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A55555 A treatise of the antiquity, authority, vses and jurisdiction of the ancient Courts of Leet, or view of franck-pledge and of subordination of government derived from the institution of Moses, the first legislator and the first imitation of him in this island of Great Britaine, by King Alfred and continued ever since : together with additions and alterations of the moderne lawes and statutes inquirable at those courts, untill this present yeare, 1641 : with a large explication of the old oath of allegeance annexed. Powell, Robert, fl. 1636-1652. 1641 (1641) Wing P3066; ESTC R40659 102,251 241

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every private person The end of all warre should be peace bellum geritur ut pax acquir atur 1 It is just cause of warre when publike negotiation and commerce is interrupted or disturbed and for recoverie of things wrongfully and by force taken fiom us by forraigne enemies 2 Or if any shall goe about to usurp upon the Kings right of dominion in any of his kingdoms It is just cause of warre After that David by Gods direction went up to Hebron and was anointed king over the house of Iudah upon the death of Saul he maintained a long warre against Ishbosheth the sonne of Saul for usurping the kingdome of Israel 2 Sam. 2. The revenge of an injurie or disgrace dispitefully done either to a Prince or to his Embassadors is likewise a good cause of warre when Naash the king of the children of Ammon dyed and Hanun his sonne succeeded in his stead David sent messengers to comfort him upon the death of his father their entertainment was not suitable to their errand Hanun by the advice of his Princes tooke Davids servants and shaved them and cut off their garments in the midst a natibus us●● ad pedes and so sent them away For this great disgrace and abuse the text faith grandem contumeliam sustinuerunt David did justly wage battell against the king of the Ammonites Chro. 1.19 He did the like against Sheba the sonne of Bochri a man of Belial for blowing a Trumpet and solliciting the men of Israel to revolt from David to him Samuell 2. chapter 20. ●●●y other particulars might be here instanced Next how farre the preeminence of a king as to life and member is to be consid●red Life and member considerable by the common and statute lawes specially by the common and Stature lawes of this kingdome by the common and positive lawes of England The subjects are bound by their legeance to go with the king and by the Commandement of the king in his wars aswell within the Realme as without and this doth copiously appeare by severall statutes which seeme to bee but declarative of the common law as 1 Ed. 3. cap. 7. which mentions the conveyance of souldiers into Scotland Gasconie or elsewhere 18. Hen. 6. cap. 19. which maketh it felonie If any Souldier retained to serve the King in his wars doth not goe with or doe depart from his Captaine without licence the preamble of the Statute tels us that the Souldier so doing did as much as in them was decay the honour and reverence of the king And by the Statute of 7. Hen. 7. cap. 1. Forasmuch as the offence of departing or not going did stretch to the hurt and jeopardie of the king the nobles of the Realme and all the Common weale thereof therefore he or they so offending should not injoy the benefit of Clergie By the Statute 11. Hen. 7. cap. 1. It is expressed that the subjects of this Realme are by reason of their allegeance bound to serve the Prince from the time being in his wars for the defence of him and the land against every rebellion power and might reard against him either within the land or without and this statute together with some others were adjudged Trin. 43. Eliza. to be perpetuall acts and not transitorie for the kings time only wherein they were made As peace is the true end of warre so peace must be preserved that warre may be avoided In the times of peace there must bee preparations for warre by causing musters and martiall meetings to be assembled at times convenient And therein the Lievtenants their Deputies of each severall Countie with Muster-masters and other subalterne officers have a speciall interest of imployment and therefore provision was made 4. 5. P. M. for the better ordering of Musters Captaines and souldiers In the time of peace the common and municipall law of this kingdome provides for suppressing of all rebellions insurrections and rietous assemblies To which end the king commits the custodie of each countie to an officer very ancient with us called a Sheriffe who for the service of the king and peace of the countrey hath power to raise the power of his countie And every subject is bound to attend him as the kings deputie in causes of publike service warranted by the lawes and this officer is to dwell in his proper person within his Baylywicke that he may the more readily attend the kings service The second point is terrene honour Terrene honour what it is and herein I must walke warily passibus aquis First must be determined what is meant by terrene honour Some would have it to be the outward worship and ceremoniall honour that wee can doe in this world to the king next to the service of God If that were only intended by these words it were but a shadow in regard of substance for in devoting our life and blood is comprehended the highest pitch and streyne of honour that might be Our Saviour Christ his words Matth. 6.25 Is not life more worth than meate and the body than raiment will fully satisfie us that the life of man is above all worldly riches and honours and therefore something else must be conceived out of these words more than a shadow or ceremonie By the first commandement of the second table in the subdivision of the persons to whom honor is due there is in the opinion of many Divines a kind of particular honor or esteem to be ascribed to a man who is more wealthy than his neighbour in regard of the talent of terrene riches wherewith God hath endowed him and thereby enabled him to supply the King and the common weal by rendring his respective dues and duties unto them in a larger proportion than other persons who are inferiour in their worldly meanes Dat census honores Then sithence all riches wealth and substance are called terrene quiae terris terrenis accrescant because they proceed and have their being out of earth and earthly things and are the causes of particular honour and esteem and of distinguishing the degrees of men as husbandmen Yeomen Gentlemen Esquires and the like and also of cradesmen both of Merchandize and manufacture according to the customes of this Kingdome It will follow by good consequence that as the King is to bee honoured and obeyed with life and member so with earthly substance according to the demension thereof and the degree of each mans earthly honour Saint Paul in the generall cleares this point of prerogative jure divino Romans 13. Omnis anima potestatibus sublimieribus subdita sit c. Let every soule bee subject to the higher power For there is no power but of God verse 2. whosoever therefore resisteth the power resisteth the ordinance of God And the Apostle pursues it with Ideo necessitate subditi estote c. verse 5. Wherefore yee must needes bee subject not only for wrath but also for conscience sake Verse 6. For this cause pay
and without limit from this day forward 2 The terminus a quo you every subject whom the Law injoynes to take this oath 3 The qualities or properties required that is to be true and faithfull 4 Terminus ad quem to whom To our Soveraigne Lord the King and his heires 5 In what manner And faith and truth shall beare of life and member That is as in Calvins case untill the letting out of the last drop of our dearest heart blood And I must adde what is there omitted And terrene honour That is the uttermost of our estate and livelihood 6 The circumstance of place where these duties of Legeance concerning our lives and estate ought to be performed it must bee in all plaees whatsoever without any circumscription for you shall neither know nor heare of any ill or dammage c. that you shall not defend The parts of this oath for the better instruction of the common people I shall summe up in this one proposition which I will presume briefly and succinctly to handle Every subject must be true and faithfull to the King and his heires to the uttermost of his life and fortune or estate 1 The King hath a double capacitie in him one a naturall bodie being descended of the blood Royall of the Realme which is subject to death infirmitie and such like 2 The other is a politike bodie or capacitie so called because it is established by the policie of man and in this capacitie the King is esteemed to be immortall invisible not subject to death infirmitie infancie non-age c. This Legeance is due to the naturall person of the King which is ever accompanied with the politike capacitie that is the Crowne and Kingdome And is not due to the politike capacitie only distinct from his naturall as by divers reasons in Calvins case is at large recited and resolved For if that distinction might take place then would the faith legeance and obedience of every subject due to his Soveraigne be appropriated regimini non regenti to the government of a Kingdome not to him that ruleth or governeth In the time of Edward the second at a Parliament holden at Yorke Hugh la Spencer the sonne being nominated and appointed to serve the King in the office of Chamberlein did draw unto his adherence Hugh Spencer his father and they both usurping upon the Kings Royall power and compassing about to have the sole government of the land to themselves did traiterously contrive a declaratorie writing which they would have compelled the King to signe purporting amongst other mischievous positions That homage and oath of Legeance was more by reason of the Kings crown that is his politike capacitie than by reason of the person of the King whence they inferred these damnable and detestable consequents 1 If the King did not demsne himselfe by reason in the right of his Crowne his leiges were bound by oath to remove him 2 That sithence the King could not be reformed by suite of Law that ought to be done per aspertee by asperitie of Compulsion 3 That his leiges be bound to governe in aide of him and in default of him All which execrable opinions were condemned by two Acts of Parliament one in the 14. yeare of the raigne of the same king Edward the second called Exilinm Hugonis le Despensor patris fili● the other An. 1. Ed. 3. cap. 1. which confirmed the banishment of these Spensers Legeance then by law of nature before any judiciall or municipall lawes were recorded or reported is due to the sacred person of the king alone immediately and without any intervallum or moment of time and before the solemnitie of his Coronation and so must remain to him and his heires and entirely without any partnership with him or any intermission in default of him emnimode by all wayes and meanes It is due to his naturall person accompanied with his politike capacitis indistinctly without any partition or separation and this oath is a politicall confirmation of that Legeance It is due to him as he is mixta persona anointed by the hand of the priest as he is supreme head under Christ in all causes and ove● all persons aswell Ecclesiasticall as Civill The qualities prescribed by this oath are naturally incident to Legeance veritie and fidelitie to be true and faithfull and they comp●ehend what before is spoken of faith obedience and subjection faith unto his person obedience to his lawes Subjection to his government or all to all faith subjection and obedience to his person laws and government By the ancient lawes of this Realm this kingdome of England is an absolute Empire and Monarchie consisting of one head which is the king and of a bodie politike which is the common wealth compact and compounded of many and almost infinite severall members all which the law divideth into severall parts the Clergie and the Laietie this Legeance requires a due observancie of all the Morall lawes contained in both Tables of the Decalogue To obey our king in the true and sincere worship of God according to the canonicall discipline of the Church ratified by his regall authoritie To obey him in abandoning all apostasie from Christianitie heresies schisms factions fond and fantastike opinions repugnant to the Orthodox doctrin of the Church To obey him in acknowledging a supremacie in him and a subordinate superiority in his Ministers and Magistrates over his people To obey him in all the rights of distributive and commutative justice in doing good as works of mercy charitie and pietie and eschewing evill that is all sorts of felonies fraud force deceit and all offences whatsoever which derogate from or deprave the peace and government of the Realm The performance of these duties makes a true and faithfull subject The latitude and extent of this veritie and fidelitie from the subject to the Soveraign is twofold The extent this oath first of life and member secondly of terrene honour wherein the prerogative of the king is considerable generally according to the speciall law of nature called by some jus Gentium and stiled by our common law lex rationis the law of reason and more specially according to the municipall lawes and customes of this kingdome The King is pater patria and every subject is bound by the law of nature to hazzard and adventure both life and member for the safetie of the King and Countrey either against privie and traiterous conspiracies civill mutinies and dissentions or hostile Invasions or injust warres or in the execution of legall acts of justice The Poet could say Dulci est pro patria mori a sweet thing it is to die for our Countrey and as sweet a thing it is to die pro patre patria for the father of our Countrey for indeed both come to one There may bee many causes of warre which when they are discussed and resolved by the King and State the justnesse of them is not to be disputed by
in the multitude of counsellors there is safetic Prov. 11.14 Every purpose is established by counsell and with good advice make warre Prov. 30.18 Moses had Iethro and Aaron Ioshua the sonne of Nun his successor Caleb and Eleazar the high priest for his privie counsellors David had his succession of counsellors Samuell the prophet Ionathan whose love to him was wonderfull Abiathar the priest and Nathan also a prophet with many others To return to our owne nation king Ine had his Cinredus whom hee calls his father Hedda and Erkenwald his bishops with many others Alfred had his Plegmund Archbishop of Canterbury Werefridus Bishop of Worcester and others Athelstane edicted his lawes Ex prudenti Vlfhelmae Archiepiscopi aliorumque Episcoporum consilio by the counsell of his Archb. and other Bishops and so successively the kings of England ever had as before their privie counsell such and so many as the prince shall think good who doe consult daily or when neede is of the weighty matters of the Realme to give therein to their prince the best advice they can The prince doth participate to them all or so many of them as he shall thinke fit such legations and messages as come from forraigne princes such letters or occurrents as be sent to himselfe or his secretaries every Counsellor hath a particular oath of faith and secrecy administred to him before hee bee admitted a privie counsellor To shew the extraordinary regard and royall use of the kings counsell The regard ● the Privie counsell Let us looke backe upon the case of 5. Hen. 4. upon an agreement for an exchange had for the Castle of Barwick between the king and the Earl of Northumberland wherein the king promised to deliver the Earle lands and tenements to the value of that Castle by these words per avise assent des estates de son Realme son Parliament c. By the advice and assent of the estates of his Realm So as the Parliament be before the feast of S. Luke or otherwise by the assent of his great Counsell and other estates of his Realme whom the king shall assemble before the said Feast in case there be no parliament before c. as by the instrument thereof dated at Lichfield 27. Aug. 5. Hen. 4. remaining in the Tower may appeare To this counsell the Oracles of the Common law the grave and reverend Judges Leges loquentes Reipublicae God grant in all Successions they may be so have had their resort from time to time in all ages for advice and directions in their proceedings aswell in criminall causes as in matters of right and propertie as it was observed by the learned Lord Chancellor I will touch but two which are cited by that honourable Judge in cases of propertie Thomas Vghtred Knight brought a Forme-don against a poore man and his wife They came and yeelded to the demandant which seemed suspicious to the Court the matter being examined judgement was stayed because it was suspicious And Thorp said that in like case of Giles Blacket it was spoken of in Parliament And faith he wee were commanded that when any like case should come we should not goe to judgement without good advice wherefore sue to the councell and as they will have ●s to doe we will and otherwise not in this case 2. Greene and Thorpe were sent by the Judges to the Kings Councell where there were twentie foure Bishops and Earls to demand their advice touching the amendment of a writ upon the Statute of 14. Ed. 3. cap. 6. which was an Act made for amending of Records defective by misprision of Clerks By the advice and assent of this Councell is that great and common Councel solemnly called The forme of the writ of Summons to the Sheriffe followeth in these words Rex viz. S. c. Quia sie avisamento assensu Concilii nostri pro quibusdam arduis urgentibus negotiis nos Statum defensionem Regni nostri Angliae Ecclesiae Anglicanae concernentibus quoddam Parliamentum nostrum apud Civitatem nostram W. c. teneri ordinavimus Et ibidem cum praelatis Magnatibus et Proceribus dicti Regni nostri colloquium habere et tractare Tibi c. wherein these things are worthy observation 1 That this great Court is assembled by the power of the King expressed in his writ under his great Seale with Teste meipso 2 This power is extended with the advice and assent of his Right Honourable privie councell His grace favour and providence by calling a Parliament to parlee and treat with his Lords spirituall and temporall as also with his commons who by their Knights Citizens and Burgesses as their respective proxies elected by and with the popular suffrage of the Freemen of every Countie Citie Towne or Borough do make up the body of that great court and doe there meet to yeeld and consent unto such matters as shall be there treated and established 4 The subject of a treatie or parliament That is certaine difficult and urgent occasions concerning his Majestie his royall state and the defence of his kingdome and Church This high court consisteth of two honses The higher or upper where the King and his Barony or Nobilitie spirituall and temporal do take their place And the lower house where the Knights Citizens and Burgesses are assembled for the Commons consisting when M. Crompton wrote his jurisdiction of Courts of 439. persons The King had the only power to appoint it his gracious favour is to give life and beginning to it by his owne personall accesse in most Royall state And as sinis coronal opus hee crowneth and perfecteth all the Acts of this great assembly with his Royall assent without which no bill can passe nor law be made Though there bee no written Acts of parliament extant before the raigne of Henry the third yet some have sollicitously laboured to draw the Antiquitie of this thrice excellent court of Parliament from King Arthurs time to king Ine Offa Ethelred Alfred and others before the Conquer our with a successorie continuance untill this Present age and collected and inferred that the words used by K. Inas in the proem of his laws exhortatione c. Omnium Aldermannorum mcor'um seniorum sapientum Regni mei And the like words of Offa and other kings in the time of the heptarchie and that the words of Conventus sapientum used by King Edward the sonne of Alfred the words of Conventus omnium Nobilinm sapientum used by King Athelftane cum consilio sapientum used by king Edgar Haec instituerunt Rex sapientes mentioned of King Ethelred and the like of other Kings should include the Lords and Commons of the parliament whether this most eminent Court were in those ancient dayes assembled and exercized in that manner as now it is dubium est dubitare liceat doubtfullnesse is a fluctuation of the minde which in historicall matters of indifferencie that concerne
with men learned and Nobly borne He sate himselfe daily in Councell and disposed his affaires of most consequence in his owne Person His Counsellors as one saith were avessa●●es nor principalls He permitted them ability to advise not authority to resolve By this meanes keeping the lore in his owne power as fittest for Princes to doe Hee had a gracious issue of peace ever after attending the remainder of his Raigne and happily lived to traine and adaptate his son and Successor Edward the first Englands Iustinian for the future swaying of his Royall Scepter and afterwards 16. Novem. 1272. dyed his sonne and Successor being then in the holy Land and thirtie yeares of age who being partner of his Fathers experience shewed himselfe in all his actions after capable to command not the REALME onely but also the whole world This renowned King returning from the holy Warres was with Eleanor his Wife crowned at Westminster 15. Aug. 1272. And afterwards 15. Aprilis 3. Regni began his first Parliament at Westminster called West 1. And therein the King did will and command that the peace of holy Church and of the Land bee well kept and maintained in all points and that common right be done to all as well poore as rich And cap. 6. doth provide that no Citie Burrough or Towne nor any man beamerced without reasonable cause and according to the quantity of his trespasse that is to say Every Free-man saving his Free-hold a Merchant saving his Merchandize a Villaine-saving his gainure and that by their Peeres and this is but a reflexe upon the 29. Article of the Great Charter No Free-man shall be taken c. In October 25. Regni after many other Parliaments The King held a Parliament at London and did then fully grant and renew the great Charter made by his Father in the ninth yeare of his Raigne and the 37. Chapters therein contained unto the Peeres and Commons in haec verba and likewise the Charter of the Forest under his great Seale In this Parliament cap. 1. those Charters were confirmed And the King did well that the same should be sent under his Seale as well to his Iustices of the Forest as to others and to all Sheriffes of Shires and to all his other Officers and to all his Cities throughout the Realme together with his writs commanding that they cause the foresaid Charters to be published and to declare to his people that his Highnesse had confirmed them in all points And that his Iustices Sheriffes Majors and other Ministers which under him had the Lawes of the Land to guide should allow the same Charters pleaded before them in judgement in all their points S. the great Charter as the Common Law and the Charter of the Forest for the wealth of the Realme Cap. 2. All judgments given against the points of the Charters should be undon and holden for nought Cap 3. It was enacted that the same Charters should bee sent into every County under the King Seale there to remaine and should be read before the people two times by the yeare Ca. 4. The sentence of examination was to be denounced twice a yeare against the breakers of those Charters Cap. 5. It was enacted That whereas the aydes and taskes given to the King before time towards his Wart●s and other businesse of the Subj cts owne grant and good will howsoever they were made might turne to a bondage to them and their heires because they might bee another time found in the Rolles and likewise for the prices taken throughout the Realme by his Ministers That such ayde taskes or prices should not bee drawne into a Custome for any thing that had beene done before be it by Roll or any other president whatsoever that might be found Cap. 6. That from thence forth no such manner of aydes taskes nor prices should be taken by the King but by the common assent of the Realme and for the common profit thereof Ca. 7. The Commons being grieved with the Maletent of wools S. a toll of 40. s. for every sack of Wooll upon their petition the King released it And did grant for him and his heires that no such things should bee taken without their common assent and good will The whole Subject of this Parliament is stiled Mag. Char. Printed 1540. Confirmatio chartarum de libertatibus Anglia forrestae And followes the great sentene e of excommunication called sententia lata super Chartas denounced by Robert Kilwarby Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the Clergy against the violators of those Charters I find next insuing this sentence in that booke of 1540. the Statute de tallagio non concedendo that no tallage or ayde should be laid or levied by the King or his Heires without the good will and assent of the Arch-Bishops Bishops Earles Barons Knights Burgesses and other Free-men of the Communalty of the Realme Cap. 2. Nothing should be purveyed to the Kings use without the owners consent Cap. 3. Nothing from thence forth should be taken of sacks of Wooll by colour or occasion of Maletent Cap. 4. All Lawes liberties and Customes were againe confirmed and the curse of the Church to be pronounced against the breakers of this Charter This Statute hath no certaine time prefixed of its making But afterwards at a Parliament held at Westminster in Lent 28. Edw. 1. certaine Statutes were made called Articulisuper Chartas whereby the two Charters were more strictly confirmed and injoyned to be read foure times in the yeare by the Sheriffe before the people in full County and those are but explanations upon Mag. Charta The second Chapter being large and wholly made for the reliefe of the Subjects against the Kings Purveyors and Ministers for taking their goods and victualls against their wills at what price they pleased and sometimes without any price The third concerning the Marshals jurisdiction of the Kings House and other good ●n●uing Lawes and S●atures which are but Comments or Paraphiases upon that Article of Nullus liber homo c. and doe provide penalties in certaine where none were before I will wade no further into the numerous confirmations of Magna Charta It hath bin ratified since 9. of Henry third above thirtie rimes I may be bold to say it is the Grammar of the fundamentall Lawes of the Land By which all other Lawes are to be construed It is the lydius lapis of the Law It is the syse and Standard by which all our Nationall Lawes must be assayed and tryed Those are the Lawes which the Kings of England at their Coronations have sworne to maintaine and to execute Iustice to the people according to the Lawes and thereby to protect their subjects No Acts of Parliament are so wisely contrived and interwoven with reason and judgment but some sonnes of Beliall will arte vel ingenio strive and compasse to elude and subvert them At the Parliament in the third yeare of his now blessed Majesties Raigne an humble remonstrance