expir'd of all that crost themselves for the Holy Land those things excepted whereupon Suits were Commenced or Enquests taken by our Order before we took upon us the Cross and when we shall return from our Pilgrimage or if peradventure we forbear going we will presently cause full Right to be done therein according to the Laws of Wales and before the said Parties We will forthwith restore the Son of Lewellyn and all the Hostages of Wales and the Deeds that have been delivered to us for security of the Peace We will deal with Alexander King of Scotland as to the restoring him his Suitors and his Hostages his Franchises and Rights as we do with our other Barons of England unless it ought to be otherwise by vertue of the Charters which we have of his Father William late King of Scotland and this to be by the Judgment of his Peers in our Court. All these Customs and Franchises aforesaid which we have granted to be kept in our Kingdom so far forth as we are concerned towards our Men all Persons of the Kingdom Clerks and Lay must observe for their Parts towards their Men. And whereas we have granted all these things for God's sake and for the amendment of our Government and for the better compremising the discord arisen betwixt us and our Barons We willing that the same be firmly held and established for ever do make and grant to our Barons the scurity underwritten to wit That the Barons shall chuse Five and twenty Barons of the Realm whom they List who shall to their utmost Power keep and hold and cause to be kept the Peace and the Liberties which we have Granted and Confirmed by this our present Charter insomuch that if we or our Justice or our Bayliff or any of our Ministers act contrary to the same in any thing against any Persons or offend against any Article of this Peace and Security and such our Miscarriage be shown to four Barons of the said Five and twenty those four Barons shall come to us or to our Justice if we be out of the Realm and show us our Miscarriage and require us to amend the same without delay and if we do not amend it or if we be out of the Realm our Justice do not amend it within Forty days after the same is shown to us or to our Justice if we be out of the Realm then the said Four Barons shall report the same to the residue of the said Five and twenty Barons and then those Five and twenty Barons with the Commonalty of all England may distress us by all the ways they can to wit by seizing on our Castles Lands and Possessions and by what other means they can till it be amended as they shall adjudge saving our own Person the Person of our Queen and the Persons of our children and when it is amended they shall be subject to us as before And whoever of the Realm will may swear that for the Performance of these things he will obey the Commands of the said Five and twenty Barons and that together with them he will distress us to his Power And we give Publick and free leave to swear to all that will swear and will never hinder any one And for all Persons of the Realm that of their own accord will swear to the said Five and twenty Barons to distress us we will issue our Precept Commanding them to swear as aforesaid And if any of the said Five and twenty Barons die or go out of the Realm or be any way hindred from acting as aforesaid the residue of the said Five and twenty Barons shall chuse another in his room according to their discretion who shall swear as the others do And as to all things which the said Five and twenty Barons are to do if peradventure they be not all present or cannot agree or in case any of those that are Summon'd cannot or will not come whatever shall be determined by the greater number of them that are present shall be good and valid as if all had been present And the said five and twenty Barons shall swear that they will faithfully observe all the matters aforesaid and cause them to be observed to their power And we will not obtain of any one for our selves or for any other any thing whereby any of these Concessions or of these Liberties may be revoked or annihilated and if any such thing be obtained it shall be null and void nor shall ever be made use of by our selves or any other And all ill will disdain and rancour which has been betwixt Us and our Subjects of the Clergy and Laity since the said discord began we do fully release and pardon to them all And moreover all Trespasses that have been committed by occasion of the said discord since Easter in the sixteenth year of our Reign to the restoring of the Peace we have fully released to all Clerks and Lay-men and so far as in us lies we have fully pardoned them And further we have caused Letters Patents to be made to them in testimony hereof witnessed by Stephen Archbishop of Canterbury Henry Archbishop of Dublin and by the aforesaid Bishops and by Mr. Pandulphus upon this Security and these Concessions Whereby we will and strictly Command that the Church of England be free and enjoy all the said Liberties and Rights and Grants well and in Peace freely and quietly fully and entirely to them and their Heirs in all things in all places and for ever as aforesaid And we and our Barons have sworn that all things above written shall be kept on our parts in good Faith without ill design The Witnesses are the Persons above-named and many others This Charter was given at the Meadow called Running-Mead betwixt Windsor and Stanes the 15th day of June in the Seventeenth Year of our Reign JOHN by the Grace of God King of England to the Sheriff of Hampshire and to the Twelve that are chosen in that County to enquire of and put away the evil customs of Sheriffs and of their Ministers of Forests and Foresters of Warrens and Warrenners of Rivers and of guarding them Greeting We command you that without delay you seize into our Hand the Lands and Tenements and the Goods of all those of the County of Southampton that will not swear to the said Five and twenty Barons according to the form exprest in our Charter of Liberties or to such as they shall have thereunto appointed and if they will not swear presently at the end of Fifteen days after their Lands and Tenements and Chattels are seized into our Hands that ye sell all their Goods and keep safely the Money that ye shall receive for the same to be employed for the Relief of the Holy Land of Jerusalem and that ye● keep their Lands and Tenements in our Hands till they have sworn or that Stephen Archbishop of Canterbury and the Barons of our Kingdom have given Judgment thereupon In witness whereof we direct unto you these our Letters Patents Witness our Self At Odibaam the Seven and twentieth Day of June in the Seventeenth Year of our Reign FINIS Books lately Printed for Richard Chiswell THE Case of Allegiance in our present Circumstances considered in a Letter from a Minister in the City to a Minister in the Country 4o. A Breviate of the State of Scotland in its Government Supreme Courts Officers of State Inferiour Officers Offices and Inferiour Courts Districts Jurisdictions Burroughs Royal and Free Corporations Fol. Some Considerations touching Succession and Allegiance 4o. Reflections upon the late Great Revolution Written by a Lay-hand in the Country for the satisfaction of some Neighbours The History of the Desertion or an Account of all the Publick Affairs in England from the beginning of September 1688. to the Twelfth of February following With an Answer to a Piece called The Desertion discussed in a Letter to a Country Gentleman By a Person of Quality K. William and K. Lewis wherein is set forth the inevitable necessity these Nations lie under of submitting wholly to one or other of these Kings And that the matter in Controversie is not now between K. William and K. James but between K. William and K. Lewis of France for the Government of these Nations An Examination of the Scruples of those who refuse to take the Oath of Allegiance by a Divine of the Church of England A Dialogue betwixt two Friends a Jacobite and a Williamite occasioned by the late Revolution of Affairs and the Oath of Allegiance The Case of Oaths stated 4o. A Letter from a French Lawyer to an English Gentleman upon the Present Revolution 4o. The Advantages of the Present Settlement and the great danger of a Relapse The Interest of England in the Preservation of Ireland
acknowledg that to judg aright of Things the Proceedings of England with respect to James II. have been the most just and lawful that could be The Things I have made out in this Treatise are summarily contain'd in the following Articles 1. That the Constitution and Establishment of any Government is the Effect of the Original Consent of the People though the Authority of the Magistrates be a Thing established by God. 2. That this Establishment supposeth the Subsistence of the Laws which are the End of the Government in the Design of God for indeed Kingdoms without Justice are no better than great Robberies as St. Austin calls them De Civit. Dei Lib. 4. cap. 4. 3. That these Fundamental Laws for the Subsistence of the Society are a Bond which so strictly ties the Soveraigns that nothing is able to dispense with their Obligation to them 4. That when the Soveraigns do violate them they break the Ties whereby their Subjects are bound to their Lawful Authority 5. That the Subjects can never be deprived of their Right to hinder the Ruin of the Society and of the Laws for the conservation of which only they have put their Rights into the Hands of the Prince 6. That there was never any State that subsisted under other conditions than these 7. That England in particular and Scotland have always had this Right Now these Things supposed it is evident 1. That James II. has forfeited all his Rights to the Crown even before his Desertion 2. That the Lords and People justly took up Arms against him to oblige him by Force to reform the Disorders he had caused 3. That the States had Power without any regard had to Him to raise the King and Queen to the Throne 4. That the Subjects are more than enough freed from their Oath of Allegiance to King James 5. That they have Right and are under Obligation to take up Arms and oppose themselves against James II. and to maintain the Authority of the King and Queen 6. That those who oppose themselves to this are declared Enemies of the State and of our Religion and the Authors and Abettors of Tyranny and Popery 7. That those who pretend themselves scrupulous in these Points are the Cause of the Division and consequently of the Ruin of the State and Religion whereby they grievously sin against God and therefore are obliged in Conscience to repent and make amends for the Mischief their Division has caused The thing is very evident and forasmuch as it is of the highest importance for their Salvation I beg of them well to weigh and consider these following Articles and witness their Repentance in all these respects 1. Then they ought to repent for that they making profession to have so strong an Affection for James II. they have made him fall upon the Designs of changing the Government into a Despotical and Arbitrary Power and thus by their Maxims have advanced and precipitated his Ruin. They are the Men who have made him conceive the Design of establishing a Tyranny in England they have given birth to his hope of being able to compass it according to his Hearts desire and his Ruin proceeding from the opposition that was made against these his Designs 't is them he may thank for all the Miseries into which he is plunged and consequently they have great reason to repent for having precipitated his Ruin by their false and deceitful Foundation See what Gerson saith In opusc contr Adulat consid 10. Clericus ille Regem suum aut Principem amaret minimè qui perversas tales vellet dare doctrinas aut toto posse scientia illas non impediret quia non est modus certior quo Rex aut Princeps se perderet in corpore in anima totamque ejus damnationem quam habendo falsas tales opiniones eas opere exequendo Cur Quoniam Dominatio sua in Tyrannidem verteretur in infidelitatem That Clergy-man would be far from loving his King or Prince who should teach him such perverse and false Doctrines or that with all his Power and Skill should not oppose them because there is not a more sure way for a Prince to destroy himself Soul and Body and to procure his total Damnation than by entertaining such false Opinions and reducing them into practice Why so Because his Government by this means would be changed into Tyranny and Perfidiousness 2. They ought to repent for their having contributed so much towards the establishing of Tyranny not only because that would have destroyed the Publick Liberty but because his Design at the same time was to overthrow the Protestant Religion and substitute in the place of it the Idolatry Superstition and Tyranny of Popish Usurpation This was a thing they could not do without imitating the Conduct of the Popish Clergy who since the Popes have undertaken to tread under their Feet the Rules of the Gospel and of the Church have endeavoured to inspire Princes with an indifferency for their Oaths and contempt of the Laws which are a Safeguard and Security of the Civil Society 3. They must repent at least some of them for having obstinately endeavoured to hide and disguise the Conspiracies which were design'd for the Ruin of our Religion and Liberty 4. They must repent for having writ in favour of an Opinion contrary to the Judgment of the Ancient Reformers of England and for having traduc'd as Rebels the Protestant Churches beyond the Sea for their maintaining the Maxims which the first Reformers of England have Asserted and for which they have Writ in defence of their Protestant Brethren 5. They must repent for that by their Sermons and Writings they have insinuated to the People those Maxims which have put them upon betraying the Natural Rights of the Society and in the Sequel upon imprudently exposing themselves to betray the Interest of the Protestant Religion which they were obliged to deliver safe to their Posterity 6. They must repent for having by this means encouraged the Judges to tread underfoot the Authority of the Laws and to dispence with them as having taught them to look upon the Laws as the Concessions of Princes and Acts of their Will and by Consequence revocable at their good Pleasure 7. They must repent at least some of them for having mounted to Ecclesiastical Dignities by publickly appearing in the Lists for defence of these pernicious and tyrannical Maxims directly level'd at the Ruin and Overthrow of our Liberty and Religion 8. They must repent for that their Opinions at this Day are the Causes of the present Conspiracies Rebellions and Treasons against the Government by which God has been pleas'd so graciously to secure our Liberty and Religion from the inevitable Ruin wherewith they were threatned However we have cause to bless God that those who are guilty of these Sins are but inconsiderable in their Numbers And I ardently wish for them they may once seriously enter into themselves
to the utmost of his Power with them And the King shall give publick and free Liberty for any man to swear that will and shall never pohibit any to swear And all those of the Nation who will voluntarily of their own accord swear to the Five and twenty Barons to distress the King with them the King himself shall issue his Praecept Commanding them to swear as aforesaid Item If any of the said Five and Twenty Barons dye or go out of the Realm or be any other way hindred from performing these things the residue of the Five and twenty shall chuse another whom they think best in his place who shall be sworn as the rest are And in all matters referred to those Five and twenty Barons if they happen to be all present and differ amongst themselves or if any of them being thereto appointed will not or cannot come what the major part of them shall agree upon and enjoyn shall be valid as if all the Five and twenty had agreed in it And the said Five and twenty shall swear that they will faithfully observe and keep the Articles aforesaid and with all theit might cause them to be observed Moreover the King shall give them the Securities of the Archbishop and Bishops and Master Pandulphus that he will not obtain any thing from the Pope whereby any of these Articles of Agreement may be revoked or diminished And if any such thing be obtain'd that it be reputed void and of none effect nor shall ever be made use of THE GREAT CHARTER OF KING JOHN A True Copy from the Original French. JOHN by the Grace of God King of England to the Archbishops Bishops Abbots Earls Barons Justices Foresters Sheriffs Prevosts Ministers and all his Bayliffs and his Lieges Greeting Know ye that We by the Grace of God and for the saving of our Soul and the Souls of all our Ancestors and of our Heirs and for the Honour of God and the safety of Holy Church and for the amendment of our Government By the Advice of Our Honoured Fathers Stephen Archbishop of Canterbury Primate of All England and Cardinal of Rome Henry Archbishop of Dublin William Bishop of London Peter Bishop of Winchester Jocelin Bishop of Bath Hugh Bishop of Lincoln Walter Bishop of Worcester William Bishop of Chester Benedict Bishop of Rochester and Master Pandulph Sub-deacon of our Lord the Apostle and of our Friend and Brother Anner Master of the Order of Knights Templers in England And by the Advice of our Barons William Earl Marshal Earl of Pembroke William Earl of Salisbury William Earl of Warren William Earl of Arundel Alan of Galloway Constable of Scotland Warin Fitz-Gerard Peter Fitz-Herbert Hubert de Burgh Steward of Poictou Hugh Nevill Matthew Fitz-Herbert Thomas Basset Alan Basset Phillip d' Aubenie Robert de Ropelee John Marshall and John Fitz-Hugh and by the Advice of other our Lieges Have in the first place granted to God and confirmed by this our present Charter for us and for our Heirs for ever That the Churches of England shall be free and shall enjoy their Rights and Franchises entirely and fully And this our Purpose is that it be observed as may appear by our having granted of our meer and free Will that Elections should be free which is reputed to be a very great and very necessary Priviledge● of the Churches of England before the difference arose betwixt Us and our Barons and by our having confirm'd the same by our Charter and by our having procur'd it moreover to be confirmed by our Lord the Apostle Innocent the third Which Priviledge We will maintain And our Will is that the same be faithfully maintain'd by our Heirs for ever We have also granted to all the Free-men of our Kingdom for us and our Heirs for ever all the Liberties hereafter mentioned to have and to hold to them and their Heirs of Us and our Heirs If any of our Earls our Barons or others that hold of us in Chief by Knight-Service die and at the time of his death his Heir be of full age and Relief be due he shall have his Inheritance by the ancient Relief to wit the Heir or Heirs of an Earl for an entire Earldom C pounds the Heir or Heirs of a Baron for an entire Barony C Marks the Heir or Heirs of a Knight for a whole Knights Fee C Shillings at most and where less is due less shall be paid according to the ancient Customs of the several Tenures If the Heirs of any such be within Age and in Ward they shall have their Inheritance when they come of Age without Relief and without Fine The Guardians of the Land of such Heirs being within age shall take nothing out of the Land of the Heirs but only the reasonable Profits reasonable Customs and reasonable Services and that without making destruction or wast of Men or Goods And if we shall have committed the Custody of the Land of any such Heir to a Sheriff or any other who is to account to us for the Profits of the Land and that such Committee make destruction or wast We will take of him amends and the Land shall be committed to two lawful and good Men of that Fee who shall account for the Profits to us or to such as we shall appoint And if we shall give or sell to any Person the custody of the Lands of any such Heir and such Donee or Vendee make destruction or wast he shall lose the Custody and it shall be committed to two Lawful Sage and Good Men who shall account to Us for the same as aforesaid And the Guardian whilst he has the Custody of the Heirs Land shall maintain the Houses Ponds Parks Pools Mills and other Appurtenances to the Land out of the Profits of the Land it self and shall restore to the Heir when he shall be of full age his Land well stockt with Ploughs Barns and the like as it was when he receiv'd it and as the Profits will reasonably afford Heirs shall be married without disparagement insomuch that before the Marriage be contracted the Persons that are next of Kin to the Heir shall be made acquainted with it A Widow after the death of her Husband shall presently and without oppression have her Marriage and her Inheritance nor shall give any thing for her Marriage nor for her Dower nor for her Inheritance which she and her Husband were seiz'd of the day of her Husband's death and she shall remain in her Husband's House Forty Days after his death within which time her Dower shall be assign'd her No Widow shall be compelled to marry if she be desirous to live single provided she give Security not to marry without our leave if she hold of us or without the Lord's leave of whom she holds if she hold of any other We nor our Bayliffs will not seize the Lands or Rents of a Debtor for any Debt so long as his Goods are sufficient to pay the
Debt Nor shall the Pledges be distrain'd upon whilst the Principal Debtor is able to pay the Debt But if the Principal Debtor have not wherewith to pay the Debt the Pledges shall answer for it And if they will they shall have the Lands and Rents of the Debtor till they have received the Debt which they payed for him if the Principal Debtor cannot show that he is quit against his Pledges If any Persons have borrowed Money of Jews more or less and die before they have paid the Debt the Debt shall not grow whilst the Heir is under age and if such Debt become due to us we will take no more than the Goods exprest in the Deed. And if any die and owe a Debt to the Jews his Wife shall have her Dower and shall be charged with no part of the Debt and if the Children of the deceased Person be within age their reasonable Estovers shall be provided them according to the value of the Estate which their Ancestor had and the Debt shall be paid out of the Residue saving the Services due to the Lord In like manner shall it be done in Cases of Debts owing to other persons that are not Jews We will impose no Escuage nor Aids within our Realm but by the Common Council of our Realm except for our Ransom and for the making our eldest Son a Knight and for marrying out eldest Daughter once And for these purposes there shall but a reasonable Aid be required In like manner shall it be done within the City of London and moreover the City of London shall have all her ancient Customs and Liberties by Land and Water We Will moreover and Grant that all other Cities and Boroughs and Towns and Ports have in all respects their Liberties and free Customs And as for coming to the Common Council of the Kingdom and for assessing Aids except in the three cases aforesaid And as for the assessing of Escuage we will cause to be summoned the Archbishops Bishops Abbots Earls and the Greater Barons each in particular by our Letters and moreover we will cause to be summon'd in general by our Sheriffs and Bayliffs all that hold of us in Chief at a certain day to wit Forty days after at least and at a certain place and in our said Letters we will express the cause of the Summons And when Summons shall be so made business shall go on at the day assign'd by the Advice of such as are present though all that are summoned do not appear We will not allow for the future that any take Aid of his free men but only to ransom his Person to make his eldest Son a Knight and to marry his eldest Daughter once and for these purposes there shall but a reasonable Aid be given None shall be distrained to do greater Service for a Knight's Fee or for any other Frank-Tenement then what is due by his Tenure Common Pleas shall not follow our Court but shall ●e held in a certain place Recognizances of Novel Disseisin Mordancester and Darrein presentment shall be taken no where but in their proper Counties and in this manner We or our Chief Justice if our Selves shall be out of the Realm will send two Justices through every County four times a year who with four Knights of every County to be chosen by the County shall take the said Assizes in the Country at a day when the County Court is held and in a certain place and if the said Assizes cannot be taken upon that day so many Knights and free Tenants of them that were present in the County Court that day shall stay as may give a good Judgment according as the concern may be greater or less A Free man shall not be amerced for a little offence but according to the manner of his offence and for a great offence he shall be amerced according to the greatness of his offence saving his Contenement And so a Merchant saving his Merchandise And a Villain in like manner shall be amerced saving his Wainage if he fall into our Mercy and none of the said Amercements shall be affeered but by Oaths of good and lawful Men of the Visinage An Earl and a Baron shall not be amerced but by their Peers and according to the manner of their Offence No Clerk shall be amerced but according to his Lay-fee and in like manner as others aforesaid and not according to the quantity of his Church Living No Ville nor any man shall be distrain'd to make Bridges over Rivers but where they anciently have and of Right ought to make them No Sheriffs Constables Coroners nor other our Bayliffs shall hold the Pleas of our Crown All Counties Hundreds Wapentakes and Tythings shall be at the ancient Farms without being rais'd except our own demesne Mannors If any that holds of us a Lay-fee dye and our Sheriffs or other our Bayliffs show our Letters Patents of Summons for a Debt which the deceased owed to us our Sheriff or Bayliff may well Attach and Inventory the Goods of the Dead which shall be found upon his Lay-fee to the value of the Debt which the deceased owed to us by the view of Lawful Men yet so as nothing be removed till such time as the Debt which shall be found to be due to us be paid and the residue shall go to the Executors to perform the Testament of the dead and if nothing be owing to us all his Goods shall go to the use of the Dead saving to his Wife and Children their reasonable Parts If any Free-man dye intestate his Goods shall be divided by the hands of his near Kindred and Friends by the view of Holy Church saving to every one their Debts which the Dead owed them None of our Constables nor other our Bayliffs shall take the Corn nor other the Goods of any Person without paying for the same presently unless he have time given him by consent of the Vendor Our Constables shall distrain no man who holds by Knight Service to give Money for Castle-garde if he has perform'd it himself in proper Person or by another good Man if he could not perform it himself for some reasonable Cause And if we lead him or send him into the Army he shall be discharg'd of Castle-garde for so long time as he shall be with us in the Army Our Sheriffs our Bayliffs nor other shall not take the Horses nor Carts of any Free-man to make carriage but by leave of such Free-man Neither our selves nor our Bayliffs shall take another Man's Wood for our Castles or other occasions but by his leave whose Wood it is We will hold the Lands of such as shall be convict of Felony but a year and a day and then we will restore them to the Lords of the Fees. All Weares shall from this time forward be wholly taken away in Thames and Medeway and throughout all England except upon the Sea-Coast The Writ called Precipe henceforth shall be made