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A91489 A treatise concerning the broken succession of the crown of England: inculcated, about the later end of the reign of Queen Elisabeth. Not impertinent for the better compleating of the general information intended. Parsons, Robert, 1546-1610. 1655 (1655) Wing P574; Thomason E481_2; ESTC R203153 79,791 168

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or three S 7. yet 't is plain it was his own Will because he commanded it to be drawn written and sealed and never revoked it Besides it is subscribed by many witnesses and inrolled in the Chancery by his own command enough to make it good against the assertion of those few who to please the time wherein they spake in Queen Maries time might say and ghess the King was past memory when his stamp was put to it Now to make good what he did two Acts of Parlaments 28 35. of his Reign gave him full authoritie to dispose of this Point of Succession as he and his learned Council should think best for the Common-wealth By a Statute made in the 27th of Elisabeth 27. Elisah a Statute was made That whosoever shall be convinced to conspire attempt or procure the Queens death or is privie or accessary to the same shall loose all right title pretence claim or action that they or their heirs have or may have to the Crown of England Now the late Queen of Scots being attainted and executed by the authoritie of the said Parlament and for breach of the said Statute 't is easie to determine what Title her Son hath claiming only by her The Uniting of Scotland with England dangerous to the English or like to be 1. Only the increase of Subjects but those rather to participate the Commodities of England than to impart any from Scotland 2. The natural hatred of that People unto us and their ancient inclination to joyn with our enemies the French and Irish against us are Arguments of great mischiefs likely to ensue by that conjunction 3. The Scot must needs hold in jealousie so many Englishmen competitors of the Blood Royal and therefore will fortifie himself against them by those Forrein Nations of whom he is discended with whom he is allyed as the Scots French Danes and uncivil Irish which will prove intolerable to the English 4. The King both for his own safety and for the love he beareth to his own Nation will advance them and plant them about him in chief Places of credit which must needs breed Emulations and Controversies between them and the English Then must he of Force secretly begin to favor and fortifie his own to the incredible calamitie of the other as Canutus did his Danes and William the Conqueror his Normans neither of them enemies to the English blood nor evil Kings but careful of their own safeties for herein it is impossible to be neutral 5. The Romans with all their Power and Policie could never unite the hearts of England and Scotland in peace nor hold the Scots and North-Irish in obedience of any authority residing in England What then are we to hope for of this King herein The Religion of Scotland unpleasing to our State His Religion is neither fit for our State wherein Archbishops c. and Officers of Cathedral Churches are of much dignitie and there suppressed nor will be pleasing to our Nobilitie to be subject to the exorbitant and popular authoritie of a few ordinary Ministers which the King himself is there content to yield unto And therefore it is likely that few will be forward to entertain that King for the reforming of Religion here that hath no better Order in his own at home For the Ladie Arabella For the Ladie Arabella is alleged her being an equal degree of Discent with the King of Scots Her being above him in all hopes for herself or benefit to the English that can be expected in an English Prince and a Prince born in England Against Her Neither she nor the Scot are properly of the House of Lancaster and the Title of Lancaster is before the Pretence of York ut suprà 2. The testament of King Henry 8. barreth her as well as the Scot 3. Her Discent is not free from Bastardie for Queen Margaret soon after the death of her first Husband married Steward Lord of Annerdale who was alive long after her marriage with Anguis and it is most certain also That Anguis had another Wife alive when he married the said Queen All this confirmed by the Lord William Howard Father to the now Admiral sent into Scotland by Henry 8. of purpose to enquire thereof who reported it to King Henry Queen Mary and divers others For this cause King Henry would have letted the marriage between Anguis and his Sister and chiefly caused him to exclude her issue 4. She is a Woman and it were perhaps a great inconvenience that three of the weak sex should succeed one the other 5. All her Kindred by her Father is meer Scotish In England she hath none but by her Mother the Candishes a mean Familie and Kindred for a Princess CAP. VI Examination of the Title of the House of Suffolk being Darby and Hartford Sect. 29. 30. The Earle of Hartford's Children illegitimate THe Children of the Earle of Hartford Discending of Ladie Frances the eldest Daughter of Charles Brandon are proved illigitimate 1. Because the Ladie Katharine Gray their Mother was lawful Wife to the Earle of Pembroke when they were born not separated from him by lawful authority or for any just cause but abandoned by him because her House was come into misery and disgrace 2. It could never be lawfully proved that the said Earle and Ladie Katharine were married but only by their own Assertions not sufficient in Law Therefore was the marriage disannulled in the Arches by publick and definitive sentence of Parker Archbishop of Canterbury not long after the Birth of the said Children 3. When the Marquess of Dorset married their Grandmother the Ladie Frances he had another lawful Wife sister to H. Fitz-allen Earle of Arundel whom he put away to obtain so great a marriage as was the Lady Frances This bred much hate between the Marquess and Earle ever after but the Marquess favor with K. Henry deprived the other of all remedy And therefore may their Mother the Lady Katharine seem illegitimate too Bastardie in the issue of Charles Brandon Charles Brandon had a wife alive when he married the Queen of France by which wife he had issue the Ladie Powyse wife of the Lord Powyse and this wife of his lived some time after his marriage with the Queen Darby's Evasion This Wife say the Friends of Darby died before the birth of the Lady Eleonor the yonger daughter their ancestor though after the Birth of the Lady Francis Hartford's ancestor Hartford's Confutation of the first Bastardie To the first Bastardy of Hartford their Friends affirm That the Contract between the Lady Katharine and the Earl of Pembrook was dissolved lawfully and judicially in the time of Queen Mary Hartford's evasion of the second Bastardie in the behalf of his Second born Edward Seymore The Lady Katharine being found with Child affirmed the Earle of Hartford to be the Father Hereupon he being sent for out of France where he was with Sir N. Throgmorton and had got leave to
heads For which cause the States of Venice and Genoa which were wont to have simply this Government of Aristocratia were inforced in the end to chuse Dukes The Division and Factions among the Senators of Carthage was the cause why Aid was not sent to Hannibal their Captain in Italie after his so great and important Victorie at Canna which was the very cause of the saving of the Romane Empire and the loss of their own As also afterwards the Emulations and Discord of the Romane Senators in the Affairs and Contentions of Marius and Sylla and of Pompey and Caesar was the occasion of all their Destruction and of their Common-wealth with them Why Helps are given to Kings Therefore it appeareth that of all other Governments Monarchie is the best But for that a King is a Man as others be and thereby not only subject to Errors in Judgment but also to passionate Affections in his Will It was necessarie That the Common-wealth should assign him the best Helps that might be for Directing and Rectifying both his Will and Judgment Lawes the first Help why given The first Help is the Law which Aristotle saith Est mens quaedam nullo perturbata affectu and in the same place addeth That he which joyneth a Law to Govern with the Prince joyneth God to the Prince but he that joyneth to the Prince his Affection to Govern joyneth a Beast So that a Prince Ruling by Law is more than a man or a man Deified and a Prince Ruling by Affections is less than a man or a man Brutified In another place also the same Philosopher saith That a Prince that Ruleth hemself and others by his own Appetite and Affections of all Creatures is the worst and of all Beasts is the most furious and dangerous for that nothing is so outragious as Injustice armed and no Armor is so strong as Wit and Authority Councils the second Help why given The Monarchie of ENGLAND tempered The second Help that Common-wealths do assign to their Kings and Princes be certain Councils as we see the Parlament of England and France the Courts in Spain and Diets in Germanie without which no matter of great Moment can be concluded And besides this commonly every King hath his Privie Council whom he is bound to hear and this was done to temper somwhat the absolute Form of a Monarchie whose danger is by reason of his sole Authoritie to fall into Tyrannie as Aristotle noteth In the Monarchie of England all the Three Forms of Government do enter more or less In that there is one King or Queen it is a Monarchie In that it hath certain Councils which must be heard it participateth of Aristocratia And in that the Commonaltie have their Voices and Burgesses in Parlament it taketh part also of Democratia All which limitations come from the Common-wealth as having Authoritie above their Princes for the good of the Realm Restraint of Kings among the Romans Why Kinglie Government left in Rome This Restraint hath been in all Times and Countries as for example The Romans that began with Kings gave their Kings as great and absolute Authoritie as ours have now adaies but yet their next in Blood Succeeded them not of necessitie but new Kings were Chosen partlie by the Senate and partlie by the People So as of Three * most excellent Kings that ensued immediatelie after Romulus none were of the Blood nor yet Romans born but rather Strangers Chosen for their Virtue and Valor So for the neglecting of their Laws the Senators slew Romulus their first King and cut him in pieces and for the same reason expelled Tarquinius Superbus their last and all his Posteritie and with them the Name and Government of Kings which was changed in the Regiment of Consuls Restraint of Kings among the Grecians In Greece and namely among the Lacedemonians their Kings Authoritie was so restrained by certain Officers of the People called Ephori which commonly were five in number as they were not only chastened by them but also Deprived and somtimes put to death Restraint of Kings in Christendom In Germanie The Emperor can neither make War nor exact any Contribution of men or Money thereunto but by the free leave and Consent of all the States of the Germane Dyet or Parlament And for his Children or next in Kinn they have no action interest or pretence to Succeed but only by free Election if they shall be thought worthie Nay one of the chiefest Points that the Emperor must Swear at his entrance is this That he shall never go about to make the Dignitie of the Emperor Peculiar or Hereditarie to his Familie but leave it unto the Seven Electors free in their power to Chuse his Successor according to the Law made by the Pope Gregory the Fift and the Emperor Charles the Fourth in this behalf In Polonia and Bohemia The Kings of Polonia and Bohemia can neither do any thing of great Moment without the consent of certain principal men called Palatines or Castellans neither may their Children of next Blood Succeed except they be Chosen as in the Empire In Spain France and England In Spain France and England the Privileges of Kings are far more eminent both in the Power and Succession for their Authoritie is much more absolute and their next in Blood do ordinarily Succeed for as touching Authoritie it seemeth that the Kings of France and Spain have greater than the King of England for that everie Ordination of these Two Kings is Law in it self without further Approbation of the Common-wealth which holdeth not in England where no general Law can be made without Consent of Parlament But in the other Point of Succession the restraint is far greater in those other Two Countries than in England For in Spain the next in Blood cannot Succeed be he never so lawfully Discended but by a new Approbation of the Nobilitie Bishops and States of the Realm as it is expresly set down in the Two ancient Councils of Toledo the Fourth and Fifth Nor can the King of Spain's own Son at this day be called Prince except he be first Sworn by the said Nobilitie and Estates as we have seen it practiced in the King Philip's Children In France Women neither any of their Issue though Male are admitted to Succeed in the Crown And therefore was Edward 3d. of England though Son and Heir unto a Daughter of France which was left by her Three Brethren Sole Heir to King Phillip * the fair her Father put by the Crown As also was the King of Navar at the same time Son and Heir unto this Womans eldest Brothers Daughter named Lewis Huttin notwithstanding all their allegations And Philip de Valois a Brothers Son of Philip the fair's preferred to it by General Decree of the States of France and by Verdict of the whole Parlament of Paris And albeit the Law Salica
preferred for the elder brother cannot give or transmit that thing to his Son which is not in himself before his Father die nor can his son represent what the Father never had The Common-Law dealeth not with the Point of Succession to the Crown Touching the Common Law the right and interest to the Crown is not expresly decided in it nor is it a Plea subject to the rules thereof but superior and more eminent nor are the Maxims thereof alwayes of force in this as in others As in the case of Dower Copercenars and Tenancie by the courtesie No more ought they to be in this case of inheritance as by the former eight Presidents hath been shewed The Common Lawyers then refer this point of the Crown to Custom nothing being in effect written by them touching it Only the best of our old ones favored that title of Lancaster and Chancelor Fortescue and Sir Tho. Thorope chief Baron of the Exchequer in Henry 6. his time were much afflicted for it by the contrary faction The Princes of York often Attainted The Princes of York forfeited their Right by their Conspiracies and Attainder thereupon as R. Earle of Cambridge put to death therefore by the Judgment of his Peers his elder brother the Duke of York being one of the Jury that condemned him His son Richard Duke of York was also attainted of treason after many oaths to Henry 6. sworn and broken by him and his son Ed. 4. with the rest of his off-spring to the ninth degree at a Parlament at Coventry Anno 1459. But the House of Lancaster was never attainted of any such crime The Hous of York came to the Crown by Violence and Crueltie Edward 4. entred by violence wilfully murthering besides divers of the Nobilitie Henry 6. a good and holy King and his son Prince Edward dispossessing the Hous that had held the Crown about 60 years together in which time their Title had been confirmed by many Parlaments Oaths Approbations and publick Acts of the Common-wealth and the consent of all forreign Nations All which had been enough to have autorized a bad Title Those of Lancaster better Princes than those of York The 4 Henries of the hous of Lancaster were far more worthie Princes then the 4 Princes of the Houses of York as Edw. 4. Rich. 3. Hen. 8. Edw. 6. And if the affairs of any the former especially the 3d succeeded not the chief caus thereof was the sedition rebellion and troubles raised by those of York and their contention against the Princes of the Houses of Lancaster The Cruelty of the Princes of York one to the other The Princes of York have not been onely cruel to their enemies but to themselvs too embrewing their hands in their own blood Then when they had ruined th'other George Duke of Clarence conspired against Edw. 4. his own brother with whom reconciled Edw. caused him afterwards to bee murthered at Calis Rich. 3. murthered his two young Nephews and Henry 8. a great number of that Hous as Edmund de la Poole his Cousin German Henry Duke of Buckingham his great Ant 's son extinguishing that and ruining this familie Also Henry Courtney Marquis of Exceter his own Cousin german the Ladie Margaret Countess of Salisbury and daughter to George D. of Clarence and her son the L. Montague c. The kindness of the Princes of Lancaster But the Love Union Confidence Faithfulness Kindeness and Loialtie of the Princes of Lancaster towards th'other was very notable as in the 2 brothers of Henry 4 and the 3 brothers of Henry 5. and in five or six Dukes of Somerset their near Cosens which argueth both a marvellous confidence those Princes had in that quarrel and a great blessing of God unto the whole familie that agree'd so well The Successes of such noble Houses as followed either partie Another blessing seemeth to bee bestowed on them That no antient great Houses are remaining at this day in England but such as chiefly took their parts as Arundel Oxford Northumberland Westmerland and Shrewsbury whereas the chief partakers of the other Faction are all destroied as Mowbray Duke of Norfolk De la Poole Duke of Suffolk th' Earl of Salisbury th' Earl of Warwick and many others CAP. III. Examination of the Title of the Hous of Scotland Sect. 28. Allegations for the K. of Scots 1. THat hee is descended of the eldest daughter of Henry 7. without bastardie or other lawful impediment and therefore hath the right of prioritie 2. The benefit would accrew unto the Common-wealth by the uniting of England and Scotland a point long sought for 3. The establishing of true Religion in England Hee is not of the Hous of Lancaster but rather of York Hee is not descended truly of the Hous of Lancaster becaus not of the Ladie Blanch the true heir thereof but of Kathathine Swinford whose children were unlawfully begotten though afterwards legitimated by Parlament so that his best Title is by York inferior to that of Lancaster and therefore is to com in after them of that Hous Forrein birth not just impediment in Succession to the Crown of England Hee is Forrein born and therefore excluded by the Laws of England from inheriting within the land Answ 1. This Assertion in an universal sens is fals for a stranger may purchase and inherit by the right of his wife 7 9 Edw. 4. 11 14 Henrie 7. 2. The Statute of 25 Edw. 3. is to bee restrained unto proper inheritance onely viz. That no person born out of the Allegiance of England whose father and mother were not of the same Allegiance at the time of his birth shall not demand inheritance within the same Allegiance 3. This Statute toucheth not the Crown nor any except express mention bee made thereof 4. The Crown cannot properly bee called an inheritance of Allegiance or within Allegiance beeing held immediately from God 5. The Statute meaneth inheritance by descent onely but the Crown is a thing incorporate and therefore goeth as by Succession Now if a Prior Dean c. or other head incorparate though an alien may inherit or demand Lands in England notwithstanding the Statute much more may the Inheritor to the Crown 6. Express exception is made in the Statues of Enfants du Roi which word cannot but include all the King's off-spring and blood-Roial 7. King Stephen and Henry 2. born out of the Realm and of parents that were not of the Allegiance of England when they were born were yet admitted to the Crown without contradiction which argueth that by the cours of the Common Law there was no such stop against Aliens and that if the Statute would have abridged the antient libertie in this case of Succession it would have made special mention there which it doth not The King of Scots excluded by the last Will of Henry 8. Henry 8. his Will whereby he excludeth the off-spring of Margaret S. 4. Which though somwhat infringed by the testimony of two
bastard-brother to the prejudice of his his lawful Edmond and Aldred This Egbert left a son named Elthelwolfe or Adelwulfe or Edolf who succeeded him and had four sons Ethelbald Ethelbert Ethelred and Alfred who were all Kings one after another and for the most part most excellent Princes specially Alfred the last of all whose acts bee wonderful Hee left a son as famous as himself which was Edward the elder who dying left two lawful sons Edmond and Aldred and one illegitimate named Adelstan which being esteemed to bee of more valor then the other two was preferred to the Crown before them and was a Prince of worthie memorie Hee brought England into one perfit Monarchie having expelled utterly the Danes and quieted the Welchmen Conquered Scotland and brought their K. Constantine to do him homage Restored also Luys d'Outremer his nephew to the kingdom of France Aldred to the prejudice of his Nephews Edwin and Edgar This Adelstan dying without issue his lawful brother Edmond was admitted who left two sons Edwin and Edgar but for that they were yong they were put back and their Uncle Aldred preferred who reigned with the good will and prais of all men Edgar to the prejudice of his elder brother Edwin Aldred dying without issue his elder Nephew Edwin was admitted to the Crown but yet four years after hee was deposed again for his leud and vitious life and his younger brother Edgar admitted in his place who was one of the rarest Princes that the world had in his time Stow saith hee kept 3600 ships in this Realm Canutus Dane to the prejudice of Edmond and Edward Englishmen This Edgar had by his first Wife Egilfred Edward called the Martyr and by his second Alfred Etheldred Which Alfred to the end that her Son might Reign caused Edward to be slain and so Etheldred came to the Crown though with much contradiction moved in hatred specially of the murther of his Brother This Etheldred was driven out of this Kingdom by Sweno King of the Danes who possessed the Realm and dying left a Son Canutus with whom Etheldred returning after the death of Sweno made an Agreement and Division of the Realm And so died leaving his eldest * Son Edmund Iron-side to succeed him who soon after dying also left two Sons Edmund and Edward but the whole Realm to Canutus who pretended it to be his by a Covenant made between Iron-side and him That the longest liver should have all and so with the Realm took the two Children and sent them over into Swethland And was admitted not only by the consent of the Realm but allowed also by the Sea of Rome And he lived and proved an excellent good King and after twenty years Reign died much mourned by the Englishmen Harald Bastard preferred to his lawful Brother Hardicanutus This Canutus left a base Son named Harald and a lawful one named Hardicanutus But Harald was by the more part of Voices chosen before his lawful Brother Hardicanutus preferred before his neerer in Blood After the death of Harald Hardicarnutus was chosen without any respect either to Edward the Confessor Alured Sons to Etheldred that were in Normandy or to Edmond and Edward Sons to his Son Iron-side that were in Sweathland though in proximitie of Blood they were before him Alured and Edward the Confessor before Edmond and Edward their eldest Brother's Sons But this Hardicanutus dying without issue Alured second son to Etheldred by his second Wife against the priority both of his Brother and his Nephews that were in Swethland was called to be King but being murthered by the way by Goodwin the Earl of Kent his elder brother Edward the Confessor was admitted yet before Edmond and Edward sons to his elder brother Iron-side And the said Edward the Confessor was a most excellent Prince and Reigned in Peace almost twenty years Harald 2. to the prejudice of Edgar Edward being dead without issue The States made a great Consultation whom they should make King and first of all excluded him that was only next by Propinquitie of blood which was Edgar eldest son to Edward the Out-law son to Edmond Iron-side because he was a Child not able to Govern the Realm And Harald son to the Earle Goodwin by the Daughter of Canutus was admitted William Duke of Normandie his Title by Election But William Duke of Normandie pretended to be chosen before by * Edward the Confessor with the consent of the Realm which though no English Authors do avow it cleerly seemeth notwithstanding very probable Because the said William had at his Entrance many in England that did favor his pretence and that as Gerard saith At his coming to London he punished divers by name for that they had broken their Oaths and Promises in that behalf Moreover by alleging his Title of Election he moved divers Princes abroad to favor him in that action as in a just quarrel which it is not like they should have done if he had pretended only a Conquest or his Title of Consanguinity which could be of no importance in the world Among others Pope Alexander 2. whose Holiness was greatly esteemed in those dayes did send him his Benediction and a precious Ring of Gold with a Hallowed Banner St. Anthoninus Archbishop of Florence commended his enterprise But howsoever he got the Victory and God prospered his Pretence and hath confirmed his off-spring in the Crown more than these Five hundred years Examples after the Conquest William Rufus and Henry 1. to the prejudice of their elder brother Robert William the Conqueror left three sons Robert William and Henry and by his Will the Kingdom to William named Rufus forsom particular displeasure against his elder son who being at his fathers death absent in the war of Jerusalem was put back although the most part of the Realm was inclined unto him and William Rufus by the persuasion of Lanfrake Archbishop of Canterbury was established in the Crown And hee dying without issue his younger brother Henry against the right also of his elder brother Robert absent again in the war of Jerusalem did by fair promises to the people and the help of Henry Newborow Earl of Warwick and Maurice Bishop of London get the Crown wherein God did so prosper him that his said brother Robert coming afterwards to depose him of it hee took him prisoner and kept the Crown King Stephen preferred to Henry 2. his nearer in blood and Henry again to Stephen his issue This King Henry left a daughter which had of Jeffrey Plantagenet Duke of Anera a son named Henry whom Henry his Grandfather caused to bee declared Heir apparent in his daies But yet after his deceas becaus Prince Henry was but a childe the State of England did choos Stephen Earl of Boulongue and son to Adela the Conqueror's daughter putting back both Henry and his Mother But again for that
his minion to put away his wife a goodly young Ladie daughter of Isabell his father's sister and to marrie another openly to her disgrace And in the last evil Parlament hee made would needs have all absolute autoritie granted to 6 or 7 his favorites to determine of all matters Grieved with these exorbitant indignities the more or better part of the Realm called home by their Letters Henry 4. deposed Richard 2. by Act of Parlament by his own confession of unworthie Government and his voluntarie resignation of the Crown to the said Henry by publick instrument All this without blood-shed And in almost all this Edmund L. D. of York the head of that familie together with Edward Duke of Aumale his eldest son and Richard Earle of Cambridge his yonger the Grand-father of Edward 4. assisted the said Henry That Henry 4. had more right to Succeed unto Richard 2. than Edmond Mortimer heir of Clarence much more any other King Richard 2. deposed the question is Whether Edmond Mortimer then alive his Father Roger being slain in Ireland a little before Nephew removed of Lionel Duke of Clarence or Henry Duke of Lancaster son of John of Gant should have Succeeded in right For Henry is alleged his being neerer to the former King by two degrees and proximitie of Blood though not of the elder Line is to be or hath been preferred in these cases 2. His Title came by a Man the others by a Woman not so much favored by Law nor Reason 3. The said Edmond being offered the Crown by Richard Earle of Cambridge who had married his Sister Anne and other Noblemen at Southampton he judged it against equitie discovered the Treason to Henry the fifth by whose command those Noblemen were executed 1415. Thirty years after which Richard Duke of York son of the aforesaid Earle and Anne for Edmond her brother died without issue set his Title on foot And whereas Roger Mortimer Father of this Edmond was declared Heir apparent by a Parlament 1382 that was done by Richard 2. from the hatred he bore to John of Gant and his son Henry rather than for the goodness of the others Title the cause whereof was Because immediately after the death of the Black Prince divers learned and wise men held opinion That John of Gant eldest son of Edward 3. then living should rather succeed than Richard jure Propinquitatis This made the old King Edward 3. confirm the Succession to Richard 2. by Parlament and the Oaths of his Uncles and made the yong King Richard 2. hold first and his son in jealousie and hatred ever after as distrusting the likelihoods of their Title Declaration of the Heir Apparent in the Princes life being Partial no sure president Partial establishing of Succession by Parlament is no extraordinary thing with Princes which yet most commonly have been to little purpose So did Richard 3. cause John de la Pole Earle of Lincoln and Son to his sister Elisabeth Dutchess of Suffolk to be declared Heir apparent thereby excluding his Brother Edward's four Daughters c. So did Henry 8. prefer the issue of his yonger sister before that of his elder So did Edward 6. declare the Lady Jane Gray his cozen Germain removed to be his Heir and Successor excluding his own two sisters Such say they was the aforesaid Declaration of Roger Mortimer by Richard 2. to as little purpose as from little equity Uncle preferred before the Nephew divers times Contra Sect. 83. That John of Gant should have in right succeeded his father rather than Richard himself as neerer to his father is proved by the course of divers Kingdoms where the Uncle was preferred before the Nephew 1. In Naples much about the same time Robert before Charles the son of Martel his elder Brother 2. In Spain Don Sancho Bravo before the Children of Prince Don Alonso de la Cerda from whom the House of Medina Celi is discended by sentence of Don Alonso the wise and of all the Realm and Nobility Anno 1276. 3. In the Earldom of Arthois Mande before Robert son to her Brother Philip by sentence of Philip le Bel of France confirmed by the Parlament of Paris and by his Successor Philippes de Valois whom he the said Robert had much assisted in the recovery of France from the English 4. In Britanie John Breno Earle of Montfort before Jane Countess of Bloys Daughter and Heir of Guy his elder brother by sentence of Edward 3. and the State of England who put him in possession of that Dukedom 5. In Scotland where albeit Edward 1. of England gave sentence for John Baliol Nephew to the elder Daughter excluding thereby Robert Bruse son to the yonger yet that sentence was held to be unjust in Scotland and the Crown restored to Robert Bruse his son whose posterity holds it to this day 6. The like whereof in Naples Lewis Prince of Taranto son to Philip prevailed before Joan the Neece of Robert aforesaid who was Philip's elder brother though Philip died before Robert because he was a man and a degree neerer to his Grand-father than Joan. 7. And in England it self Henry 1. preferred before William son and Heir of Robert of Normandie his elder brother And King John preferred before Arthur D. of Britanie the son and Heir of his elder brother Geoffrey because he was neerer to Richard his brother then dead than was Arthur Which Right of his the English inclined still to acknowledge and admit and thereupon proclaimed him King notwithstanding that the French and other Forrein Princes of stomach opposed themselves against it King John rightfully preferred before his Brother Arthur Against this last King Richard when he was to go to the Holy Land caused his Nephew Arthur to be declared Heir apparent to the Crown thereby shewing his Title to be the better Answ 1. It was not by Act of Parlament of England for Richard was in Normandie when he made it 2. Richard did it rather to repress the amhitious Humor of John in his absence 3. This Declaration was never admitted in England but renounced by consent of the Nobility in his absence 4. Richard himself at his return disadvowed it appointing John to be his Successor by his last Will and caused the Nobles to swear Fealtie unto him as to his next in blood The Opinion of Civil Lawyers touching the Right of the Uncle and Nephew Contra Sect. 83. This Controversie divided all the Lawyers in Christendom Baldus Oldratus Panormitanus c. for the Nephew Bartolus Alexander Decius Alciatus Cujatius c. for the Uncle Baldus himself at length concludeth That seeing rigor of Law runneth only with the Uncle being properly neerest in blood by one degree and that only indulgence and custom permitteth the Nephew to represent his Father's place whensoëver the Uncle is born before the Nephew and his elder brother dieth before his Father as in the case of John of Gant and Richard 2. he may be
hee who represented her person was to bee preferred before her For the Duchess of Bragança and against the point of Representation Shee was born and bred in Portugal Philip and Parma were forrein 2. Shee was nearer by a degree unto Emanuel and Henry the Cardinal then the Duke of Parma 3. Against the representation urged by Parma that no representation was admitten in the Succession to the Crown of Portugal but that every pretender was to bee taken and preferred according to the Prerogatives onely of his Person as the next in propinquitie of blood or the man before the woman and the elder before the younger if they bee in equal degree of propinquitie to the former Kings Touching Representations Contra Sect. 40. The last King Sebastian entred the Crown by way of Representation not by propinquitie of blood the Cardinal beeing brother and hee but Nephew unto the former King John 3. Sect. 82. Answ. Hee was of the right descendant line of K. John 3. and the Cardinal but of the Collateral and all Law alloweth the right line to bee served and preferred before the Collateral bee admitted This was the caus of his coming to the Crown and not representation Allegations of King Philip's right to Portugal Seeing then that Representation was not admitted but every Pretendor considered in his own person onely Sect. 82. King Philip beeing in equal degree of propinquitie of blood with the Duchesses alleged hee was to bee preferred before them both becaus a man and born before them 2. The inheritance of Portugal besides that it belonged to the Crown of Castile of old evidently belonged to John King of Castile by the marriage of Beatrix daughter and heir of Ferdinand King of Portugal after whose death it was conferred by election of the People on John M. of Avis bastard-brother of the foresaid Ferdinand by him the said Beatrix and her posteritie wrongfully debarred and excluded King Philip his own carver in Spain When these contentions were at the hottest died the K. Cardinal before he could decide them Whereupon the K. of Spain taking his right to bee best and becaus a Monarch and under no temporal Judg thinking hee was not bound to attend any other or further judgment in the matter but might by force put himself in possession of his own as hee took it if otherwise hee might not have it hee entered upon Portugal by force of Arms and at this day holdeth it peaceably The end of the controversie An Objection in behalf of Representation in the Succession of England Representation taketh place in England So as the children of the son though women shall ever bee preferred before those of the daughter though men Therefore seeing the Ladie Philippes right to the Dukedom of Lancaster and Crown of England mentioned Sect. 70 72 c. is to bee preferred according to the Laws of England onely it followeth that the right of Succession pretended by the Princes of Portugal from the said Ladie Philippe should bee determined onely by the Laws of England which admit of Representation Answer to the former Objection The question is not here by what Law this pretence by Portugal to the Crown of England is to bee tried but rather who is the true and next heir of John of Portugal and the Ladie Philippe heir of Lancaster which once known it little importeth by what Law hee pretendeth his right unto England whether of Portugal or England though to determine this first and chief point of the Succession of Portugal the Laws of Portugal must needs bee the onely Judges and not those of England CAP. X. Whether it bee better to live under a Forrein or a Home-born Prince a great Monarch or a little King Against Forrein-Government the opinion of Law-makers ARistotle in all the different Forms of Common-wealths which hee prescribeth in his 8 books of Politicks ever presupposeth that the Government shall bee by people of the self-same Nation the same also do presume all the Law-makers therein mentioned as Minos Solon Lycurgus Numa Pompilius and the rest Of Orators and Writerr Demosthenes his famous invectives against Philip of Macedonia that desired to encroach upon the State of Greece and his Orations against Eschines who was thought secretly to favor the pretences of the said forrein Princes The books of the Italians when they speak of their former subjection to the Lombardes Germanes French and their present to the Spaniard The late writings of the French against the power of the hous of Guise and Lorrain whom they hold for strangers Of Nations by their Proceedings and Designs The desperate and bloodie executions of divers Nations to th' end they might rid themselvs from stranger's dominion are arguments of the very impression of nature herself in this matter for examples whereof see Q. Curtius lib. 5. 6. And the Sicilians who at one Evensong-tide slew all the French within their Iland whom themselvs had called and invited thither not long before And the English who murthered all the Danes at one time and would have don as much for the Normans if themselvs had been strong enough or the advers partie less vigilant And the French in the time of Charles the 7. when nothing could repress them from revolting every where against the English Government of which at length by hook and crook they wholly free'd themselvs Of Holy Scripture The autoritie of holy Scriptures is evident in this behalf Deut. 17. 16. Thou shalt make them King over thee whom the LORD thy GOD shall choos out of the number of thy brethren thou mai'st not set a stranger over thee which is not of thy brethren In the behalf of Forrein Government This hatred of Stranger's Government is but a vulgar aversion of passionate or foolish men Passionate by corruption of nature whereby men are inclined to think evil of others especially their Governors and the more the farther they are from us in kindred or acquaintance foolish as those that weigh not the true reasons causes or effects of things but onely the outward shew and popular apprehension grounded for the most part in the imagination or incitation of others who endeavor onely to procure tumults It importeth not what Countrimam the Prince bee so his Goverement bee good All passion against stranger or unto others laid aside wee are onely to respect the fruits of good and profitable Government the peace and proprietie of the Subject which what Prince bee hee native or forreign soëver procureth us is fittest for ours or any other Government for after a Prince is established the common subject hath no more conversation with him nor receiveth further personal benefits of him than of a meer stranger Then if hee govern ill what is the Subject the better by his beeing Home-born Home-born Princes and Tyrants As in the like case the children of Israël said of Rehoboam Quae nobis pars in David vel quae haereditas in filio Jesse 3 King 12. 16.