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A59082 An historical and political discourse of the laws & government of England from the first times to the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth : with a vindication of the ancient way of parliaments in England : collected from some manuscript notes of John Selden, Esq. / by Nathaniel Bacon ..., Esquire. Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. 1689 (1689) Wing S2428; ESTC R16514 502,501 422

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Author reciting another example of his justice against another of his Justices for putting one to death without president rendreth the Kings reason for that the King and his Commissioners ought to determine such cases excepting those Lords in whose precinct the Kings Writ passeth not CHAP. XXX Of Francheses of the Person FRancheses of the Person are such Liberties annexed unto the Person as are not absolute Lordships but only tending thereto and limited within a Precinct but not annexed thereto and these are matters of profit rather than power as those of Bury St. Edmonds Doncaster Dorchester Circester all which were in the Saxon times and these or some of them had juridical power in cases of Felonies and Robberies arising within that Precinct so as the Delinquent was both Inhabitant and taken within the same this was called Infangtheoff and if upon fresh pursuit made by the right owner or possessor the Delinquent was taken with the prey in his possession or as the old Dialect is Handhaben Backhearend Then was he carried immediately before the Coroner of that Liberty and the Sakeber or party wronged made his proof by Witnesses and thereupon judgement forthwith passed without answer and execution immediately ensued Some Liberties had Outfangtheoff that is the trial and forfeiture of such Delinquents being no Inhabitants and yet taken within the Liberty or Inhabitants and not taken within the Liberties but this Trial was always by Jury The Antiquity of these Liberties are not obscurely manifested in their names and more clearly by the Saxon Laws and Acts for it 's observed of Alfred that he seized a Franches of Infangtheoff because the Lord of that Franches would not send a Felon taken within his Liberty for a Felony committed without the same to the Goale of the County as he ought to have done Other Liberties there were granted also by Charter a tast whereof may be seen in one Grant made by King Edgar to the Monastery of Glastenbury wherein was granted Sack Hamsockne Friderbrece Forstel Teme Flemone Ferdre Hundred Setene Sock Tholl Adae Horda Bufan Orderan Bene Orderan the particular natures of each may be observed in the Glossaries all of them being allowed to the Crown by the Law and by the advice of the Council of Lords granted over to these Grantees in nature of Deputies to the King to possess both the power and profit thereto belonging CHAP. XXXI Of Manors NEvertheless most of these Liberties if not all of them were many times granted by Kings as appendant to Manors which were Francheses of smaller circuit being at the first portions of ground granted to some particular persons and by them subdivided and granted over to particular persons to hold of the Grantors by Rents Services and suit to one Court all being no other than the spoils of War and rewards of valour or other service These in their collective nature are called a Manor and by continuance of time become a kind of body politick In Antiquity it is called Mansum from the Mansion-house although it is not of the Essence of a Manor nor ought the words of Bracton to be construed according to the literal sense for the house may be destroyed and yet the Manor continue and the ground was granted in tenure before any house built thereupon The quantity of the ground thus given to hold by Service was according to the pleasure of the Lord more or less and therefore might extend into divers Parishes as on the other part one Town might comprehend divers Manors The Estate that was granted depended partly on the condition of the Grantee for some were servi or Bond-men and their Estate was altogether at the will of the Lord as was also the benefit but the servants merit and the Lords benignity concurring with some Conscience of Religion as the light grew more clear abated the rigour of the tenure into that which we now call Copy-hold Other Estates were made to the Free men which in the first times were only for years albeit therein they were not niggardly for they sticked not at Leases for a hundred years yet with a render of Rent which in those days was of Corn or other Victual and thence the Leases so made were called Feormes or Farmes which word signifieth Victuals But times ensuing turned the Victual into Money and terms of years to terms of lite and inheritance retaining the Rents and those called Quit-rents or the Rents of those persons that are acquitted or free But in case of estates of inheritance for the most part after the death of the Tenants were reserved Heriots or a relief which were not left to the will of the Lord but was put in certainty in the very letter of the Law for according to each mans degree such was his Relief or Heriot But over and above all they reserved special service to be done by the person of the Tenant or some other by his procurement of which those that were their servi or villains were at the will of the Lord others had their particular service set down in their grants These concerned either War or Peace the former was afterwards called the service of the Knight or Souldier the latter the service of the Husbandman or Plough That of the Souldier was the more honourable and suitable to the old German trade Pigrum iners videtur sudore acquirere quod possis sanguine parare and the work was to defend the Kingdom the Lords person and Honour and to this end he was ever to have his weapons in readiness which gave name to the service and altered as times and customs changed This service by custom from a work degenerated into the bare Title and became a dignity and the men named or rather intituled Milites and many of the Saxon Charters were attested by men bearing that Title yet the service itself was far more ancient and called servicium loricae of which sort also were the Custodes pagani that wore a Helmet a coat of Mail and a guilt Sword not unlike the old German way of calling forth of their Tirones to the war. Of this rank some were more eminent than others for some bare the single title of Knight and it seemed served on foot others served on horseback and were called Rad knights or Knights-riders as Bracton noteth and these I take to be the Vavasours noted in the Conquerours Laws for that their relief is a Helmet a Coat of Mail a Shield a Sphear and a horse Now for the maintaining of this service they had Lands and Tenements called Knights-Fees which bound the owner to that service into whose hands soever they came to be done either by the person of the owner or other fit person by him procured and therefore were discharged from the payment of all Taxes and Tollage which was the Law of the Goths of old and remains in Sweden at this day
are to be ordered by Tutors than Children and therefore this may be annexed to the rest of the Liberties as well as the other Nevertheless it seemeth that the Laws took them into their regard in respect of their Estates which might be abused to the prejudice of the Publick rather than out of any respect had to their persons Now because there is a difference between the disability of these persons the one being perpetual the other temporary therefore is there also by these Laws a difference in the disposal of their Estates for the Tutor had a right in the disposing of the one and but a bare authority or power in providing for the other Secondly the person of the Tutor is to be considered Anciently it was the next kindred grounded as I conceive upon the natural affection going along with the blood and this so continued in custom until these times for though the Mirrour of Justice saith that Henry the First brought in that course of giving the custody of these disabled persons to the King as hath been formerly observed yet Bracton that wrote long after the time of Henry the First speaking of these kind of persons saith Talibus de necessitate dandus est tutor vel curator not so much as mentioning the King in the case And in another place speaking of such as are alieni juris saith that some are under the custody of their Lords and others under their Parents and friends But let the time of the entrance of this Law be never so uncertain it is now a declared Law that the King in such cases is the common Curator or Tutor of all such persons as he is a Chief Justice rendring to every one his right The King shall have the Wrecks of the Sea. What shall be called a Wreck the Statute at West 1. declareth viz. Where the Ship so perisheth that nothing therein escapeth alive and these are rather in their original committed to the King as a Curator than given him as a Proprietor although that Custom hath since setled a kind of right which may perhaps be accounted rather a Title by Estoppel For the fundamental ground is that the right owner cannot be manifested and therefore the King shall hold it and if the right owner can be manifested the King shall hold it till the owner doth appear The Heir in Socage-tenure shall have an Action of Waste and an account against his Guardian for the profits of the Lands and Marriage The Heir in Socage being under age shall also be under custody of such Guardian of the next kinred who cannot challenge right of Inheritance in such Lands so holden as if the Lands descended from the Father's side the Mother or next of the kinred of the Mothers side shall have the custody and so if the Lands descend from the Mother the Father or next kinred of the Father's side shall have the custody And this custody bringeth with it an Authority or Power onely and no Right as in case of the Heir in Knight-service and therefore cannot be granted over as the Wardship in Knight-service might but the Guardian in Socage remaineth accomptant to the Heir for all profits both of Land and Marriage The full age of Tenant in Socage is such age wherein he is able to do that service which is Fourteen years for at such age he may be able by common repute to aid in Tillage of the ground which is his proper service But the Son of a Burgess hath no set time of full Age but at such time as he can tell Money and measure Cloath and such work as concerns that calling Widows deforced of their Dower of Quarentine shall by Action recover damages till they recover their Dower They shall also have power to devise their crop arising from her Dower It was used that the Heir should have the crop with the Land but this Statute altered that former usage and yet saved the Lord's liberty to distrain if any services were due Writs de consimili casu granted in cases that fall under the same Law and need the same remedy and such Writs shall be made by agreement of the Clerks in the Chancery and advice of such as are skilful in the Law. It was none of the meanest Liberties of the Freemen of England that no Writs did issue forth against them but such as were anciently in use and agreed upon in Parliament And it was no less a grievance and just cause of complaint that Kings used to send Writs of new impression to execute the dictates of their own wills and not of the Laws of the Kingdom as the complaints of the Clergy in the times of Henry the Third do witness Nevertheless because many mens cases befel not directly within the Letter of any Law for remedy and yet were very burthensome for want of remedy it is provided by this Law that such emergent cases that do fall within the inconvenience shall be comprehended within the remedy of that Law. Aid to make the Son of the Lord a Knight and to marry his eldest Daughter shall be assessed after the rate of twenty shillings for a Knights Fee and twenty shillings for twenty pounds in yearly value of Socage-tenure The uncertainties of Aids are by this Law reduced and setled as touching the sum and thereby delivered the people from much oppression which they suffered formerly Nor was onely the particular sum hereby but also the age of the Son when he was to be made a Knight viz. at the age of Fifteen years too soon for him to perform Knight-service but not too soon for the Lord to get his money And the Daughter likewise was allowed to be fit for Marriage at Seven years of age or at least to give her consent thereto albeit that in truth she was neither fit for the one or other and therefore it must be the Lords gain that made the Law and it was not amiss to have the aid beforehand though the marriage succeeded not for many years after and if the Lord died in the interim the Executors having Assets paid it or otherwise his Heir CHAP. LXVIII Of Courts and their Proceedings BEsides the Courts of Justices itinerant which were ancient as hath been said other Courts have been raised of later birth albeit even they also have been of ancient constitutions and divers of them itinerant also and some of them setled in one place The work of the Justices itinerant was universal comprehending both the matters of the Crown and Common-pleas That of Oyer and Terminer is onely of Crown-pleas originally commenced and enquired of by themselves and granted forth upon emergent crimes of important consequence that require speedy regard and reformation Justices of Gaol-delivery have a more large work that is to deliver the Gaols of all criminal offenders formerly indicted or before themselves Justices of Assize and Nisi prius are to have cognizance of Common-pleas onely and
and imprisoned Before this Law this crime was but finable unless the fact was committed upon a Virgin for then the member was lost And this was the Saxons Law but the Normans inflicted the loss of the member upon all Delinquents in any Rape Nor was this made Felony by any Law or Custom that I can finde till about these days It is true that Canutus punished it capitis aestimatione by way of compensation which rather gives a rule of damages to the party wronged than importeth a punishment inflicted for an offence done against the Crown as if it were thereby made capital But for the more certainty of the penalty another Law provideth that if the Rape be committed without the Womans consent subsequent she may have an Appeal of Rape And though a consent be subsequent yet the Delinquent upon indictment found shall suffer death as in the case of Appeal But if a Wife be carried away with the goods of her Husband besides Action of the party the King shall have a fine If the Wife elopeth she shall lose her Dower if she be not reconciled before her Husband's death All which now-recited Provisoes are comprehended together in one Chapter and yet the Chapter is partee per fess French and Latine So far thereof as concerneth death was written in French being the most known Language to the great men in general many of whom were French by reason of the interest that Henry the Third had with France in his late Wars against the Barons It was therefore published by way of Caveat that no person that understood French might plead ignorance of the Law that concerned their lives The residue of that Chapter was written in Latine as all the other Laws of that Parliament were upon grounds formerly in this discourse noted One Proviso more remaineth which is also comprehended in the same Chapter with the former viz. Any person that shall carry away a Nun from her house shall suffer imprisonment for three years and render damages to the house This crime was formerly onely inwombed in the Canon-Law and now born and brought forth into the condition of a Statute-Law rather to vindicate the right of the Freemen than in any respect had to the Clergie who had been very bold with the liberty of the Freemen in this matter For Archbishop Peckham not a year before the making of this Law for this offence had excommunicated Sir Osborn Gifford nor could he get absolution but upon his Penance First he was disciplin'd with rods three times once in the open Church at Wilton then in the Market-place at Shaftsbury and lastly in the publick Church there Then he must fast divers moneths Lastly he must be disrobed of all Military habiliments viz. Guilt Spurs Sword Saddle golden Trappings and to use no brave garments but russet with Lamb and Sheep-skins to use no Shirit nor take up his Order again until he had spent three years Pilgrimage in the Holy Land and unto this Penance the Knight by Oath bound himself A strange power and to repress which it was time for the people to look about them and rather to punish Delinquents themselves than to leave it to the will of such men as never had enough Concealment or neglect of apprehending of Felons punished by Fine and Imprisonment In those ancient times pursuits of Felons with Hue and Cry were made by Lords of Manors Bailiffs of Liberties Sheriffs and Coroners whereas now they are made by Constables See more in the Chapter of Peace Escapes also were punished with Fine and Imprisonment and in some places the Lord had the Fine in other places the Sheriff and in some cases the King yet in no case was any Fine assessed or taken till the Trial before the Justices Persons defamed for Felony not submitting to Trial by Law shall be committed to close and hard Imprisonment It hath been accounted an extream construction of this Law and questionless so it is that this Law should warrant that punishment of pressing to death which hath been of later times more constantly used than former times ever knew of for though it be granted that some trick of torture was sometimes used even before the Normans times and so might now and then leave some few examples after the Norman times yet did the Law never patronize such courses especially if the death of the party suspected ensued thereupon but accounted it Manslaughter And the end of this Law was not to put a man to death but to urge him to confess and so Briton saith Such as will not submit to Trial shall be put to Penance till he shall pray to be admitted thereunto and therefore the Penance then used was such as did not necessarily infer death nor was it a final Judgement in the Trial but onely a means thereto and therefore it might rather consist in denial of conveniencies than inflicting of pain Now in what cases it was used may be understood from the manner of the Indictments in those days whereof besides Appeals by the party some were of particular fact done others onely of a Fame and it may be conceived that the course in the second was that if a man would not submit but would stand mute he was put to this kind of Imprisonment for the discovering Law was by Henry the Third taken away But if the Delinquent was positively accused of a Felony and thereupon indicted by a witness of the Fact and then if the Delinquent would not submit to his Trial by Law in such case the final Judgement was to die Onere fame c. because in the one was a Fact affirmed against him by a Witness and in the other onely a Fame or suspicion which is not pregnant against the life of a man. But this manner of Indictment being now laid aside and all proceedings being upon a Fact affirmed against the party I conceive this Law of no use at all in these days Bail shall not be allowed to Outlaws fore-jured Thieves taken in the act notorious Thieves appealed persons burners of Houses breakers of Prison false Coyners counterfeiters of the Broad-seal prisoners upon excommunication open Malefactors and Traitors against the King. The six first are in nature of persons attainted either upon their own confession or such manifest Evidence as in common reason cannot be gainsaid all which were before this Law under bail yea the last of all although the most heinous of all was in the same condition As touching breakers of Prison in these times it was Felony for what cause soever they were committed and therefore their imprisonment was without bail for whoso makes no Conscience of breaking the Prison his credit will little avail Yet it must be acknowledged that the Law imprisoned few without bail in those foregoing times but in case of Felony or Execution but afterward the cases of commitment being ordinary even in matters of mean process and because mens credits
with certain select persons in every County did administer Justice in several Iters or Circuits so when Kings had once gotten the name of being chief in civil affairs as they had it in martial they soon left the Lords behind them who also were willing enough with their own case and had the name of doing all notwithstanding it was done by advice of the Lords and directory of Ministers or Commissioners thereto deputed And thus that Peace which formerly passed under the Titles of Pax Domini pax Vicecomitis which is pax Regni became by eminency swallowed up in that which was called the Kings Peace and the Justices called the Kings Justices and himself flattered into that Title of Fountain of Justice which belongeth onely to him that is The Most High or Chief Law-giver The manner how this honourable care of the Safety and Peace of the Kingdom was employed may be referred to a double consideration the one in execution of Justice upon Delinquents the other in preventing occasions of offence or delinquency by means whereof the publick Peace might be endangered The first was acted diversly according to the present sence of affairs for what was at first done by the Princes in their Circuits with one hundred of the Commons called Comites and that done per pagos vicosque was afterwards done by itinerant Judges sent from the King for the greatest matters and by Lords in their Leets Governours or chief Magistrates of Towns in their Courts and Sheriffs in their Torns as Judices stati for the ease of the people in matters of less moment I say I conceive it was in the Torn for I suppose no emergent Court taken up upon occasion could by the Law draw a necessity of a sudden appearance of all above twelve years of age at the same And for the same cause it seemeth that one certain Torn every year was holden for inquiries of Homicide unto which all above twelve years of age were to come except Barons Clergie and Women or otherwise all such had been bound to attendance on every Torn Nevertheless the work of the Torns continued not to hear and determine as anciently they had done For in Henry the third's time and formerly divers men had Prisons to their own use some as Palatines others as Lords of Franchise and others by power and usurpation and had the benefit of all Fines incident and by this means many were fined that deserved it not and some also that deserved worse To prevent which evil Henry the third took away that power of holding Crown-pleas And Edward the first took away their power to determine Escapes and left them onely the power of inquiry and to certifie at the next coming of the Justices But these injurious times had holden too long to be forgotten or laid aside by such cool pursuit Men were still ordinarily imprisoned and so continued oftentimes till the coming of the Justices itinerant For whereas in case of Bloudshed the Writ de odio atia was a remedy the other had no remedy but by procuring a Commission of Oyer and Terminer which ordinarily was a cure worse than the hurt As a remedy hereof Edward the first found out the new way of making Justices of Peace as may appear by the Statute at Winton which Law being purposely made for the conserving of the Peace providing for penalty of Crimes already committed as well as for the suppressing of future ordaineth That offences against that Law shall be presented to Justices assigned to enquire thereof and though these at the first might be itinerant yet it soon made way to resiant And before that Statute it seemeth the King had found out the way if that Note be true which is left revived into memory by that honourable Reporter which relating to the sixth year of Edward the first saith That then prima fuit institutio justiciariorum pro pace conservanda And yet some semblance there is that it was yet more ancient even in the time of Henry the first if I mistake not the sence of that clause in his Laws concerning Vagabonds he ordereth that they shall be carried Justiciae quae praeest although the Language be not so Clerkly as to speak the sence out Now though their Work as yet was but in tryal and they were onely trusted with power of inquiry yet it induced a new way wherein the Sheriff was not so much as intrusted to intermeddle and which not onely intermitted the course of his proceedings in such matters but also led the way to the dispoiling of the Sheriff's Torn and Lord's Leet of that little remainder that was left them of Judicatory power in matters that were against the Peace and made their Inquisitory power less regardful and eased the Justices itinerant of much of their Work in regard they were speedily to certifie up to the King and so these matters should be determined in Parliament according as those Justices were elected in Parliament who as it seems were jealous of giving the power of determining those offences into any sudden hand To sum up then the first part as touching the punishment of offences against the Peace the wheel is now in the turning the Leets and Torns begin to be slighted the labour of the Justices itinerant lessened the Commissions of Oyer and Terminer disused by the bringing in of a new Order of Justices for the Peace especially appointed and the Parliament as the supreme Providers left as the reserve for the asserting and maintenance of the same albeit that under it the power of determining much rested upon Justices or Judges that attended the King's Court after that the Common-pleas were setled and confined to a certain place The preserving of the Peace for the future consisted in preventing and suppressing Riots Routs unlawful Assemblies and in apprehending and securing of such as were actors and contrivers of such designes and other Malefactors And herein we are to consider 1. The Laws 2. The Means 3. The executive power Concerning the first there is no question to be made but that the power of making Laws for the maintenance of the Peace rested in the Parliament although endeavour possibly might be used to settle the same in the sole order of the King 's own person and therefore we find not onely the assize of Arms but generally the substance of the Statute at Winton to be formerly taken up by Proclamation by Kings predecessors to Edward the second who first that I can find put the same into force of a Law by Parliament finding by experience that Proclamations may declare the King's Mind but not command the Peoples Wills although peradventure the thing enjoyned was of ancient use and little inferiour to Custom or Common Law. Such are the Distempers of Civil Broils that bring up Peace in the rear as a reserve when their own strength is wasted rather than out of any natural inclination thereto A brief
to take Arms from the King with their pay or otherwise they must fight without Weapons I am now come to the last general point which concerneth the executive power of matters concerning the peace within this Law touching which the Statute enforceth this That Constables in every Hundred and Franchise shall have the view of Arms and shall present defaults against the Statute of Justices assigned who shall certifie the same to the King in every Parliament and the King shall provide remedy Whereby it seemeth manifest that hitherto no Law or Custom was made against any for default of Arms but onely such as held by that Tenure and therefore they had a shift to cause them to swear to maintain Arms and so might proceed upon defaults as in case of perjury and that the Parliament was still loth to set any certain rule for penalty and absolutely declined it and left it under a general periculo incumbente which it is likely men would rather eschew by obedience than adventure upon out of a daring spirit unless their case was very clear within the mercy of common reason And therefore such cases were left to special order of the Parliament rather than they would deliver such a rod as determining power was over into any uncertain hand whatever It is very true that by the opinion of some this also hath been controverted as if all the executive power had been turned out of the Parliaments Order into the directory of Edward the First which thing reacheth far for then in order thereunto the whole Militia of the Kingdom must have been under his safe command And whether it ever entred into the conceit of that King I know not but somewhat like thereunto is not obscurely urged to nourish and suggest such a kind of notion and so derive it unto his Successors upon the words of a Statute de defensione portandi armorum the English whereof I shall render out of the French as followeth It belongeth to Vs viz. Edw. 1. and from Vs by Our Royal Seigniory to defend force of Arms and all other force against Our peace at all times that We shall please and to punish according to the Laws and Vsages of this Realm such as shall oppose and to this they viz. Lords and Commons are bound Vs to aid as their good Lord always when need shall be Two things are concurrant with this which is the body of the Statute if such it be The one is the Preface or the occasion And the second is the conclusion upon the whole body of the same The preface first sets down the inscription or direction of the Law not to the people but to the Justices of his Bench and so it is in nature of a Writ or Declaration sent unto his Judges Then it sets down the occasion which was a debate between Edw. 1. and his Lords with a Treaty which was had before certain persons deputed thereto and it was accorded that at the next Parliament Order shall be taken by common consent of the King the Prelates Earls and Barons that in all Parliaments Treaties and other Assemblies which shall be had in the Kingdom of England for ever after all men shall come thereto without force and without arms well and peaceably and thence it recites that the said meeting at Parliament was had and that there the Prelates Earls Barons and Commonalty being assembled to advise upon this matter nous eiont dit saith one Copy and no●● eions dit saith another Copy so as whether this was the Declaration of the King unto the Parliament or of the Parliament to the King is one doubt and a principal one it is in such a case as this Then the conclusion of all is that the King commandeth these things shall be read before the Justices in the Bench and there enrolled and this is dated the 30th of October in the Seventh year of his Reign which was Ann. 1279. So as if it were the Declaration of the King then it implieth as if it were not very well accepted of the Parliament and therefore the King would have it rest upon Record in nature of a Claim or Protestando for saving the Prerogative of the Crown But if it were the Declaration of the Parliament the King held it so precious a flower that fearing it should fade set it in a private Garden of his own that it might be more carefully nursed against the blast of Time as if the Parliament had not assented thereto or if they did meaned not to hold it forth to the world for future times to be a constant rule but onely by way of concession to ease themselves of the present difficulty in making a Law against wearing of Armour in ordinary civil affairs and so referred it to the King's care to provide against emergent breach of the peace as an expedient for the present inconveniences in affairs And it will well suit with the posture of affairs then in course for the Welsh-Wars were now intermitted and a quiet of three years ensued in the midst of which Souldiers having liberty to do nothing and that is next to naught but recreate themselves used their wonted guise as if they were not dressed that day that they were not armed nor fit for counsel unless as their Ancestors with Weapons in their hands nor worthy of the presence of a King under other notion than as a General in the field and themselves as Commanders that are never A-la-mode but when all in Iron and Steel I say to make a Law that must suddenly bind men from riding or being armed when no man thought himself safe otherwise was in effect to expose their bare necks to the next turn of the Sword of a King that they did not over-much trust and the less in regard he trusted not them I do not wonder therefore if the Parliament liked not the work but left it to the King to provide for the keeping off breaches of the Peace and promised their assistance therein Lastly supposing all that is or can be supposed viz. that the Parliament had given up the power of the Militia unto Edward the First yet it was not to all intents nor did it continue for besides the Statute of Tornaments which sheweth plainly that the ordering of Armour was in the power of the Parliament and which in all probability was made after that Law last before-mentioned the Statute at Winton made after this Law nigh six years space ordereth the use of the Trained bands in maintaining the peace and reserveth the penalties to themselves for any default committed against the said Act. And therefore notwithstanding any thing that yet appeareth to me out of any Law or History the chief Moderatorship of War and Peace within the Realm of England resteth hitherto upon the Parliament next unto God and in the King no otherwise than in order to the Publick the rule whereof can be determined by no other Judge than that which can be
Legiance of the Subject This is the strength as nigh as I can collect of that which is set down as a sixth reason but I make it the fourth because the third as I conceive is but an illustration of the second and the fifth is upon a supposal of a Fides ficta whereas that Faith of an English Subject which is according to Law is the truer of the twain But to the substance of this fourth reason If the first be granted yet the Reporter cannot attain his conclusion for the King may in his Natural Capacity have right to the Crown by Inheritance and yet not right in the Legiance of his Subjects otherwise than in the right of the Crown As in the case of Lord and Tenant the Lord may inherit the Lordship in his Natural Capacity but the service is due to him as Lord and not as by Inheritance in the service in the abstract And though it be granted that the Legiance to a King is of a higher strain than that of a Tenant to his Lord fol. 4. b. 5. a. yet doth the Reporter bring nothing to light to prove them to be of a different Nature in this regard The fifth and last reason that cometh to consideration is from a Testimony of the Parliament for it is said That this damnable Tenet of Legiance to the King in his Politick Capacity is condemned by two Parliaments But in truth I can find but one under that Title that mentioneth this Opinion and that is called Exilium Hugonis which is sum is nothing else but Articles containing an enumeration of the particular offences of the two Spencers against the State and the Sentence thereupon The offences are For compassing to draw the King by Rigour to Govern according to their Wills for withdrawing him from hearkning to the advice of his Lords for hindring of Justice and Oppression and as a means hereunto they caused a Bill or Schedule to be published containing That Homage and Legiance is due to the King rather in relation to the Crown than absolutely to his Person because no Legiance is due to him before the Crown be vested upon him That if the King do not Govern according to Law the Lieges in such case are bound by their Oath to the Crown to remove him either by Law or Rigour This is the substance of the Charge and upon this exhibited in the Lords House the Lords super totam materiam banish them before their Case is heard or themselves had made many appearance thereto So as to the matter of this Schedule which contains an Opinion suitable to the point in hand with some additional aggravations the Parliament determineth nothing at all but as to the publishing of the same to the intent to gather a party whereby they did get power to act other enormities mentioned in the Charge And in relation to those enormities the Lords proceeded to sentence of Banishment all which was done in the presence of the King and by his disconsent as may appear by his discontent thereat as all Historians of those Affairs witness And it is not probable that the King would have been discontented with the proceedings of the Lords in asserting the Prerogative of a King in that manner of the Schedule if he had perceived any such thing in their purposes Add hereunto that the Lords themselves justified the matter of the Schedule in their own proceedings all which tended to enforce the King to govern according to their Counsels and otherwise than suited with his good pleasure By force they removed Gaveston from the King's presence formerly and afterward the Spencers in the same manner So they removed the King from his Throne and not long after out of the World. Last of all I shall make use of one or two Concessions which hath passed the Reporter's own Pen in this discourse of his for the maintaining that the Legiance of an Englishman is Neither Natural nor Absolute nor Indefinite nor due to the Natural Capacity but qualified according unto Rules The first is this Englishmen do owe to their Kings Legiance according to their Laws therefore it is not Natural or Absolute or Indefinite The inference is necessary for the latter is boundless and Natural the former is limited and by civil Constitution If any breach therefore of English Legiance be bounded by Law then the Legiance of an English man is circumscribed and not Absolute or Natural The major proposition is granted by the Reporter who saith that the Municipal Laws of the Kingdom have prescribed the order and form of Legal Legiance fol. 5. b. And therefore if by the Common Law the Service of the King's Tenant as of his Mannor be limited how can that consist with the absolute Legiance formerly spoken of which bindeth the Tenant being the King 's Subject to an Absolute and Indefinite Service Or if the Statute-Laws have setled a Rule according to which each Subject ought to go to War in the King's service beyond the Sea as the Reporter granteth fol. 7. 8. then cannot the Legiance be absolute to bind the Subject to go to War according to the Kings own pleasure Secondly An English King's protection of his Subjects is not Natural Absolute Indefinite nor Originally extendeth unto them in their Natural Capacity therefore is not the Legiance of an English Subject to his King Natural Absolute Indefinite nor Originally extendeth to the King in his Natural Capacity The dependence of these two resteth upon the Reporters own words who tells us that Protectio trahit Subjectionem Subjectio Protectionem Protection draws with it Subjection and Subjection draws with it Protection so as they are Relata and do prove mutually one anothers Nature fol. 5. a. And in the same Page a few lines preceding he shews why this Bond between King and Subject is called Legiance because there is a reciprocal and double Bond for as the Subject is bound in Obedience to the King so is the King bound to the Subject in protection But the King is not Naturally bound to protect the people because this Bond begins not at his Birth but when the Crown settles upon him Thirdly This Protection is not absolute because the King must maintain the Laws fol. 5. a. and the Laws do not protect absolutely any man that is a breaker of the Laws Fourthly This protection is not Indefinite because it can extend no further than his power and his power no further than his Dominions fol. 9. b. The like also may be instanced in continuance of time Lastly The King's protection extendeth not originally to the Natural Capacity but to the politick Capacity therefore till a Foraigner cometh within the King's Legiance he cometh not within his protection And the usual words of a Writ of Protection shews that the party protected must be in Obsequio nostro fol. 8. a. The sum then is that as protection of an English King so neither is Legiance or Subjection of an Englishman Natural Absolute
Womanhood 138. Coverture 139 Custos Regni a formality of State under the Parliaments Order 79. many times conferred upon Children 80. and upon a Woman 148. D. DElegates though named by the King yet by Authority of the Parliament 133 Defender of the Faith 122 Dispensations Licenses and Faculties never in the Crown but by the Parliament givent to the Archbishop under limitations 137 139 Duels ordered by the Marshal as subservient to the Common Law 63. E. EDward the Third his Reign 2. his Title upon Entry by Election ibid. Edward the Fourth his Reign though had Title of Inheritance yet entred by Election 106 Edward the Fifth approached the Crown by Inheritance but never put it on 108 Edward the Sixth his Reign his Title and Possession did meet though he was a Child and his Sister Mary grown in age 152 Ecclesiastical power vide Prelacy and Prelates Elizabeth Queen her Reign 155. her Title by Election 163 Englishire taken away 56 Episcopacy vide Prelates and Prelacy Errors vide Heresie Exchange ordered by the Statute 38 Excommunication 159. the Writ de excommunicato capiendo ordered 169. vide Parliament exportation 38. F. FAlse News punished 66 Felony by riding in armed Troops 56 66 101 150 174 First-fruits regulated 90. taken away from Rome 130 Forcible entries 101 Forts Fortifications and Castles ordered by Parliament 147 171. G. GOal-delivery by the Judges of the Benches 54 97. vide Judges Goals regulated 67 149 Guard for the Kings Person brought in by Henry the Seventh 113 Gypsies made Felons 174 H. HEnry the Fourth his Reign doubtful in his Title but rested upon Election chosen by Parliament sitting when there was no King 68 c. Henry the Fifth his Reign his Title by an Intail by the Parliament 70 c. Henry the Sixth his Reign his Title by the Intail last mentioned though a Child he is admitted to the Crown 72 c. Henry the Seventh first setled a constant Guard his sixfold Right to the Crown and his gaining Prerogative in the persons and Estates of the people ibid. 113 c. Henry the Eighth his natural endowments 116 c. his power in the matters Ecclesiastical 120 c. in Temporals 125 c. Heresie and Errour in Doctrine under the cognizance of the Civil Magistrate 36 92. not punishable by death by Law till Henry the eighths time 126 138. the Writ De Heretico comburendo hath no legal ground in any of those former Times 67 93 95 126 138 Honours vide Parliament Hospitals visited by the Pelacy 90. I. IMportation 42 Judges of Assizes 97 142 Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical not originally in the Prelacy nor absolutely 137 Justices of the Peace their residency and quality their number various their work also 62 99. one Justice 63. and the setling of their Session ibid. their power to take Bail 149. K. KIngs vide Parliament Allegiance Supremacy Militia L. LAbourers their Work and Wages 42. ordered by the Justices of the Peace 63 Lancaster the Princes of that House friends to the Clergie in policy 86 Laws made by the Successors of Henry the Eighth during their minority annulled 69. Ecclesiastical Laws vide Parliament Lieges by Birth though not born within the Allegiance of England 57 Liveries and Tokens inhibited to the Lords 64 103. and limited in the Kings person ibid. means of jealousie between the King and his people 143 Libels in the Spiritual Court to be delivered in Copies upon demand 90 Licenses vide Dispensations Lords their power and jurisdiction in the Parliament 14. in Council 17 142 Lunacy no impediment in Trial of Treason 151. M. MAry Queen her Reign 153. her Title by Election 164. she prejudiced her Supremacy by Marriage 163 Marque and Reprisal 122 Martials Court 62 Matrimonial Causes after the Reformation by Henry the Eight in the Cognizance of the Clerge by leave 139 Militia 58 102 143 122. vide War. Mint 44 84. vide Parliament Monasteries dissolved 117. maintained by Henry the Fourth 86 Money out of England to Rome stopped 32. N. NAvy Royal as Forts for the publick safety maintained at the publick charge 148 Nisi prius 98 Non-residency 139 Noble Ladies Trial 101. O. OYer Terminer 54 98 Ordinary not to be questioned in the Civil Courts for things under Ecclesiastical jurisdiction 28 29. hath cognizance of Vsury 28. of Avoidances Bigamy and Bastardy 29. grant Administration 30. visit Hospitals and call Executors to account 90. hath power to fine and imprison 91 141. to keep Courts but the Authority doubtful 137. have Cognizance of the Heresie 91 138. Matrimony Non-residence ibid. In Queen Elizabeth's time their jurisdiction left in doubt 168 c. Oath ex Officio first brought in by the Church-men in matters Ecclesiastical 92. afterwards by the Parliament into the Star-chamber in cases criminal 142. P. PArdon of Crimes not absolutely in the King 11 Parliament without the King consisting of three States 69. without the Clergie 34 Parliaments power in ordering of the Crown 75 133 162. In ordering the King's person by Protectors 9. vide Protector In ordering their Children In ordering their Family 10 75. In ordering their Revenues 10 75 68. In ordering their Council 83 In the Militia vide Militia and War. In conferring places of Honour and Trust 11 23 In ordering the Mint vide Mint In making Ecclesiastical Laws Concerning Church-Government 131 c. 121 165. Concerning Doctrine 123 131 138 c. Concerning Worship 131 Concerning Church-censures 140 In granting Licenses and Dispensations 137 In final Appeals 133 In ordering it self 14 76 In Judicature 15 111 Parliament not inconstant though mutable 110 Peace Justices and their Sessions 62 c. 99 c. 148 c. 173 c. penal Laws executed to get money 108 114 Pleadings in English 57 Pope's power in England abated 33 c. vide Ordinary Supremacy Archbishop Prelacy not favoured by the Canon 140. their power since the time of Queen Mary 166. their dignity and power distinguished 28 34 Priests Wages 41 91 Praemunire and Provisors 32 34 c. 89 Proclamations made equal to Laws 125. altered 158 Protectors variety of them makes a doubtful Government 3 5 72 Purveyance regulated 31 39 R. RAvishment consented to forfeits Joynture 56 Request Court established by Cardinal Wolsey 140 Richard the Second his Reign 6. endeavours to over-rule the Parliament but failed in the conclusion 7 Richard the Third's Reign 108. his Title by Vsurpation and Murther ibid. Riots 101. S. SAnctuaries changed into fewer priviledged places 151 Servants imbezelling Felony ibid. 174 Sheriffs Courts regulated 149. Election of Sheriffs 55. Farm of the County 98. continuance in service ibid. Extortion ibid. Souldiers vide War. Staple 42 c. 111 Star-chamber 19 c. 141 Stealers of Men and Women Felony 174 Supremacy Supream Head 120. certainly not Absolute or Arbitrary power nor a Legislative power 166 c. Supream Governour 159. in causes Ecclesiastical ibid. c. in Temporal ibid. T. TEnths and First-fruits
may be said of their making of War of defence against Forrain Invasion Matters of publick and general charge also were debated and concluded in that Assembly as the payment of Tithes it is said they were granted Rege Baronibus Populo Such also as concerned the Church for so Edwin the King of Northumberland upon his marriage with a Christian Lady being importuned to renounce his Paganism answered he would so do if that his Queens Religion should be accounted more holy and honourable to God by the wise men and Princes of his Kingdom And all the Church-Laws in the Saxons time were made in the Micklemote Monasteries were by their general consent dedicated and their Possessions confirmed The City of Canterbury made the Metropolitan Matters also of private regard were there proceeded upon as not onely general grievances but perverting of Justice in case of private persons as in that Council called Synodale concilium under Beornulfus the Mercian King quaesitum est quomodo quis cum justitia sit tractat●● seu quis injuste sit spoliatus The name of which Council called Synodal mindeth me to intimate that which I have often endeavoured to find out but yet cannot viz. that there was any difference between the general Synods and the Wittagenmote unless merely in the first occasion of the summons And if there be any credit to be allowed to that book called The Mirrour of Justices it tells us that this Grand Assembly is to confer of the Government of Gods people how they may be kept from sin live in quiet and have right done them according to the Customs and Laws and more especially of wrong done by the King Queen or their Children for that the King may not by himself or Justices determine Causes wherein himself is actor And to sum up all it seemeth a Court made to rise and stoop according to occasion The manner of debate was concluded by Vote and the sum taken in the gross by noise like to the Lacedemonians who determined what was propounded clamore non calculis yet when the noise was doubtful they took the votes severally The meeting of the Saxons at this Assembly in the first times was certain viz. at the new and full Moon But Religion changing other things changed these times to the Feasts of Easter Pentecost and the Nativity at which times they used to present themselves before the King at his Court for the honour of his person and to consult and provide for the affairs of his Kingdom and at such times Kings used to make shew of themselves in their greatest pomp crowned with their Royal Crown This custom continued till the times of Henry the second who at Worcester upon the day of the Nativity offered his Crown upon the Altar and so the Ceremony ceased This grand Assembly thus constituted was holden sacred and all the Members or that had occasion therein were under the Publick faith both in going and coming unless the party were fur probatus If a Member were wronged the Delinquent payed double damages and fine to the King by a Law made by Ethelbert above a Thousand years ago This priviledge of Safe pass being thus ancient and fundamental and not by any Law taken away resteth still in force But how far it belongeth to such as are no Members and have affairs nevertheless depending on that Court I am not able to determine yet it seemeth that Priviledge outreacheth Members unless we should conceit so wide that the State did suppose that a Member might be a notorious and known Thief Lastly this Assembly though it were called the Wittagenmote or the meeting of wise men yet all that would come might be present and interpose their liking or disliking of the Proposition si displicuit sententia fremitu aspernatur si placuit frameas concutiunt And some hints I meet with that this course continued here in England for some Presidents run in magna servorum Dei frequentia and that of Ina commune concilium seniorum populorum totius Regni in another Council by him holden The Council of Winton An 855. is said to be in the presence of the great men aliorumque fidelium infinita multitudine and it will appear that it continued thus after the Norman times What power the vulgar had to controul the Vote of the wise men I find not fremitu aspernabantur it is said and probably it was a touch of the rudeness of those times for it was not from any positive Law of the Nation but a fundamental Law in Nature that wise men should make Laws and that the supream Judicature should rest in the Wittagenmote was never an honour bestowed upon it by the Saxons but an endowment from the light of Reason which can never be taken away from them by that headless conceit provoco ad populum but that Body must be as monstrous as the Anthropophagi whose heads are too nigh their belly to be wise CHAP. XXI Of the Council of Lords THis in the first condition was a meeting onely of the Lords for direction in emergent cases concerning the government and good of the Commonwealth and for the promoting of administration of Justice these the Historian calls Minora because they were to serve onely the present passions of State. Afterwards when they had gotten a King into their number they had so much the more work as might concern due correspondency between him and the people and of themselves towards both This work was not small especially in those times of the growth of Kings but much greater by the access of Prelates into their number with whom came also a glut of Church-affairs that continually increased according as the Prelates ambition swelled so as this Council might seem to rule the Church alone in those days whenas few motions that any way concerned Church-men but were resolved into the Prelatical cognizance as the minora Ecclesiae And thus under the colour of the minora Ecclesiae and the minora Reipublicae this mixt Council of Lords came by degrees to intermeddle too far in the magnalia Regni For by this means the worshipping of Images and the Mass was obtruded upon the Saxons by the Roman Bishop and his Legate and the Archbishop of Canterbury and decreed That no Temporal or Lay-person shall possess any Ecclesiastical possessions That elections of Ecclesiastical persons and Officers shall be by Bishops That the possessions of Church men shall be free from all Lay-service and Taxes And in one sum they did any thing that bound not the whole body of the Freemen In which had these Lords reflected more upon the office and less upon the person and not at all upon their private interest they doubtless had been a blessing to their Generations and a Golden Scepter in the hand of a righteous King But contrarily missing their way they became a Sword in
sentencing one to suffer death upon the Coroners record without allowing the Delinquent liberty of Traverse This Officer also was made by election of the Freeholders in their County-Court as the Sheriff was and from amongst the men of chiefest rank in the County and sworn in their presence but the Kings Writ led the work CHAP. XXIV Of the County-Court and the Sheriffs Torne THE Government of the County in times of peace consisted much in the administration of Justice which was done in the publick meetings of the Freeholders and their meetings were either in one place or in several parts of the County in each of which the Sheriff had the managing of the acts done there The meeting of the Free-men in one place was called the Folkmote by the Saxons saving the judgment of the honourable Reporter Coke Instit. 2. p. 69. and of latter times the County-Court the work wherein was partly for consultation and direction concerning the ordering of the County for the safety and peace thereof such as were redress of Grievances election of Officers prevention of dangers c. and partly it was judicial in hearing and determining the common Pleas of the County the Church-affairs and some trespasses done therein but not matters criminal for the Bishop was Judge therein together with the Sheriff and by the Canon he was not to intermeddle in matters of Blood yet neither was the Bishops nor Sheriffs work in that Court other than directory or declaratory for the Free-men were Judges of the act and the other did but edocere jura populo yet in special cases upon petition a Commission issued forth from the King to certain Judges of Oier to joyn with the others in the hearing and determining of such particular cases But in case of injustice or errour the party grieved had liberty of appeal to the Kings Justice Nor did the Common Pleas originally commence in the County-Court unless the parties dwelt in several Liberties or Hundreds in the same County and in case any mistake were in the commencing of Suits in that Court which ought not to be upon complaint the Kings Writ reduced it to its proper place and in this also the Kings own Court had no preheminence In those ancient times this County-Court was to be holden but twice a year by the constitution of King Edgar but upon urgent emergencies oftner and that either by the Kings special Writ or if the emergent occasions were sudden and important by extraordinary summons of ringing the Moot-bels Unto this Court all the Free-men of the County assembled to learn the Law to administer Justice to provide remedy for publick inconvenience and to do their fealty to the King before the Bishop and Sheriff upon Oath and in the work of administring Justice causes concerning the Church must have the precedency so as yet the Canon-Law had not gotten footing in England The other Court wherein the Sheriff had the direction was in the meeting of the Free-men in several parts of the County and this was anciently and now is called the Sheriffs Torne which simply considered is but a Hundred-Court or the Sheriffs Torne to keep the Hundred-Court It was ordered to be kept twice every year viz. at the Lady-day and Michaelmas or soon after Unto this Court all the Free-holders of the Hundred repaired and there they the Bishop and Sheriff executed the same power and work for kind that they did in the County-Court In this Court all the Suits in the Hundred-Court depending had their determination and others had their commencement and proceedings as well the Pleas of the Crown as others Some have conceived it to be a County-Court or superiour thereto but there being no ground thereof I conceive it to be no other than a Visitation of the County by parcels or in circuit CHAP. XXV Of the Division of the County into Hundreds and the Officers and Court thereto belonging COunties were too great to meet upon every occasion and every occasion too mean to put the whole County to that charge and trouble and this induced sub-divisions the first whereof is that of the Hundred now and also anciently so called but as ancient if not more is the name Pagus for the Historian tells us that the Germans in the executing of their Laws a hundred of the Free-men joyned with the chief Lord per pagos vicosque which first were called Centenarii or Hundreders from their number but used for a title of Honour like the Triarii And as a second hereunto I shall add that testimony of the Council at Berkhamsted which speaking the reduction of Suits from the Kings Court ad pagi vel loci praepositum in other places it is rendred to the Governours of the Hundred or Burrough And at this day in Germany their Country is divided into Circuits called Centen or Canton and Centengriecht and the Hundreders they call Centgraven or Hundred-chiefes whether for Government in time of peace or for command in time of War the latter whereof the word Wapentake doth not a little favour Amongst these one was per eminentiam called the Centgrave or Lord of the Hundred and thereunto elected by the Free men of that Hundred and unto whom they granted a stipend in the nature of a Rent called Hundredsettena together with the government of the same The division of the County in this manner was done by the Free-men of the County who are the sole Judges thereof if Polydores testimony may be admitted and it may seem most likely that they ruled their division at the first according to the multitude of the Inhabitants which did occasion the great inequality of the Hundreds at this day The Government of the Hundred rested at the first upon the Lord and the Hundredars but afterwards by Alfred they were found inconvenient because of the multitude and reduced to the Lord or his Bailiff and twelve of the Hundred and these twelve were to be sworn neither to condemn the Innocent nor acquit the Nocent This was the Hundred Court which by the Law was to be holden once every Month and it was a mixt Court of Common-pleas and Crown-pleas for the Saxon Laws order that in it there should be done justice to Thieves and the trial in divers cases in that Court is by Ordeale Their Common-pleas were cases of a middle nature as well concerning Ecclesiastical persons and things as secular for the greater matters were by Commission or the Kings Writ removed as I formerly observed all Free-holders were bound to present themselves hereat And no sooner did the Defendant appear but he answered the matter charged against him and judgment passed before the Court adjourned except in cases where immediate proof was not to be had albeit it was holden unreasonable in those days to hold so hasty process and therefore the Archbishop of York prefers
the Diocess of Lincoln into two Diocesses by advice of the Bishops Princes and other wise and holy men and turned the Abbey of Ely into a Bishop's See. But it was their wisdom to preserve the ancient Land-marks and no less both wisdom and care to continue their due Priviledges and Interests to each Every County had its Court and every Court its wonted Jurisdiction No complaint must be to the King's Court if right may be done in the County no distress must be taken but by Warrant from the County and that must be after complaint thrice made The County-court must be called as our Ancestors have appointed Such as will not come as they ought shall be first summoned and in case of default distrained at the fourth default the Complainant shall be satisfied out of the distresses so taken and the King also for his Fine These are the express Laws of the Conquerour's own establishment the last of which also Hen. 1. confirmed by another express Law saving that he would allow but of two Summons and two Distresses before execution And as it was one principal work that he undertook to reduce the Laws into course which had been intermitted during the violent times of his Father and Brother the first of whom never had liberty for reformation and the latter never had will so amongst other Laws he setled those concerning the County-court namely 1. That the Bishops Earls and chief men should be present for direction 2. That it should be holden once each month 3. That the Church-matters should precede and then the Crown-pleas And lastly the Common-Pleas besides some other particulars concerning pleading and proceedings in the handling of Causes Neither were these Causes of a petty regard onely but of greatest concernment One example I shall remind the Reader of and not recite in terminis but refer to Mr. Selden's own Pen. The occasion was this Odo the Conquerour's half Brother was by him made Earl of Kent and therewith had the gift of a large Territory in Kent and taking advantage of the King's displeasure at the Archbishop of Canterbury possessed himself by disseism of divers Lands and Tenements belonging to that See. Lanfrank the succeeding Archbishop being informed hereof petitioned to the King that Justice might be done him secundum legem terrae and the King sends forth his Writ to summon a County-court The Debate lasted three days before the Free men of the County of Kent in the presence of many chief men Bishops and Lords and others skilful in the Laws and the Judgment passed for the Archbishop Lanfrank upon the Votes of the Free men This County-court was holden by special summons and not by adjournment as was allowable by the Saxon Law upon special occasions And this Suit was originally begun and had its final determination in the County-court and not brought by a Tolt out of the Hundred-court as is supposed by an honourable Reporter nor by the ancient Laws could the Suit commence in the Hundred because the Lands and Tenements did lie in several Hundreds and Counties The upshot of all is that the County-courts in those days were of so great esteem that two of the greatest Peers of the Realm one a Norman the other an Italian did cast a Title in fifteen Mannors two Townships with many Liberties upon the Votes of the Free-holders in a County-court and that the Sentence was allowed and commended by the King and submitted to by all In the next place we are to come to the Hundred-courts of which there are by the Normans allowed two sorts the first whereof was holden twice a year This was formerly called the Torn and was the Sheriff's Court hereof little notice is taken saving that by the Laws of Henry the first its work seems to be much designed to the view of free pledges But the more ordinary Court is that which belongs to the Lord of the Hundred unto whom also belong the Fines in cases there concerned This Court is to be holden once in each month and no Suit to be begun in the King's Court that regularly ought to begin in the Hundred No Distringas shall issue forth till three demands made in the Hundred And three Distresses shall then issue forth and if upon the fourth the party appear not Execution shall be by sale of the Distress and the Complainant shall receive satisfaction But by the latter Laws of the same King there are but two Summons allowed and then two Distresses and in case no appearance be Execution shall be for the Complainant and for the King 's Fine Lastly as the case concerned either persons or places sometimes they used to joyn several Hundreds together into one Court but this was by special Commission or Writ As touching inferiour Courts of Towns and Mannors there 's little observation to be had being of too private a regard to come into fame in those rough times yet in Hen. the first 's Laws it is ordered that Town-courts should meet every month and that Lords should hold Pleas either in their own persons or by their Stewards and that the chief man in the Parish with four other of the chiefer sort and the Minister or Parish-Priest should joyn their assistance in that work But in nothing more did the Norman Kings shew their paternal love to the Commonwealth than in the Law of Pledges or Decenners for as of all other Beauties this suffered most blemish from the storm of the Norman Invasion so was it their especial care to renew the life thereof not now amongst the Natives onely but joyning the Normans to the Saxons in the same bond of Brotherhood utterly drowned thereby all memory of Lordly power and so of divers peoples making one conquered even Conquest it self if any were and made all joynt-partners in one common Liberty Every Free-man must be under Pledges to satisfie Justice in case of delinquency Over every nine persons under Pledges there must be one man in Authority View of free Pledges must be to see that the Decennaries be full and if any be departed to enquire the cause and if any be come in whether he be under Pledges or not And thus the Norman Kings had their people under treble guard one of Fealty the other of Association and the third that of Pledges and all little enough to secure that which they in their own Consciences might have some cause to question whether it belonged to them or not CHAP. XLIX Of the Immunities of the Saxon Free-men under the Norman Government THE freedom of an English-man consisteth in three particulars First in ownership of what he hath Secondly in voting any Law whereby that ownership is to be maintained And thirdly in having an influence upon that Judicatory power that must apply that Law. Now that the English under the Normans enjoyed all this freedom unto each Man 's own particular besides what
coming nigh unto the push of pike and the King ready for the spoil of both the Barons and Clergy suddenly close their files and like a stone-wall stood firm to each other till the King wearied with succesless labour was glad to give and take breath confirmed the Liberties of the people by his Charter which is now called the Magna Charta for substance and gave such collateral security for performance on his part as did let the World know the thing was as just as himself had been unjust The worst point in the case was that the people got their own by a kind of re disseisin a desperate remedy for a desperate condition wherein the Common-wealth then lay between life and death upon the rack of the will of a King that would be controuled by nothing but his own appetite and was in the end devoured by it CHAP. LVIII Of the state of the Nobility of England from the Conquest and during the Reign of these several Kings UNder the Title of the Nobility of England I shall comprehend all such as are of the greatest eminency for birth or wisdom and learning and advancement into place of Government and Honour These were in the Saxons times the flower of the people flourishing only from the honour that ascended from beneath their deportment then was full of chear and safety to the people after that Royalty sprung up the influence thereof upon them exhaled such a reciprocal interest back again as made them less regardful of their own root whereas we see the more mature flowers are the more propense to turn head and look downward to their own original This distemper was yet much worse by the coming in of the Normans whose Nobility besides their Titles of honour in their own Countrey obtained by custom such command and power amongst the meaner sort being Souldiers under them in time of the service in the field that when the Wars had breathed out their last neither of them could forget or were very careful to lay aside This was observed by Kings and advantage espyed to climb to the top of Monarchy by the help of these great men whom if they could make their own all would be theirs and therein they had prevailed much more than they did if they had been wise enough to have maintained them in unity but in that failing the Kings were necessitated to take parties and serve the Nobility to save the main and thus continued they a considerable party in the Government of this Kingdom from the Normans for the space of two hundred years well-nigh to the prejudice both of the growth of the Prerogative of Kings and Liberties of the Commons and benefit of none but the Lords who in those unquiet times were the chief Commanders in the field This errour of the Kings was soon espied but could not be avoided it is natural to man to be proud and to such to fall into contention another course therefore is taken viz. to raise up some so high as may over-top all and keep them under nor is it altogether without reason for Kings are no ubiquitaries and some must bear their power where they cannot be personally present yet it is dangerous to bestow too much upon one man for there is no man fitting to be a King but himself that is a King and where Kings are immoderate in bestowing power it many times works much woe to the people and not seldom sorrow to the Kings themselves The place of the chief Justice was in shew but one Office yet in these times was in nature of the Kings Lieutenant-general throughout the Kingdom A power and work too great for any one man in the World that can make no Deputies to manage it and yet in those times you shall meet with one man made up of an Arch-bishop a Legat and chief Justice of England or a Bishop a Lord Chancellour a Legat and chief Justice of England and a strange kind of Government must that needs be wherein the Servants Throne is above his Masters and a Subject shall have a plenitudinary power beyond that which his Lord and King had or as the times then were was capable of By these and such like pluralities the great men of England kept the Commons below and themselves above and probably rendred the temper of the Government of this Kingdom more Aristocratical than in after-Ages And if their personal authority was of such value how much rather in their joynt assembly or court of Council concerning which I must agree that as in their original in Germany they did consult and determine of the meaner matters that is to say of matters concerning Property and therefore were in their most ordinary work Meetings of Judges or Courts of Judicature and also matters of defensive War because themselves were the Commanders and lastly in matters of sudden concerment to the State not only to serve as eyes to foresee but to provide also if they can or otherwise to call in the ayd of the peoples advice so also they continued this course and it may be now and then as all Councils have done strained their endeavours beyond their reach especially since the Normans entrance and therefore I shall not deny but that they alone with the King and without the Commons have made many Laws and Constitutions some of which now are called Statutes although many of them in truth are no other than Rules for Judicature which ordinary Courts may frame or Judgments in particular cases such as are the constitutions at Clarindon in Henry the Second's time and many other Laws which are reported to be made between the King and his Lords Nor can I look upon such Laws otherwise than as upon Judgments in Courts of Justice in new points of controversie grounded upon ancient grounds which properly are not new Laws but the ancient Rule applied to new particulars and being so published to the World may bear the name of Laws Ordinances Constitutions or Judgments the word Statute being of latter times taken up and used in a more restrictive sence of which more in their due place Now that this Court was a setled Court of Judicature and so used may appear in that Fines were levied therein and Writs of Right determined as in the great Case between the two Kings of Navar and Castilè referred to the Judgment of Henry the second and tried in this Court it is said that the Tryal was by Plea and if need were by Battel The Judges in this Court were the Baronage of England for the entry of Judgment in that great Case is thus Comites Barones Regalis Curiae Angliae adjudicaverunt c. So as though doubtless many were absent some being enemies others discontented others upon other occasions yet all might claim their Votes as Barons The President over all the rest was the Chief Justice as if the King were present then himself and by him was the Sentence or Judgment
over-spread the body of the Clergie in those days and therefore I shall sum them up as follows Rights of Advowsons shall be determined in the King 's Court. This had been quarrelled from the first Normans time but could never be recovered by the Clergie Before the Normans time the County-courts had them and there they were determined before the Bishop and Sheriff but the Ecclesiastical Causes being reduced to Ecclesiastical Courts and the Sheriff and the Laity sequestred from intermeddling the Normans according to the custom in their own Country reduced also the tryal of rights of Advowsons unto the Supreme Courts partly because the King's Title was much concerned therein and the Norman Lords no less but principally in regard that Rights require the consideration of such as are the most learned in the Laws Rights of Tythes of a Lay-fee or where the Tenure is in question belong to the King 's Court. Pleas of Debts by troth-plight belong to the King 's Court. These were Saxon Laws and do intimate that it was the endeavour of the Clergie to get the sole cognizance of Tythes because they were originally their dues and of Debts by troth-plight because that Oaths seemed to relate much to Religion whereof they held themselves the onely Professors The King's Justice shall reform Errours of the Ecclesiastical Courts and Crimes of Ecclesiastical persons Appeals shall be from Arch-Deacons Courts to the Bishops Courts and thence to the Archbishops Courts and thence to the King's Court and there the Sentence to be final No man that ever was acquainted with Antiquity will question that these were received Laws in the Saxons time nor did the Clergie ever quarrel them till the Normans taught them by courtesie done to Rome to expect more from Kings than for the present they would grant whereof see Cap. 47. But King Steven that was indebted to the Clergie for his Crown and could not otherwise content them parted with this Jewel of Supreme power in Causes Ecclesiastical to the Roman cognizance as hath been already noted but Henry the second would have none of this Cheat at so easie a rate This struck so smart a blow as though the Popedom had but newly recovered out of a paralytick Schism yet seeing it so mainly concerned the maintenance of the Tripple-Crown Alexander the Pope having lately been blooded against a brave Emperour made the less difficulty to stickle with a valiant King who is conclusion was fain to yield up the Bucklers and let the Pope hold what he had gotten notwithstanding against this Law and all former Law and Custom And thus the Popes Supremacy in Spiritual Causes is secured both by a Recovery and Judgment by confession thereupon The King shall have vacancies of Churches and power to elect by his secret Council The Party elected shall do homage salvo ordine and then shall be consecrated This certainly was none of the best yet it was a custom not altogether against reason although not suitable to the opinion of many yet we meet two alterations of the ancient custom First that the election shall be by the King and secret Council whereas formerly the election of Bishops and Archbishops was of such publick concernment as the Parliament took cognizance thereof and that which was worse a Council was hereby allowed called a secret Council which in effect is a Council to serve the King's private aims and unto this Council power given in the ordering of the publick affairs without advice of the publick Council of Lords which was the onely Council of State in former times And thus the publick affairs are made to correspond with the King 's private interest which hath been the cause of much irregularity in the Government of this Island ever since The second alteration resteth in the salvo which is a clause never formerly allowed unless by practice in Steven's time whenas there was little regard of the one or the other Nor doth it concur with the file of story that it should be inserted within these Constitutions seeing that Writers agree it was the chief cause of quarrel between him and Becket who refused submission without the clause and at which the King stuck with the Archbishop for the space of seven years which was six years after the Constitutions were consented unto and concluded upon No Clergie-man or other may depart the Realm without the King's License It is a Law of Nations and must be agreed on all hands that no reason of State can allow dispensations therein especially in a doubtful Government where the Supremacy is in dispute and this the wilful Archbishop never questioned till he questioned all Authority but in order to his own for but the year before when he went to Turonn to the general Council upon summons he first obtained License from the King before he went. No Sentence of Excommunication or Interdiction to pass against the King's Tenant or any Minister of State without License first had of the King or his Chief Justice in the King's absence Till the Conquest no Excommunication passed without Warrant of Law made by the joynt assembly of the Laity and Clergy but the Conquerour having let loose the Canons and the Clergie having got the upper hand in Councils made Canons as they pleased and so the Laity are exposed to the voluntary power of the Canon onely as well the Normans as until these times Kings have saved their own associates from that sudden blow and upon reason of religious observance lest the King should converse with excommunicate persons e're he be aware The Laity are not to be proceeded against in Ecclesiastical Courts but upon proof by Witnesses in the presence of the Bishop and where no Witnesses are the Sheriff shall try the matter by Jury in the presence of the Bishop A negative Law that implieth another course was used upon light Fame or Suspition ex officio although the Oath at that time was not born into the World and that all this was contrary to the liberty of the Subject and Law of the Land And it intimates a ground of prohibition in all such cases upon the Common Law which also was the ancient course in the Saxons times as hath been formerly noted Excommunicated persons shall be compelled onely to give pledge and not Oath or Bail to stand to the Judgement of the Church Upon the taking and imprisoning of the party excommunicate the course anciently was it seemeth to give Pledge to stand to Order Of this the Bishops were weary soon as it seemeth and therefore waved it and betook themselves to other inventions of their own viz. to bind them by Oath or Bail both which were contrary to Law for no Oath was to be administred but by Law of the Kingdom nor did it belong to the Ecclesiastical Laws to order Oaths or Bail and therefore this Law became a ground of prohibition in such
which shew him to be a brave King if he was not a very rich man. Henry the second was more heavy because he had more to do yet find we but one assessment which was Escuage unless for the holy War which was more the Clergy-mens than his Richard was yet a greater burthen his Reign was troublesome to him and he deserved it for from the beginning thereof to the ending could never the guilt of his disobedience to his Father be blotted out but it was more troublesome to the people because it cost so much treasure was managed by such ill Governours except the Archbishop of Canterbury and was unsuccessful in most of his undertakings yet never invaded the liberties of the Commons by any face of Prerogative But what wanted in him was made compleat and running over in his Successor John who to speak in the most moderate sence of his Government being given over to himself when he was not himself robbed the Lords of their authority bereaved the Church of its Rights trod under foot the Liberties of the people wasted his own Prerogative and having brought all things into despair comes a desperate cure the head is cut off to save the body and a president left for them that list to take it up in future ages And thus that which Steven gave Henry the second lost Richard the first would not regain and John could not and so all were gainers but the Crown CHAP. LXI Of Judicature the Courts and their Judges IT is no silent argument that the Commons gain where Laws grow into course and it was the lot of these troublesome times to lay a foundation of a constant Government such as all men might learn which formerly was laid up onely in the breasts of wise experienced men The two most considerable points in Government is the Law and the Execution the latter being the life of the former and that of the Common-wealth I say not that the Law was augmented in the body of it or that the Execution had a freer course than in the best of the former times but both were more and more cleared to the world in many particulars as well touching matters concerning practice of the Law as touching rules of righteousness For the first whereof we are beholding to Glanvil in Henry the second 's time and for the latter to King John or rather the Barons in his time in the publishing of the Grand Charter or an enumeration of the Liberties or Customes of the people derived from the Saxons revived continued and confirmed by the Normans and their Successors which for the present I shall leave in lance dubio to stand or fall till occasion shall be of clearing the point in regard that King John soon repented of his Oath the Bond of his consent and to heal the Wound got the Pope's pardon and blessing thereupon so easie a thing it was for a Son of the Roman Church to pass for a good Catholick in an unrighteous way The execution of the Law was done in several Courts according to the several kinds of affairs whereof some concerned matters of Crime and Penalty and this touched the King's honour and safety of the persons of himself and his Subjects and therefore are said to be contra coronam dignitatem c. The second sort concern the profits of the Crown or treasure of the Kingdom The third concern the safety of the Estates of the people These three works were appointed unto three several Courts who had their several Judges especially appointed to that work Originally they were in one viz. in the supream Court of Judicature the Court of Lords whereof formerly was spoken but after through increase of affairs by them deputed or committed to the care of several men that were men of skill in such affairs and yet retained the Supremacy in all such cases still And because that which concerned the publick Treasure was of more publick regard than the other the deputation thereof was committed probably to some of their own members who in those days were Barons of the Realm and afterwards retained the Title but not the Degree and therefore were called for distinction-sake Barons of the Exchequer The particular times of these deputations appear not clearly out of any monument of antiquity nevertheless it is clear to me that it was before Henry the second 's time as well because Henry the first had his Judex fiscalis as Glanvil so frequently toucheth upon the King's Court of Pleas which cannot be intended at the Court of Lords for that in those days was never summoned but in time of Parliament or some other special occasion But more principally because the Historian speaking of the Judges itinerant reciteth some to be of the Common-pleas which sheweth that there was in those days a distinction of Jurisdiction in Judicatures And it may very well be conceived that this distinction of Judicature was by advice of the Parliament after that the Grand Council of Lords was laid aside by Kings and a Privy-Council taken up unto whom could not regularly belong any juridical power because that remained originally in the grand assembly of the Lords Over these Courts or two of them one man had the prime Title of Chief Justice who then was called Lord Chief Justice of England and whose office was much of the nature of the King's Lieutenant in all causes and places as well in War as Peace and sometimes was appointed to one part of the Kingdom and by reason thereof had the name onely of that part and some other of the other parts The greatness of this Office was such as the man for necessity of state was continually resident at the Court and by this means the King's Court was much attended by all sorts of persons which proved in after-times as grievous the King as it was burthensome to the people Other Judges there were which were chosen for their learning and experience most of them being of the Clergie as were also the under-Officers of those Courts for those times were Romes hour and the power of darkness Other Courts also were in the Country and were Vicontiel or Courts of Sheriffs and Lords of Hundreds and Corporations and Lordships as formerly and these were setled in some place But others there were which were itinerant over which certain Judges presided which were elected by the Grand-Council of Lords and sent by Commission from King Henry the second throughout the Kingdom then divided into Six Circuits unto each of which was assigned Three Justices so as the whole number of Justices then was Eighteen The office was before the coming of the Saxons over hither but the assignation was new as also was their Oath for they were sworn But the number continued not long for within four years the King re-divided the Land into four Circuits and unto each Circuit assigned five Justices making in the whole the number of Twenty and one Justices for the Northern
It seemeth also that the loss not onely of Chattels and Goods but also of Lands c. extended to Outlawries I conceive in case of Felony and the King's Pardon in such case could not bind the Lord's right of Escheat although it might discharge the Goods and the year and day whereunto the King was entitled which case alone sufficiently declareth what power Kings had in the Estates of their Subjects Manslaughter made not bailable This was Law in Henry the second 's time although it crossed the Norman Law and questionless it was upon good ground for the times now were not as those in the Conquerour's times when shedding of Bloud was accounted Valour and in most cases in order to the publick service And now it seems it was a growing evil and that cried so loud as though in case of Treason bail might be allowed yet not in this case ubi ad terrorem aliter statutum est saith the Author Robbers shall be committed to the Sheriff or in his absence to the next Castelane who shall deliver him to the Sheriff And the Justices shall do right to them and unto Trespassers upon Land. By the Conquerour's Law these Offenders were bailable and I conceive this was no Repeal thereof and the rather because Glanvil alloweth of Pledges in all cases except Manslaughter yea in those Crimes that did wound Majesty it self although they concern the destruction of the King's person or Sedition in the Kingdom or Army thereof The Justices herein mentioned were intended to be the Justices itinerant and the Trespasses upon Land are meant such as are contra pacem Domini Regis as riotous and forcible Entries for some Trespasses were against the peace of the Sheriff as formerly hath been observed Fauxonry is of several degrees or kinds some against the King others against other men and of those against the King some are punished as Wounds of Majesty as falsifying the King's Charter and whether falsifying of Money were in that condition or not I leave or falsifying of Measures yet more inferiour I cannot determine but it is clear by Glanvil that falsifying of the Deed of a private person was of smaller consideration and at the utmost deserved but loss of Member Inheritances may not be aliened Inheritances were in those times of Lands or Goods for it was the custom then that the personal Estate the Debts deducted was divisible into three parts one whereof belonged in right to the Wife as her reasonable part the other to the Heir and a third to the Testator to make his Will of them and of the other two parts he could not dispose by Will. Concerning Lands it was regularly true that no man could alien his whole Inheritance to the disherisin of his Heir either by Act in his life-time or any part thereof by his last Will without the concurrence of the Heir But of purchased Lands he may give part by Act executed in his life-time though he have no Lands by inheritance and if he hath no Issue then he may alien all And where a man hath Lands by inheritance and also by purchase he may alien all his purchased Lands as he pleaseth If the Lands be holden in Gavel-kind no more of the Inheritance can be conveyed to any of the Children than their proportionable parts will amount unto This Law of Inheritance was divers according to the Tenure for the Lands in Knights-service always descended to the Heir but such as were holden in Socage passed according to the custom either to the eldest or to the youngest or to all equally And thus stood the general state of Inheritance from the Normans time hitherto seeming somewhat too strait for the Free men that by Law of Property might challenge a power to do with their own as they pleased But the Normans saw a double prejudice herein the first was the danger of ruine of many of their Families who now ingrafted into the English stock and yet not fully one might expect a late check to their preferments from the Saxon Parents after a long and fair semblance made of their good Will. The second prejudice was the decay of their Militia which was maintained by Riches more than by multitude of men partly because that rich men are most fearful of offending and therefore ordinarily are most serviceable both with their Bodies and Estates against publick dangers and partly because by their Friends and Allies they bring more aid unto the publick by engaging them in the common Cause that otherwise might prove unsensible of the condition of their Country The Heir of a Free-man shall by descent be in such seisin as his Ancestor had at the time of his death doing service and paying relief and shall have his Chattels If the Heir be under age the Lord shall have the Wardship for the due time and the Wife her Dower and part of the Goods If the Lord with-hold seisin the King's Justice shall try the matter by twelve men The first of these branches is declaratory of a ground of common Law but being applied to the last is an introduction of a new Law of tryal of the Heir 's Right by Assize of Mortdancester where formerly no remedy was left to the Heir but a Writ of Right If these three branches be particularly observed they speak of three sorts of Heirs of Tenants by Knight-service viz. such as are Majors or of full age and such as are Minors or under age and such as are of a doubtful age Those that are of full age at the death of their Ancestors may possess the Lands descended and the Lord may not disseize him thereof but may be resisted by the Heir in the maintenance of his possession so as he be ready to pay Relief and do service that is due and if the Lord expel him he shall have remedy by Assize Those Heirs that are Minors shall be under the Lord's guardianship till they come to one and twenty years The Heirs of such as hold by Socage are said to be at full age at fifteen years because at that age they were thought able to do that service but the Sons of Burgesses are then said to be of full age when they have ability to manage their Father's Calling such as telling of Money measuring of Cloath and the like yet doth not Glanvil or any other say that these were their full age to all purposes albeit that some Burroughs at this day hold the last in custom to all intents whatsoever The last branch provideth the remedy to recover to the Heir his possession in case it be detained either through doubtfulness of age of the Heir or his Title and it directs the Issue to be tryed by twelve men This tryal some have thought to be of Glanvil's invention and it may well be that this tryal of this matter as thus set down was directed by him yet he useth often in his book the word solet and in his Preface
and nothing shall hinder it but the special reservation of the donor and yet he saith that such gift or grant taketh not away the right of the Lord Paramount in his Tenure albeit the gift be in free Alms. Nevertheless it seemeth to be such restraint that the Templars and Hospitallers were fain to find out a new way which was to protect mens Tenements from execution of Law by levying crosses thereon albeit the right of the Lords was not barred and therefore Edw. 1. provided a Law to make this also in nature of a Mortmain within the Statute made in the seventh year of his Reign called the Statute de Religiosis by which it was enacted that in case of such alienations in Mortmain the Lord should have liberty to enter if he failed then the Lord Paramount or if he failed the King should enter and dispose of the same and that no license of Mortmain should be sued out but by the mean Lord's assent and where part of the premises remain still in the Donor and the original Writ mentioneth all the particulars And thus at length was this issue for the present stayed which hitherto wasted the strength of the Kingdom and by continual current emptying it into the mare mortuum of the Clergie consumed the maintenance of Knight service by converting the same to Clerk-service No Judge shall compel a Free-man to make Oath without the Kings command So is the sence of the Law rendred by an ancient Authour and I hope I shall not wrong the Text if I affirm that the Ecclesiastical Judge was included within the equity though properly he be not Balivus for the Law intends to shew that it is a liberty that the Subject hath not to be compelled to take Oath without the Kings especial command and by consequence it sheweth also that the King at that time and until then had the directory of Oaths for it was an ancient Liberty given in the Kings Charters unto such as they pleased viz. to impose Oaths and to punish for breach of Oath and this passed under the word Athae or Athas and so Edmund the Saxon King gave to the Abbey of Glastenbury amongst other Athas Ordulas and the Church-men that first procured vacations from Suits of Law during holy times procured a Law also to be setled by Edward the Saxon King and Gunthurne the Dane that Ordeal and Oaths should be forbidden upon the holy Feasts and lawful Fasts And a wonder it is how it escaped the gripe of the Clergie so long who catched at any thing that had but a glance of Gods worship in it And if this were the Subjects Liberty not to be compelled to Swear surely much more not to be compelled to accuse himself unless by the Law he be especially bound for it is Glanvil's rule Ob infamiam non solet juxta legem terrae aliquis per legem apparentem se purgare nisi prius convictus fuerit vel confessus in curia But the power of the Clergie now was grown strong and they begin to remember themselves and that Oaths are of a holy regard and they men for holiness best able to judge when and to whom they shall be ministred and therefore now they begin to enter their claim and to make a sure Title they get a grant from Pope Innocent to Steven Langton Arch-Bishop of Canterbury of a faculty of licensing administration of Oaths during the time of Lent and he accordingly enjoyed it during the mad time of Henry the Third But Edward the first quarrelled it and left it questionable to Edward the Second who being in his condition as a lost man had less care of such smaller matters and therefore allowed that his Judges of Assizes should be licensed by the Arch-bishop to administer Oaths in their Circuits in the sacred times of Advent and Septuagessima and this course continued till Henry the Eighth's time The Clergie having thus gotten the bridle gallop amain they now call whom they will and put them to their Oaths to accuse other men or themselves or else they are Excommunicated Henry the Third withstood this course if the Clergie-mens complaints in the times of that King Artic. 9. be true and notwithstanding the same the Law holds its course and in pursuance thereof we find an attachment upon a prohibition in this form ensuing Put the Bishop of N. to his pledges that he be before our Justices to shew cause why he made to be summoned and by Ecclesiastical censures constrained lay-Lay-persons men or women to appear before him to swear unwillingly at the Bishops pleasure to the great prejudice of our Crown and Dignity and contrary to the custom of the Kingdom of England And thus both King and Clergie were at contest for this power over the peoples Consciences to which neither had the right otherwise than by rules of Law. Bigamists shall not be allowed their Clergie whether they become such before the Council of Lyons or since and that Constitution there made shall be so construed Whatsoever therefore their Synods in those times pretended against the married Clergie it seemeth by this Law that they had Clergie that were married once and again and yet before and after the Council were admitted as Clerks in the judgment of the Law. But the general Council interposes their authority and deprives them that are the second time married of all their priviledges of Clergie It was it seemeth twenty years and more after that Council before the Church-men in England were throughly reformed for either some were still Bigami at the making of this Law or as touching that point it was vain nor is it easie to conceive what occasion should after so long a time move such exposition the words of the Constitution being Bigamos omni privilegio clericali declaramus esse nudatos Now whether this slow Reformation arose from the defect in Law or in obedience thereto may be gathered from some particulars ensuing First it is apparent that the Canons of general Councils eo nomine had formerly of ancient times gotten a kind of preheminence in this Nation but by what means is not so clear In the Saxon times they were of no further force than the great Council of this Kingdom allowed by express act For the Nicene Faith and the first five general Councils were received by Synodical confirmations of this Kingdom made in the joynt meeting both of the Laity and Clergie and during such joynt consulting the summons to the general Councils was sent to the King to send Bishops Abbots c. but after that the Laity were excluded by the Clergie from their meetings and the King himself also served in the same manner the Summons to the general Council issued forth to the Bishops immediately and in particular to each of them and to the Abbots and Priors in general by vertue whereof they went inconsulto Rege and sometimes Rege
redemption of their Captive King for Knighting of the Kings Son and for his Daughters Marriage because these three might be due by the Common-Law the two latter by custom the former by common right although mentioned from the late disaster of King Richard which King John might with shame enough remember and expect the same measure from the censure of an unquiet conscience I shall not enter into debate concerning the omission hereof in the later Charters possibly it might seem a tautology Nor concerning the restriction as if it did imply that the Burgesses had Vote only in cases of general assesments but shall leave it to the consideration of the Reader No Distress shall be taken for greater service or other matter than is due Distresses are in nature no other than a summons in act or the bringing of a man to answer by seizure of part of his Goods and it was used by the Saxons as hath been shewed and because the rich men under colour of seeking their right many times sought for wrong and though they could not prevail in the issue yet prevailed so far that the Defendant could not escape without charge and hinderance therefore the Law provided a Writ of remedy against unjust vexation which Glanvil remembreth us of and yet because that remedy also carried with it matter of charge and disturbance to the Plaintiff and so the remedy might be worse than the disease therefore the Law defined distresses by circumstances of person matter time and place under penalties of fine and amercement besides the recompence to the party first it must not be taken but by leave from the Kings Court unless in case of matters due by common right and upon complaint made by the Plaintiff The King sent out a Summons in this manner Henricus Rex Ang. Hominibus Abbatis de Ramsey salutem Precipio quod cito juste reddatis Abbati Domino vestro quicquid ei debetis in censu firma debitis placitis quod si nolueritis ipse vos inde constringat per pecuniam vestram And in all cases of matters due by common right the distress never was done in an arbitrary way but by Judicial Act in the Lord's Court. Secondly no distress for suit shall be made out of the Fee nor against any person but such as are of that Fee. Nor shall any distress be made in the King's High-way or open street but by the King's Officer and special Writ because distress is incident to service and that is due as from the Fee and therefore by common right the same must be recovered from the Fee and such as owe service in the same but the High-way or open street are more properly a Franchise belonging to the King although the Soil haply may be the Lords And therefore it was an old Law that they should be under the King's safeguard Sit pax publica per communes vias and no violence must be there tolerated but by the King 's special Writ which presupposeth the especial notice taken by the King of the nature of the occasion A moderation also must be observed in the taking of the distress for it must not be excessive and also in keeping thereof for if the owner will he may replevy the same according to the ancient course and the Sheriff must grant replevy if it be demanded although formerly no replevy was without special Writ and yet that also not always readily obeyed for the times were such as the Lords were bold with the King's Courts and Ministers and refused the order of the Law. Now in such cases wherein the matter concerned contempt of the King's Authority a Fine was set upon the Offender but in case it concerned onely a Tort done to the party he was amerced The one is called Redemption because the penalty otherwise must lie upon the person if it be not redeemed by pecuniary Fine the other is called Amercement which is originally a satisfaction unto the party wronged by recompence out of the personal Estate of the Delinquent Thirdly as touching the matter of the distress it must not be of Plough beasts or Sheep unless in case of damage fesant if other distress may be had for the Law had a care of such Cattel as were most of publick concernment and which was the main stock of subsistence so far as Justice would allow And therefore the unjust taking of any man's Cattel by any person whatsoever is liable to the same penalties that unjust distresses are Fourthly concerning the using of the distress it must not be sold no not in the King's case till fifteen days be past after it is taken nor must it be carried out of the County but it must be so impounded as the owner may come to feed it and it must be discharged if the owner give security of satisfaction before the return of the Writ Fifthly the intent of the distresses must be that which is just and therefore not for other suit than by the Feoffment is due or else by Prescription and in case many are joyntly seized the suit shall be by one and the rest shall contribute Nor must any man be compelled to shew his Title to his Land by distress The Common-pleas shall be holden in one certain place The Office of Judge of the Common-pleas was in my opinion distinct and several from that of the Crown-pleas nor though one and the same man might execute both Authorities doth it therefore follow that it was by one and the same power as if being Judge he had thereby power in all matters of the Common-pleas and also of the Crown For though it be true that Bracton saith The King hath one proper Court wherein are the Chief Judges which both by his own Testimony and Briton's also did hear and determine Causes of all sorts yet is it true also that it was by Appeal or Writ of Errour as in case of false Judgment and that the King had plures curias which doubtless had their proper work And in the time of Henry the second it is clear that six were especially assigned for the Common-pleas throughout the whole Realm and yet by another especial Commission or Letters-Patents the same men might also have power to determine matters of the Crown as at this day in their several Circuits This Law therefore doth not as I conceive work any alteration but onely in this that whereas formerly the Judges of Common-pleas attended on the King's Court continually as all other Judges did and whither the King removed they did the like which was a great uncertainty and grievance unto the Commons henceforth they are fixed to a certain place Assize of Novel Disseisin and Mortdancester shall be determined in the proper County onely and by the Justices itinerant sent by the King or his Chief Justices The Law was so declared in Henry the second 's
for the most part are but for enquiry All which saving the Justices itinerant in ancient use were instituted about these times and therewith ended both the work and common use of the ancient iters and yet all these later Courts joyntly considered have not the like comprehensive power that the iters had for they had the power of hearing and determining all causes both of the Crown and Common-pleas albeit in a different manner That is to say in the first times promiscuously united into one and the same person but soon after the Norman times and more clearly in the time of Henry the Second that power was divided into several persons some sitting upon the Common-pleas others upon the Crown-pleas The Judges of these journeying Courts were specially assigned by the King as in the case of the Gaol-delivery or setled by the Law upon the Judges of both Benches at Westminister as in case of Oyer and Terminer and of the Assizes or Nisi prius saving that in the last case they were associated with Knights in the Counties for the taking of Assizes Now concerning the Courts that were setled some were setled or annexed to the King 's personal residence as the Chancellor's Court for in these times it began to have a judiciary power of eminent stature and growing out of the decays of the great chief Justice of England Then also the Kings-Bench was annexed by the same Law unto the Kings Court or personal residence as it anciently ever had that honour although it seems the endeavours were to make it like the Common-pleas in that particular Another and last Court that was setled in this manner was the Marshals Court which in the original onely concerned the Kings houshold but afterwards compassed in a distance of the neighbouring places because the Kings attendants were many in those times whenas the Courts of Justice continually attended on his person and this precinct was called the Verge and all cases of debt and covenant where both parties were of the Houshold and of Trespasses vi armis where one of them was of the Houshold were handled in the Court of the Verge or the Marshals Court. And Inquests of death within the same shall be taken by the Coroner of the County with the Coroner of the Houshold Other Courts were rural and affixed also to some certain place either of the County or Town or other particular place That of the County suffered in these times great diminution even almost to destruction by a Law restraining the power thereof onely to Trespasses of 40 s. value or under for though formerly the Kings Justices incroached upon the County-Courts and contracted suits before themselves which by the ancient Law they ought not yet it was ever illegal and the County-Courts held their right till this Law was made which kept under those inferiour Courts and made them of less account than formerly Nevertheless the Kings Justicies or Writ to the Sheriffs oftentimes enableth the inferiour Court to have cognizance of cases of greater value Lastly a rule was set to the smaller Courts of Corporations Fairs and Markets viz. That no person should be sued in any of them which was not a debter or pledge there CHAP. LXIX Of Coroners Sheriffs and Crown-pleas COroners shall be chosen in the County from the wisest greatest and chief men of the Country Of these Officers formerly hath been spoken as touching their election qualification and work this Law brought in no change of any former Law but onely of a former Custom gained by these degenerating times which brought men into place that were far unfit who otherwise of poor and mean condition maintained themselves by bribery and extortion and being found guilty had not sufficient to give recompence This Law therefore revives the first Law and holds these men to their work of taking Inquests and Appeals by Indenture between themselves and the Sheriff and these were to be certified at the next coming of the Justices The Free-holders in every County if they will shall elect their own Sheriff unless the Sheriffwick be holden in Fee. This was indeed the ancient custom as the Officers of the Kingdom were elegible by the Common-council of the Kingdom so were all the Officers of the County chosen by the County But within a few years in the time of Edward the Second comes another Law That the Sheriffs shall be appointed by the Chancellor Treasurer Barons of the Exchequer and the Justices Which Law was made in favour of the people as by the file of that Statute doth more fully appear for though at the first blush it may seem a priviledge lost by the Freemen that these great men should have the election of the Sheriff yet it proved a great advantage to the common quiet of the people in those times of parties and was so apprehended Otherwise as the case stood in those days of Edward the Second it was no time for him to gain upon the peoples Liberties Nor had the Statute of Articuli super cartas whereof we how treat been penned with these words if they will. And questionless in these days we now live in if the people had but a little taste of this seeming liberty of electing Sheriffs in the County-court as formerly it was used it would be soon perceived that the election of these chief Officers were better disposed in some other hand if rightly pursued Homicide by misfortune shall not be adjudged murder That the Saxons made difference between Homicide by misfortune and that which was done felleo animo or with a spirit of gall formerly hath been shewed now what it was that altered the case I cannot say unless the violence cruelty and oppression of the times Formerly all kind of Manslaughter was finable I mean in the Norman times and so might more rationally be ranked into one degree but now the punishment began to change from forfeiture of Estate and loss of Member to death and forfeiture of Estate and therefore it was more necessary to make the difference in the penalty seeing in the fine formerly a difference was observed and this difference to assert by a Law that might limit the invenomed spirits of the Judges of those days Robbery punished by death This crime hitherto was punished by fine and loss of member at the utmost but is now made capital and punished with death One example whereof and the first that Story maketh mention of we find of an Irish Nobleman in the days of Henry the Third who suffered death for piracy and it was a Law that then though rigorous yet seasonably was contrived to retard the beginnings and hasten the conclusion of a Civil War in a Nation who value their Estates and Liberties above their own lives Rape upon the complaint of the party violated made within forty days shall have right If the Delinquent be convicted without such complaint made he shall be fined
what manner they thought meet and not otherwise Aids are lawful if they be legally given by common consent of Parliament Taxes if legally given by Parliament are no less lawful yet they must be collected in such manner and by such means as the Parliaments Order doth direct Loans of moneys to the King may be made by them that will but the King must not demand them because the Subject hath no means to recover the debt This trick had been lately tryed by Edward the Second much money he got and it was repayed by the Order of the Parliament But of all the rest nothing shewed more absolute Authority in the publick Revenue than the care that was had of the Demesnes of the Crown for whereas the Expxences of Kings grew so vast that neither the yearly Revenue could suffice nor Aids Assessments and Taxes could satisfie however ordinary they in these times were become rather than Kings would contain themselves they would invade their own Demesnes by pawning selling and giving them away either for love or money and thus was poverty treasured up against the future both for King and Crown The Parliament espying this leak that was like to undo all applyed a speedy remedy undoing what was done and undoing some by an Act of Resumption and thereby taught Kings to look to their Honour better for the future and People also to take heed of medling with such ticklish matters and to know that he that hath such in his possession hath them by a crack'd Title that cannot be amended but by Act of Parliament Fourthly an English King is no Out-law nor can he do any wrong though the man may He hath a double relation one as a King the other as a Man and the uniting of both in one person hath cheated many a man of his judgment in the case of Prerogative He hath a double Will and these many times contrary equally as in other Relations and in this contrariety sometimes the King overcomes the Man and sometimes the Man the King so as if any man the King hath much more cause to cry out O miserable man These divers Wills are generally led by divers Rules One of a man which many times reacheth no higher than the Affections and if the man be weak they deserve little better name than Lusts. The rule of a King is Law or Councils of these in place and unto these in all prudentials he must submit his Judgment and Will as he is a King. Nor can he do otherwise unless he will presume to be wiser than his Council Suitable hereunto doth that clause in one of the Statutes of these times conclude viz. That the King is bound by his Oath to pass all Laws that are for the good of the Kingdom For were the power of Election or determination of the point onely in the King then were the Oath in vain nor is the Parliament at all in case of the King's dissent to judge of the convenience or inconvenience of Proposals made for the good of the whole body according to that power which is exercised in these times Nor is it rational to infer here from that if Law and Council be the Rule of a King then the Obedience of the People unto this King must be in order to Law and Council otherwise the Disobedience cannot be determined to be against the King but against the Man and though against the private Will of the Commander yet not against the Law nor therefore can it be said illegal or unjust The Parliament in these times held forth this Doctrine plainly to the World That it is their proper work in Cases needful to do right to such as are wronged by the King his Command is no Warrant in such Cases If a man be wrongfully imprisoned by him he shall be released and set at liberty by them Let his Act be never so authentical under the Broad Seal it can take no man's Right away Richard the Second did his utmost to satisfie and quiet the tumultuous Rabble under Cade and Straw and granted store of Manumissions to the Bond-men by Declaration and by his Letters-Patents but not one of them good enough to deprive any one of the meanest of the Free-men of their Rights in those Bond-men The priviledge of shewing mercy and granting pardon hath been anciently betrusted to the King as an Overseer of the execution of Law yet he hath not that Prerogative To have mercy on whom he will have mercy Ever since this Nation had learned to read the Bible Murther hath been excepted from mercy nor did the Law ever allow any King that Prerogative to pardon that Edward the Third did not challenge any such not onely bound thereto by his Coronation-Oath but by publick Acts of State declaring the same yet because the Parliament was not always sitting and Kings were ever subject to this Temptation to favour Servants by granting mercy to Malefactors a general Rule of Inhibition is made against all pardon to be granted by the King in case of Felony but onely in cases allowed by advice of the Council It is true that in the first times of Richard the Second he liked not to be thus girt in his power which he pretended was more at liberty in his Predecessors possibly he meaned King John and Edward the Second who many times did what they listed yet under his favour no Law was so shameless as to hold forth such a power till Richard the Second's Law countenanced it But why do I call it a Law which is onely a Declaration by consent of the Lords such as then were the Commons would never own such an Opinion And therefore it soon proved abortive for within three or four years by publick Act of Parliament it is peremptorily declared That the King's Pardon shall not extend to Murther So as upon the whole matter it is plain That it is not the King's Will though supported by the Council of Lords and backed by the Opinion of the Judges that must be a Rule for the Government of this Kingdom nor doth any Allegiance bind Obedience thereunto in case where Justice or the Liberty of the People is concerned Three things yet remain which Kings have claimed to be their own viz. Conferring Titles of Honour and Places of Trust and the Legislative Power The first is but a Feather and not worthy of regard yet it is plain that these times produce many precedents of Dukes Marquesses and Earls made in Parliament and possibly it may be apparent that the first motion of any such Title of Honour did first fetch its original thence if not in the Field but it is not worthy of the labour The second is more considerable viz. The power of conferring Places of Publick Trust This Kings have pretended unto although in course of congruity it will be thought more meet that it belongeth rather to that chief
formerly bred by the Canon nourished by continual practice allowed by Ordinance of Parliament or Grant from Kings in Parliament are now confirmed by solemn concurrence of the whole Representative Body of the Kingdom to have and to hold with Warranty And yet the sence is not so general as the words nor doth it seem much other than a Confection made for the Arch-Bishops appetite to cure a distemper between him and the King for the Civil Judge lost nothing hereby nor would the Crown as may appear by a Law of equal Authority with the former for though an Executor or Administrator may cheat yet it tells us that Ordinaries only can oppress and extort from dead men and therefore in such cases doth provide remedy by enquiry and Indictment before the King's Justices They shall have Cognizance of Vsury during the Delinquent's Life and the King after the Delinquent's death The difference ariseth from the different end the first being to reform the Person by Church-censures and to urge him to restitution the latter is for the King 's Fine or Forfeiture For as touching the Usurer's estate the offence was in the nature of Felony forfeiting both Lands and Goods to the King after the Delinquent's death And it seemeth the manner was to Indict the Delinquent during his life and that stuck to him as a deadly Arrow in his side till he died Nor did it lie in the power of the Ordinary by Ecclesiastical censure so to reform the Of●ender as to clear him to the King unless the party offending made his peace with the King by Composition And thus the Law continued for ought appeareth to me till the time of Henry the Eighth They shall have Cognizance of avoidance of Benefices of Right They shall certifie Bigamy and Bastardy had beyond the Sea and whether a Prior be perpetual or Dative The first of these concerning avoidance of Churches it seemeth was somewhat doubtful in point of practice for that the Civil Judge used to determine all manner of avoidances as well in Fact as of Right but by this Statute they are restrained only unto avoidances in Fact so as after this Statute it is holden that avoidances by death shall be tryed by the Countrey but if the avoidance be by Deprivation Resignation Creation or otherwise it shall be tryed by the Ordinary because by common intendment he is more conusant of the thing than Countrey-people But as touching the point of Bigamy the matter is more doubtful in regard that commonly the Marriage of a second Wife or Widow is a matter in Fact done in the face of the people and of which they take notice especially where the life of man is concerned which rather requireth the Judgment of his Peers than where the outward maintenance only is engaged Nevertheless because the main point is whether the party be a Clerk or not and the same anciently rested upon the Certificate of the Ordinary It is by this Law again allowed to him to try and certifie this point of Bigamy also although the Statute of Bigamists might seem to Entitle the Civil Magistrate thereto as the Law was holden to be before this Statute was made In the next place although it cannot be denyed but the Trial of Bastardy beyond the Sea might as well lie in the cognizance of the Lay-Magistrate as in that of the Ecclesiastical yet seeing the Clergy had already attained the cognizance of the thing the place proved but a matter of circumstance especially they having the advantage of the Civil Magistrate in this in regard that the Ecclesiastical persons beyond the Sea had also obtained the cognizance of that matter amongst themselves their Testimony or Certificate would come with more credit to the Clergy in this Kingdom than to the Magistrate whose cognizance in such cases they did disallow Lastly concerning Priories whereas some were presentative and filled by Induction from the Ordinary and others were Donative having their Priors meerly at the will of the Abbot to be placed and displaced as he thought most expedient If then the point in issue depends upon this knot this Law referreth the Trial unto the Ordinary who by common presumption best knows whether any Institution and Induction had passed his Registry and Seal or not And thus though a kind of Judicial power seemeth to be carried along herewith yet is all in a ministerial and subservient way unto the Civil Magistrate and nevertheless with such credit and authority that the main hinge of the Judicatory in such cases depends upon the dash of their pen. No Bishop nor Arch-Bishop shall be Impeached before the Civil Magistrate without the Kings express Warrant The former particulars concerned matter of Authority this and others ensuing concern matter of immunity which or most of which were formerly for a long time within the fancy of the Canon but never came to the height of Parliamentary approbation or Authority till now that it comes in as a peace-offering to pacifie the quarrel between the Arch-Bishop Stratford and the King. For he being engaged in the French Wars so resolved to continue and therefore to maintain distempers at home he held neither Honourable nor safe Their Temporalties shall not be wasted during the vacancy Nor shall they be seized but by Judgment of the Court. The first of these was an ancient Law grounded upon great reason although dulled by time and by covetousness of the needy Patrons next to laid aside if not quite put out of countenance So as a new Law must be made to revive it and to abolish that corrupt custom or practice of depredating those possessions given to a holy use in common supposal contrary to the trust by them undertaken and the use still continuing But the second Branch is in nature of a Law of Restraint set upon the Common-Law for the persons of these Spiritualized men were of so airy a constitution as they could not be holden by hands made out of the Clay such as the rude Laity were and therefore the Civil Magistrate upon all occasions used to lay hold upon that whereof there was some feeling which were called Temporalities and thereby drew them to appearance at the Lay-Courts for however Spiritual the Clergy were they would not easily part with their Lay-Fees But now by this Law the times are so attenuated that the very Temporalities are made so Spiritual as not to be medled with by the Lay-Magistrate unless upon judgment first obtained against them And suitably thereunto within twelve years following another Law was made more punctual That their Temporalties should not be seized upon for contempts but that their persons should be seized yet within twenty years after that this Law begins to be out of countenance and the Opinions of the Judges began to grow bold upon the ancient rule that their Temporalities were Temporal though their persons were Spiritual and that it was more dangerous to
are not of the Legiance of the King of England but as Lord of that Territory The other matter to be observed concerning pleading in the Courts of Civil Justice is this That whereas anciently from the Normans time till these times the pleadings were in the Norman Tongue they shall be henceforth in English out of an inconvenience I believe rather supposed than felt For though some kind of knowledge of Law-terms may be encreased thereby yet unless that shall be professedly studied it will breed nothing but Notions and they an over-weening conceit which many times sets men to Suits in Law to their own loss like some weak influence of the Celestial Bodies that are strong enough to stir up humours but not to expel them or draw them out However even thus in part is the reproach of Normandy rolled away like that of Egypt from the Israelites at Mount Gilgal CHAP. XI Of the Militia in these times WAR is ever terrible but if just and well governed Majestical the one may excite resistance and defence but the other conquers before blow given because it convinceth the Judgment and so prevails upon the Conscience For that heart can never be resolute in its own defence that is at War with its own understanding nor can such a heart consider such a War otherwise than as Divine and bearing the face of an Ordinance of God and then how can the Issue be unsuccessful It is no strange thing for Kings to miscarry in their Wars because it is rarely seen that they are under good Counsel but if a Christian Counsel miscarry we may conclude it extraordinary in the efficient cause and no less wonderful in the issue and end Upon this ground it concerneth a Christian Nation not onely in point of honour but of safety and continuance to settle fundamental Laws of War against time of War as of Peace in time of Peace Neither was England deficient herein saving that antient times were more obscure in the particulars and these days revealed them at such a time wherein we may say that Edward the Third approved himself not onely King of England but of himself above the ordinary strain of expectation For being now become a famous Commander and Conquerour having also an Army inured to fight and overcome and so might have given a Law he nevertheless received the same submitting both it and himself to the Directory of the Parliament in making a War with France which was three to one against him in very respect but in the Title besides the disadvantage from Scotland that lay continually beating upon his Rear The like may be observed of his War with Scotland in both which he evidently telleth the World that he held it unreasonable to enter upon the managing of an offensive Foreign War without the concurrence of the common consent of the People and that not onely for the thing it self but also for his own Personal Engagement in the Service For a King though he be the Generalissimo yet is he so from the People and his Person being of that high value is not to be exposed to every occasion that may provoke War without due advice first had with the publick Council because in his Person the People adventureth as well as himself And in this manner were the Wars in France by Edward the Third and in Scotland concluded upon debate In the next place as touching the Arrays of Men for War I find no foot-steps of any power which was claimed as peculiar to the King therein and acknowledged by the Parliament but many instances do I meet with in the opposite all which do plainly tell us that the old shifts of Jurati and Obligati ad arma could do little either in the calling of men forth or arming them for the War. But in case of publick defence against Foreigners men were summoned upon their Legiance as anciently was used And this was by both King and Parliament fully declared and all such Obligations by writing called in and damned as dishonourable to the King. In foreign service the course was no less regular if the War was by special direction of the Parliament they likewise ordered the manner of the raising of Souldiers viz. so many out of a County and so many out of a Burrough all which are by the express words of the Statute said to be granted by the Knights and Burgesses But if it was onely upon the King 's particular instigation and not by order or consent of the Parliament the King in such case being Voluntier all the Souldiers were in like manner unless some particular Law or Tenure otherwise obliged them As touching the arming of Souldiers the Law was yet more certain and particular If the Souldiers were men of Estate they were armed according to the ancient rule asserted by the Statute at Winton or otherwise were especially assessed by the Parliament or by virtue of their Tenures The first of these is confirmed by Edward the Third in Parliament wherein he willeth that no man shall be urged to arm himself otherwise than he was wont in the times of his Ancestors Kings of England The two latter were likewise confirmed by another Law made in the same Kings time whereby it was ordained That no Man shall be constrained to find Men of Arms Hoblers nor Archers other than those which hold by such services if it be not by common consent and grant made in Parliament By Men of Arms meaning those which we now call Curiassieres or compleat armed by Hoblers meaning those now called light Horse-men The Archers served on Foot and were principally armed with Bows although they had also Swords or other such offensive portable Weapons The first of these concerneth onely the arming of a man 's own person the other the finding of Souldiers and arming of them and both together sufficient for the safeguard of the Rights and Liberties of the People invaded in those times by Commissions of Array and such other expressions of Prerogative Royal for as touching the arming of a man 's own person the Statute of 1 Edward 3. formerly mentioned is clear in the point And though the Statute of 25 Edward 3. doth not in the latter direct as touching the finding Arms for others as is urged in his Majesty's Answer to the Declaration of the Parliament concerning the Commission of Array July 4. 1642. yet is it therein granted that a compleat Souldier is within the Letter of the Statute and seeing the person of the Souldier is not in the power of any private person in such cases to command him to the service it seemeth clear to me that the Statute must intend the arming of him with compleat Arms and not the armed person of the man. The Souldiery thus arrayed they are in the next place to be called to their Rendezvouz the Knights by Summons sent to the Sheriff but the rest by Proclamation If the Knights appear
from the gripe of the Clergie on the other who hitherto held the Cognizance of the Markets in Weights and Measures to themselves This model so pleased all men that Richard the Second that was pleased with nothing but his own pleasure gave unto the Justices of Peace yet further power to execute the Statute at Northampton against riotous ridings and to settle the Wages of Labourers and Servants to punish unlawful Huntings by the meaner sort of people and regrators of Wool false Weights in the Staple unlawful wearing of Liveries and unlawful Fishings contrary to the Statute at Westminster 2. Thus was the power of Justices of Peace grown to that heighth in these and other things that it undermined not onely the Council-Table and Kings Bench but the Commissions of Gaol-delivery and of Oyer and Terminer so far forth as their work was much less than formerly For Neighbours in cases of crime are better trusted with the Lives and Estates of men than Strangers so as in all this the people are still the gainers The manner of Judicature by these Justices of the Peace still remains nothing appears by any Statute in these times that one Justice of the Peace might do alone but record a forcible Detainer although questionless in point of present security of the Peace and good Behaviour by the intent of the Statutes he might do many things but in Cases of Oyer and Terminer all must be done in publick Sessions which the Justices of the Peace had power to hold by Commission onely until the Thirty sixth year of Edward the Third and ever after that they held their Sessions by vertue of the Statutes and had power to determine divers things in their Sessions according to discretion These were remedies after the Fact now see what preventing Physick these times afforded One thing that much irritated the spirits of men into discontents was false News or slanderous reports raised and spread amongst the great men For in these Times the Lords were of such a considerable power as the vexation of one Lord proved the vexation of a multitude of the meaner sort And though the Statute of Westminster the 1. formerly had provided against such Tales yet it touched onely such as concerned discord between the King and people although by implication also it might be construed to extend further But Richard the Second willing to live in quiet that he might enjoy his pleasure would have the people know their duties in plain words and agreed to a Law That all such as published such false News tending to sow strife between the Great men should be imprisoned until the first mover was found and if he were not found then the Relator should be punished by advice of the Council So much power was then given to the Council whatever it was Thus the seed was choked or was so intended to be though every passion was not thus suppressed For some angers conquer all fear and will hold possession come what will. In the next place therefore provision is made against the first Actings in sorting of parties by Tokens and Liveries utterly inhibiting the meaner sort of the people from giving of Liveries to maintain quarrels upon pain of Fine and Imprisonment and the Trial to be before the Justices of Assize which it seems was in affirmance of former Laws as by the Preamble of the Statute doth appear though the Laws themselves are not extant About Fifteen years after it was by sad experience found that the Lords maintained quarrels by multitude of Liveries and therefore another Law was made inhibiting the Lords to give Liveries to any but their menial Servants and it is ordered that the Justices of the Peace shall make enquiry of such offences and punish them according to their discretion A third prevention was provided against gathering together of Parties after they are sorted For the humours may so abound as nothing will keep them in they must either break out into a sore or a long sickness of State will certainly follow To this end therefore the Statute made at Northampton is again revived expresly forbidding all persons to ride armed unless in some particular cases of executing Justice or guarding the person of the King or his Justices and suchlike And if men will be so adventurous as to out●dare Law by publick force Troopings together and riotous Ridings another course is taken not by Commission of the Peace but rather of War directed unto valiant persons in every County and they have power thereby to apprehend such Offenders and imprison them until the Gaol-delivery though no Indictment be found thereof until the Gaol-delivery shall be By this Commission therefore power is given of Posse Comitatus in nature of a Commission of Array with an additional power of fighting and destroying so as though the King granteth the Power by the Commission yet the Parliament giveth the Power to the Commission and be it a Commission for Peace or War it is originally from that power The fourth and last prevention was the taking away means of continuance and supporting such Riotous ways Viz. Castles and Gaols out of the Custody of private hands and restoring them to their Counties For Gaols and Castles are taken promiscuously for places of security in times of Peace to keep ill persons from going out and in times of War from getting in Amongst these some belonged to the King and were committed to such as he favoured who commonly in such times of Oppression and Violence grew too big for Justice usurping a Gaol delivery and making such places of strength many times even to the innocent a Prison to keep them from the Law but unto guilty persons an Asylum to defend them against the Law. And these thus belonging to the King were under no Law but of Prerogative whereas other Castles of private persons were under the yoke of the Statute 13 E. 1. For remedy of all which the Kings Castles are once more returned to the Sheriff's Custody by Act of Parliament who questionless have the power to dispose of all places of strength whether in order to Peace or War and could not dispose them into a more safe and indifferent hand than the Sheriff's who is as well the King's Officer as the Kingdoms Servant and much intrusted by the Law in the execution of its own power And thus is this Nation now prepared for a setled Peace a condition that is long in ripening and soon rotten unless it be well fenced and over-awed by a good Conscience But Richard the Second was neither so good nor so happy his Heart affected to be high but his Head could not bear it he turns giddy and runs far wide Those that would reduce him he enforces into Foreign Countries and himself holds on his career over Hedge and Ditch into Ireland where under pretension of holding possession of that Kingdom he lost England and whilst he plays
this Kingdom and yet the Law for all this suffered no change nor did the House of Commons however the name is thrust into the English Ordinary Print ever yield unto the passing of the same but in the Parliament next ensuing complained thereof and protested they would not be bound by such Laws whereto the House of Commons had not given their consent And this dashed the Law quite out of countenance although it holds the place still amongst the number for within four years after the Clergie bring in another Bill of the same nature in general though varying in some particulars but the same was again rejected All the strength therefore of this Law resteth upon the King and House of Lords engaged by the Clergie whom they trusted for their Religion for Book-learning was with them of small account and no less by the King who knew no better way to give the Clergie content that gave him so much as to set the Crown upon his Head nor to discharge his Royal Word passed by the Earls of Northumberland and Westmorland in his behalf unto the Convocation viz. That they were sent to declare the Kings good will to the Clergie and Church-Liberties and that he was resolved to defend all the Liberties of the Church by his Kingly power and to punish Hereticks and the Churches Enemies in such manner as the Clergie should think meet and therefore desired their daily prayers for his own and the Kingdoms safety And yet for all this the people were not of this mind no small part of the Kingdom being overspread with these opinions After Henry the Fourth comes Henry the Fifth and he also makes another essay the former opinions then known onely by the general names of Heresie are now baptized by the new name of Lollardry and grown so overspreading that all the troubles of these times are still imputed to them It was indeed the Devils old and common trick thus to inrage earthly powers against these men although he be hereby but an instrument in the hand of the chief Builder that in laying a sure Foundation doth as well ram down as raise up for the malice of these men made the people of God to multiply Henry the Fifth also published a Law to this same purpose That all persons in place of Government shall swear to use their diligence to destroy all Heresies and Errors called Lollardries That all Lollards convict by the Clergie left to the secular power according to the Laws of Holy Church shall forfeit their Lands and Tenements to their Lords And the King to have the Year and Day and Waste and all his Goods and Chattels If the Lord be the Ordinary the King shall have all No forfeiture to be till the Delinquent be dead They shall be found by Indictment before the Justices of the Peace This Indictment being found shall be sent to the Ordinary with the Prisoner The Indictment shall not be for Evidence but onely for Information These are the principal things contained in this Law which by the manner of the composure seemeth to be of an uncertain colour neither made by the Clergie nor Laity but spoiled between them both The intent thereof seemeth to be principally to draw on the House of Commons to pass the Law under hope of gain by the forfeitures for the penalty is like that of Felony though the crime be not expresly declared to be Felony But the intent fell short in event For first The nature of the Crime is not defined nor declared by any Law and therefore can no man by Indictment be found to be such Secondly No penalty of death hath been by any former or by this Law determined upon such as are guilty for it is not enacted by any Law that such persons shall be delivered to the Secular power c. Thirdly This Statute determining the forfeiture to be not till death and neither that nor any other Law of this Kingdom determining death then is no forfeiture determined Fourthly Though this Law taketh it for granted that Heresie and Errours belong to Ecclesiastical Cognizance yet the same allows of no further proceedings than Ecclesiastical censures Lastly By this Law there can be no proceeding but in case of Indictment for otherwise without Record no forfeiture can be therefore where no Indictment is there is no forfeiture In all which regards it is evident that the Clergie could by this Law neither get fat nor bloud And therefore at their Convocation in the next year following they took another course and ordered that three in every Parish should make presentment upon Oath of such persons as are defamed for Hereticks and the truth so far as they can learn. Which puts me in mind of a Presentment that I have seen by some of St. Mary Overies in these times Item We saine that John Stevens is a man we cannot tell what to make of him and that he hath Books we know not what they are This new course shews plainly that the former held not force as they intended it So God blasted the practices of the Clergie at this time also rendring this Law immaterial that had the form as the other missed in the form and had the matter CHAP. XVIII Of the Court of Chancery IT often befals in State-affairs that extraordinary exigencies require extraordinary remedies which having once gotten footing are not easily laid aside especially if they be expedient for Prerogative The Privy Council in the Star-chamber pretends default of the Common-Law both in speed and severity in Cases whereby the State is endangered The Chancery pretends default by the Common-Law in point of equity and moderation The people taken with these pretences make that Rod more heavy which themselves had already complained of What the Chancery was in times past hath been already shewed still it is in the growing and gaining hand First In the Judicatory power it prevailed in relation to the Exchequer exercising a kind of power to survey the proceedings thereof in cases of Commissioners distrained to account for Commissions executed or not executed For it was no easie matter to execute Commissions from the Exchequer in those times of parties nor were men willing with such unwelcome occasions between Friends and Neighbours and it may be they grew weary of embroiling themselves one against another and of being Instruments of the violent countermotions of Princes and great men Secondly It gained also upon the Admiralty which by former Laws had Jurisdiction in all cases incident upon the great Sea. But now either through neglect of the Admiral or the evil of the Times occasioning Piracies to grow epidemical the ill government upon the Sea became dangerous to the State trenching upon the Truce made between this and other Nations For a remedy whereof first Conservators of the Truce were setled in every Port who had power committed to them to punish Delinquents against the publick Truce both by Indictment at the Kings
allow the Chief Justice of the King-bench unto that service in any of them all but onely once in the County of Lancaster and then onely at the King's pleasure Otherwise it was to be as was used by the space of one hundred years foregoing possibly because his power was too great to be trusted amongst the people Lastly the Judges of Nisi Prius were anciently made by Edward the First by whom also the Assizes were settled at certain times of the year and afterwards by the Statute of York the Nisi Prius in smaller cases was granted before one Justice of the Bench where the Plea dependeth and one substantial man of the County but those of greater concernment were to be had before two Justices of that Bench or in case they were wanting then before Justices of the other Bench or in default of them before the chief Baron if he were a man of Law and in default of that before the Judges of Assize Therefore in those days the Justices of the Benches in their Iters in the Counties were divided in their power some being for Assizes others for Nisi Prius and in some times and cases some were for both For in those times of Edward the Third Judges of Assize had power to enquire in some matters that concerned the Crown or to try Nisi Prius Nor were these powers united till in Henry the Sixth's time Justices of Nisi Prius had the power of Oyer and Terminer annexed to them in all cases of Felony and Treason What was formerly provided by Edward the Third and Richard the Second for instruction to these Judges and to bind them thereto by solemn Oath I shall not particularly mention but shall leave the consideration of the Original of the whole Judicature of this Nation unto the Readers observation upon the premises CHAP. XX. Concerning Sheriffs HEnry the Fourth after a small rest in his Throne though he always sate loose sought after the civil Peace as the corner-stone of his subsistence and that by a way of Justice which found more acceptance with the Vulgar than the common Education of the greater number in these times could promise for the worst of men cannot endure to suffer Injustice though themselves will do it Now because where Kings are reputed to be the Fountain and Life of Justice Sheriffs may be reputed to be the breath thereof and by their Irregularities do render the Government of the King as loathsome as unsavoury breath doth the person whose it is Therefore Henry the Fourth chose rather to be a loser in his Farm●●ts of the Sheriff-wicks than to occasion the Sheriffs to save their bargains by oppression And to this end he took away the course of farming of Sheriff-wicks and made the Sheriffs bare accountants for the Annual profits and as touching the casual profits the Sheriff discharged himself upon Oath This was a good security to the King but yet the People was not herewith satisfied For though the Sheriffs might not take to Farm yet what they had they might let to Farm and then wherein are the people the better for these Laws seeing it is all one for them to be oppressed by the Sheriff immediately as by the Proxy For preventing of this inconvenience another Law is made That the Sheriff shall not let his Bailywick to Farm nor be Non-resident and to this he must bind himself by Oath So as now the Sheriff is double girt and may be fairly ridden without danger to the King or People But men ride Horses for ease and pleasure and he that must bend his mind always to watch his Horses motion will chuse rather to go on foot And therefore Henry the Fifth renewed the Law of Richard the Second that Sheriffs shall be but for one year and then not to be chosen again nor serve for three years next following This Order continued for the space of eight years within which time War and Pestilence had consumed so many of the richer sort of people that a Dispensation is granted that Sheriffs may continue in their places for four years And it was above twenty years after e're the Stock was recruited again after which time the substance of the former Statutes of Edward the Third Richard the Second and 1 Henry the Fifth is revived again with a penalty upon the Sheriff his Deputy or Clerk that shall execute that place above one year So the custom of holding that Office ten or twelve years by occasion of the Dispensation for four years was laid aside But the Cure would never be perfect so long as Sheriffs held by Inheritance for it was easie to find new Deputies but not to lay down old Customs nor could it be lasting unless the penalties also had been annexed to the particular Crimes For a Sheriff before he is a year old by experience formerly had becomes too cunning for all these Laws and therefore Laws are made also against the ordinary corruption of these places such as are extorting of Fees false making of Juries false returns of Writs c. and damages in such cases given to the party wronged and when all is done he is not trusted with taking of Indictments Thus with much ado a Sheriff is made a tolerable Officer and his place by degrees so hedged in that what was in former times hard to pluck up is now become hard to set CHAP. XXI Of Justices and Laws concerning the Peace THE faint Title of Henry the Fourth to the Crown made him ever tender of the Civil Peace without breach whereof he was sure to be quiet in the Throne He undertook not this work by any superlative power from and by himself but useth the help of the Parliament and Laws wherein he was industrious pretending love of Unity amongst his people which nevertheless he liked not unless in order to quiet between himself and them The former way of Justices of Peace he followed close reducing the persons to their ancient qualifications The most sufficient persons Inhabitants in the County worth at least twenty pound yearly unless they be Lawyers or such as are Justices in Corporations Nor is the King troubled or trusted with the naming or electing of these men but the Chancellor or the Kings Council so as now by Law the King can neither be Justice nor make Justice Jure proprio but as his interest with the Council is more or less prevalent and that power that first gave it to the Crown the same power took it away or imparted and placed it else where But as touching the Work or Power of the Justices themselves it grew exceedingly much whereof was only of enquiry and to make Certificates as of Heresie Treason Falshood of Sheriffs c. But more of Oyer and Terminer as in case of Watches deceitfulness in Trades as of making Arrow-heads guilding of Metal
tanning of Leather imbasing of Silver selling of Waxen Images and Pictures c. For the superstition of these times was such as these petty Gods were not set at so high a price by the Seller but a higher price by the Buyer The Parliament therefore set a true value of them viz. For the Wax so much as the Wax is worth by weight and but four pence for the godhead So as it seems the Parliament was not very superstitious in their House whatever they were at Church Furthermore the Justices of the Peace had power to punish deceit in Measures Weights Forcible Entries and Detainers In many of which cases the penalty being Fine and Imprisonment became a snare to many of the Justices especially such as were of the greater and higher rank who having Castles of their own under colour of Justice imprisoned Delinquents in their own Castles and ransomed them at their own pleasure which proved a great oppression to the people and occasioned a Law that no Justice should commit any Delinquent to other than the County-Gaol saving Franchises to the Lords Those times are happy when Justice waits not altogether at Court but grows up in the Fields and Justices of Peace as the Kings Arms upon the Royal Mace are terrible onely to the bad and not as they are pictured before an Ale-house-door to invite men to transgress The Laws for the preservation of the peace concern either punishment of Crimes committed or prevention of them from being committed There is a succession of crimes as of Men and Ages because the Scripture tells us that the hearts of all are fashioned alike yet it is with generations as with men some incline to some crimes more than other and that is the reason that the title Treason sometimes is set forth in Folio sometimes in a lesser Volume It is evident is Story that the violent times of Richard the Second had raised the value of that amongst other offences above measure not long before his time his Father had reduced that wild notion of Treason to a certain rule that formerly wandred in a Wilderness of opinions But Henry the Fourth either to save his own stake or to take the people or both reduced it again to the Statute-rule of Edward the Third and made void that Statute of his Predecessors which had made a former Act of Parliament and all the service thereby done Treason The Dimensions of Treason thus clearly limned and declared taught ill-disposed minds to keep out of the Letter and yet to be bold with the Scene Counterfeit Money they durst not yet to diminish the same they thought came not within the Circle and so it became a common grievance till a Law was made That all purposed impairing of Money should be Treason And so the Parliament held forth to all men that they had a power to declare Treason without the bounds of the Statute of Edward the Third The like power it held forth in the time of Henry the Sixth for men knew that Burglary and Robbery were mortal crimes they would no more of that now they devise a way to spoil and prey for themselves and yet neither to rob nor break House To this end they would scatter little Scrolls in writing requiring the party that they intended to prey upon to leave so much money upon such a day at such a place and this was Sub poena of burning the parties House and Goods which many times did ensue upon default made This practice was at once made Treason to prevent the growth of such an evil And the like was done with Robberies and Manslaughters contrary to the Kings Truce and safe-conduct As many or more new Felonies were also now created One was the cutting out of mens Tongues and plucking out of Eyes a strange cruelty And that shewed the extream savageness of those times so much the more intolerable by how much the poor tortured creature could hardly be either Eye or Ear-Witness of the truth of his own wrong A second Felony was the customary of carrying of Wool or Wool-fells out of the Realm to other places except Calis Another Felony concerneth Souldiers which I refer over to the next Chapter The last was Servants plundering their Masters Goods and absenting themselves if upon Proclamation made they appear not this was also made Felony In the next place as touching Forcible Entries and Riots the remedies so often inculcated and new dressed shew plainly the nature of the times These kind of crimes commonly are as the light Skirmishes in the beginning of a War and follow in the Conclusion also as the faintings of a Battle fought till both sides be weary I shall not enter into each particular Statute divers of them being little other than as asseverations annexed to a Sentence to add credit and stir up minding in men that otherwise would soon forget what is said or done The remedies formerly propounded are now resined and made more effectual First In regard of speed which is as necessary in these forces as the stopping of the breaches of Waters in the first act and therefore one Justice of the Peace may proceed upon a holder by force or breaker of the Peace with a Continuando but Riots are looked upon as more dangerous and the first opposition had need be more stiff lest being uneffectual it aggravate the violence and therefore it is required that two Justices and the Sheriff should joyn in the work to carry on the work with more Authority and Power And what they cannot do in the punitive part they must certifie to the King and his Council or to the Kings Bench if Traverse be made So as though the power of the County be annexed to the Sheriff Jure ordinario to maintain the Peace yet the Parliament did delegate the same upon Justices as it thought most expedient To maintain and recover the Peace when it is broken shews more Power but to prevent the breach shews more Wisdom and therefore to all the rest the Wisdom of these Times provideth carefully First For Guards and Watches according to the Statute at Wint. and committed the care thereof to the Justices of the Peace And Secondly Against the gendring of parties for it is commonly seen that such as the admired for excellencies of person are so far idolized of some as that their Gestures Actions and Opinions are observed Tokens of favour though never so small are desired from such and the Idol likes it well gives Points Ribbons it may be Hats and with these men are soon gained to be Servants in the fashion and not long after to be Servants in Action be it War or Treason or any other way This manner of cheat the former times had been too well acquainted with Knights and Esquires are not to be feared in times where the word Lord carries the wonderment away their offences against the Statutes of
that Prince that will keep Guards about his Person in the midst of his own people may as well double them into the pitch of an Army whensoever he pleases to be fearful and so turn the Royal power of Law into force of Arms. But it was the French fashion and the King 's good hope to have all taken in the best sence His Title setting aside the saying of Philip the Hardy That Kingdoms onely belong to them that can get them would hardly endure the touch till Pope Innocent by his Bull confirmed the Crown to him to hold by a six-fold right Viz. Of Inheritance of War of Espousals of Election of Gift by Parliament and lastly of Pontifical Benediction which the King liked marvelous well and the rather because his Title by Marriage was buried up in the middle and so made the less noise For though it was his best guard yet he liked not that it should be so reputed lest his Title should seem rather conferred upon him than gained by him and so should hold by a Woman or at the best by the courtesie of England if the Peoples favour should so far extend the Law in that point by both which he holds the honour of a compleat King diminished His Title by Inheritance is much disputable if the right Heirs of John of Gaunt be enquired after And much more that of War for although that brought the Possession yet no right or Title but by wrong which may indeed be plaistered over by Election or Act of Parliament but then he must be Tenant to the People As touching the Pontifical Benediction himself took that but as a redundancy that might sway with the Clergie and do his Title no hurt Nevertheless what severally they cannot do by joynt concurrence he accounts so fully done as if he were a King against all the World and more Yet is he not sure enough but as one jealous is more tender so is his eye ever upon his Title there is his guard and regard as if it were the outworks of his Crown which once lost the Crown cannot hold out long In this work he minded so much his Greatness that he lost the repute of his Goodness Then casting his eye upon the Government and finding it of a mixt temper wherein if Royalty prevails not Popularity will like a good Souldier whilst his strength is full he sallies upon the peoples liberties in regard of their persons with such cunning conveyance as he taught the People to dance more often and better to the tune of Prerogative and Allegiance than all his Predecessors had done Nor did the People perceive it till they were over their Shoes and then they clearly saw their condition and that it was in vain for them to wrangle with their own acts of which more particularly in the next Chapter The Legiance of persons of the People once gained their Estates more easily follow And therefore though in the former he wrought by Ambuscado in this he may be more brave and charge them in the Van. Yet this he did also by degrees first by light skirmishes of borrowing smaller sums of money possibly when he had no need and paying them again thereby to gain credit for greater sums of which he intended not so sudden return Then he charges them home with Benevolences a trick gained in right of his Wife from her Father for he hoped that the person of Richard the Third was now become so abominable as his Laws would be the less regarded But in this course he gained nothing but Wind. Then as Edward the Fourth he falls upon Malevolences of Penal Laws things made in terrorem to scare men to obedience rather than to compel them but are now executed Ad angorem and the people find that he is but a word and a blow with them and thus serving his Prerogative with Power and his Purse with his Prerogative he made all serve his own turn Humanitatem omnem vincente periculo In the Field he always put his Wisdom in the Van for as he was parsimonious in expences of Money so much rather of Bloud if he could prevail by Wit. Generally he was the first in Arms to make men believe he was more ready to fight than they Thus he many times gained the advantage of his Adversaries and sometimes came off without blows In the Battle he did put on courage as he did his Armour and would dare to adventure just as far as a General should as if he had ever regard of his Crown rather than of the honour of a forward Souldier which nevertheless was also so dear to him as he is seldom found in the Rear although his Judgement commanded in chief rather than his Courage In the Throne he is much more wise because he was willing it should be known In doing Justice he is seldom suspected unless where himself is party and yet then he is also so shame-faced as he would ever either stalk behind some Law that had a semblance to his ends or when he meant to step out of the way he would put his Ministers before not so much that his fineness might be known but his Royalty For the Lion hunts not its own prey nor is it Regal for a King to be seen in catching of Money though he be understood Besides it was needless he had Lords Bishops Judges and other instruments of malevolent aspects as so many Furies outwardly resembling men for the Commonwealth but working for the common mischief like some Pictures one way looking right and another way looking wrong And thus the King comes lawfully by what he catched though his instruments did not and must be still holden for a good King though it be his hard hap to have ill servants Take him now amongst the people he is alike to all yea in some things that might seem to brush upon the King 's own train for he had some of his suit that were not altogether of his mind and these he would spare to the course of Justice if need were As it befel in the case of the Duke of Suffolk whom he suffered to be tried at the Kings Bench-bar for a Murder done upon a mean person and by such means obtained the repute of a zealous Justiciar as if Justice had been his principal vertue All this suited well with his main end for he that will milk his Cattle must feed them well and it encourages men to gather and lay up when they have Law to hold by what they have His Religion I touch upon in the last place as most proper to his temper for it was the last in his thought though many times the first in the acting But where it stood in his way he turned it behind him he made Church-men his instruments that the matter might better relish for who will expect ought save well from men of Religion and then if the worst come he was but misled by such as in common reason ought
first submission even unto Edward the First they were summoned unto Parliament and had vote there but onely in order to the Interests of their own Country now and henceforth they possess one and the same vote as English men Secondly as Courts and Judicatories multiplied so some also of those that were ancient enlarged their Jurisdiction especially such of them as most nighly related to Prerogative Amongst others the Privy Council leads the way who now began to have too much to do in a double capacity one at the Council-Table the other at the Star Chamber For now their power began to be diversly considered In their first capacity they had too much of the affairs of the Common-Pleas in the latter they had too much of the Crown-Pleas both of them serving rather to scare men from doing wrong than to do any man right And therefore though some men might seem to have some recompence yet the greatest gain fell to the King and his Courtiers and thus became Majesty or State or Prerogative to be more feared than beloved What the power of the Council was formerly hath already been manifested that which both these Kings conspired in and whereby they gained more power over the people than all their Predecessors was this that other Kings stood too much upon their own Legs these leaned much upon the Lords and gained the Lords to stick close to them and in this they had both the Kings Love and the Peoples Leave who now disjoynted upon several Interests especially that of Religion must be contented to let go that which they had no heart to hold And thus they obtained a Judicatory power over the people like that of great men whose censures are commonly above capacity and not like to that of the Peers This was begun in Henry the Seventh's time who taking occasion to complain of corruption and neglect in ordinary Trials of the Common Law gets the people to yield to the Council or some of them a power of Oyer and Terminer by examination upon Bill or information in matters concerning Maintenance Liveries Retainders Embraceries corruption in Sheriffs and Juries Riots and unlawful Assemblies crimes all of them of the same bloud with Rebellion which the King as much hated as the thought of his Title to the Crown and therefore would have it feared as much as the punishment by such a mighty power and a Trial of a dreadful nature could effect A Trial I say wherein both the guilty and the guiltless adventure their whole Estates against the edge of the arbitrary wills of great men of unknown Interests in an unknown way at unknown places having no other assurance how or when to come off but a Proclamation to tell the people that the King above all things delighted in Justice A bitter Pill this was for the people to swallow yet it was so artificially composed that at the first taste it gave a pretty rellish the King delights in Justice the Chancellour hath his Conscience the Archbishop brings Religion the Judges bring Law so as it is probable nothing will be done but according to Justice Conscience Religion and Law a very fair mixture but that there was a Treasurer in the case Yet the success answered not expectation the persons offended were many times inferiour and their Estates not great the Offenders more mean and of desperate fortunes for great men were too wise to try this new way or to taste of their entertainment Therefore within nine years the Judges of Assize are betrusted with all and that Court so continued for as many years more and then the King marked out one crime amongst the rest for his own tooth belonging to the great men onely for they are onely to commit the crime and to give recompence suitable to the King's Appetite It is giving of Liveries and Retainders a sore evil in the eyes of a jealous King tending to draw the inferiour sort to honour and admire and be of the suit of those of the greater sort and then beware the Crown These therefore must be tried before the King himself and his Council that he may know whom he is to fear and of whom to take heed And hereupon is a strange power given to summon upon a meer Suspicion To proceed without Information To examine the Defendant upon Oath and make him his own accuser To punish according to discretion by Fine and Imprisonment And thus the King and his Council have gotten a power under colour of Liveries and Retainders to bring the whole Kingdom to be of their Livery or else they can suspect whom they please apprehend whom they suspect put him presently to the rack of confession and so into Prison till he hath satisfied both displeasure and jealousie and covetousness it self Never was England before now in so low a degree of thraldom bound under a double knot of self-accusing and arbitrary censure and this out-reached not onely in matters meerly Civil tending to the common Peace but was intruded also into matters Ecclesiastical in order to the peace of the Church All bound unto the good Behaviour both in Body and Soul under peril of loss of all that a man hath dear to him in this world The plot of all this was laid by Henry the Seventh and was followed by Henry the Eighth who put that into practice which his Father had in design being led thereto by such a skilful Guide as Cardinal Wolsey was who though of mean Birth yet of a Spirit above a King and equal to the Popedom strained the string of Prerogative to its utmost height and then taught the King to play thereon which he did after his blunt manner till his dying day And thus though the Clergie are brought a peg lower and the Nobility advanced higher yet was it the policy of these Kings to make them all of their own Livery and Retaindership to keep them in an upper region looking on the poor Commons at a distance far below and well it was for the Commons thus to be till the influence of these blazing Stars grew cooler CHAP. XXXII Of the Militia IT may fall within the verge of Opinion that the guilty Title of Henry the Seventh to the Crown of England gauled his mind with jealousie the greatest part of his Reign Whether it were that he had not declared himself so fully upon his Title by his Wife or that as yet he feared some unknown Plantagenet would arise and put his Crown to the question This made him skilful in the point of Fortification wherein he likewise spent the greatest part of his Reign not so much by force of Arms for he cared not much for that noise well knowing that Peace is the safer condition for a King that comes in by power but principally by way of gaining Concessions and acknowledgement from the Subjects a Musick that he much delighted to hear well knowing it would conclude those amongst them that knew too much
men of so high accomplishment And by this means Lordship once bringing therewith both Authority and Power unto Kings before Kings grew jealous of their greatness in these latter days is become a meer Jelly and neither able to serve the interest of Kings if the people should bestir themselves nor their own any longer Henceforth the Commons of England are no mean persons and their Representative of such concernment as if Kings will have them to observe him he must serve them with their Liberties and Laws and every one the publick good of the people No man's work is beneath no man 's above it the best honour of the Kings work is to be Nobilis servitus as Antigonus said to his Son or in plain English Supream Service above all and to the whole I now conclude wishing we may attain the happiness of our Forefathers the ancient Saxons Quilibet contentus sorte propria A VINDICATION Of the ancient way of PARLIAMENTS In ENGLAND THe more Words the more Faults is a divine Maxime that hath put a stop to the publishing of this Second Part for some time but observing the ordinary humour still drawing off and passing a harsher Censure upon my intentions in my First Part than I expected I do proceed to fulfil my course that if Censure will be it may be upon better grounds when the whole matter is before Herein I shall once more mind that I meddle not with the Theological Right of Kings or other Powers but with the Civil Right in Fact now in hand And because some mens Pens of late have ranged into a denial of the Commons ancient Right in the Legislative power and others even to adnul the Right both of Lords and Commons therein resolving all such power into that one principle of a King Quicquid libet lìcet so making the breach much wider than at the beginning I shall intend my course against both As touching the Commons Right joyntly with the Lords it will be the main end of the whole but as touching the Commons Right in competition with the Lords I will first endeavour to remove out of the way what I find pulished in a late Tractate concerning that matter and so proceed upon the whole The subject of that Discourse consisteth of three parts one to prove that the ancient Parliaments before the thirteenth Century consisted onely of those whom we now call the House of Lords the other that both the Legislative and Judicial Power of the Parliament rested wholly in them Lastly that Knights Citizens and Burgesses of Parliament or the House of Commons were not known nor heard of till punier times than these This last will be granted viz. That their several Titles of Knights Citizens and Burgesses were not known in Parliament till of latter times Nevertheless it will be insisted upon that the Commons were then there The second will be granted but in part viz. That the Lords had much power in Parliament in point of Jurisdiction but neither the sole nor whole The first is absolutely denied neither is the same proved by any one instance or pregnant ground in all that Book and therefore not clearly demonstrated by Histories and Records beyond contradiction as the Title-page of that Book doth hold forth to the World. First because not one instance in all that Book is exclusive to the Commons and so the whole Argument of the Discourse will conclude Ab Authoritate Negativa which is no Argument in humane testimony at all Secondly The greatest number of instances in that Book are by him supposed to concern Parliaments or General Councils of this Nation holden by the Representative thereof whereas indeed they were either but Synodical Conventions for Church-matters whereunto the poor Commons he well knoweth might not come unless in danger of the Canons dint or if they did yet had they no other work there than to hear learn and receive Laws from the Ecclesiasticks And the Lords themselves though present yet under no other Notion were they than as Counsel to the King whom they could not cast out of their Council till after-ages though they often endeavoured it Thirdly The Author of that Tractate also well knoweth that Kings usually made Grants and Infeodations by advice of the Lords without the aid of the Parliament And it is no less true that Kings with the Lords did in their several Ages exercise ordinarily Jurisdiction in cases of distributive Justice especially after the Norman entrance For the step was easie from being Commanders in War to be Lords in Peace but hard to lay down that power at the Foot of Justice which they had usurped in the rude times of the Sword when men labour for Life rather than Liberty and no less difficult to make a difference between their deportment in commanding of Souldiers and governing of Countrymen till Peace by continuance had reduced them to a little more sobriety Nor doth it seem irrational that private differences between Party and Party should be determined in a more private way than to trouble the whole Representative of the Kingdom with matters of so mean concernment If then those Councils mentioned by the Author which concern the King's Grants and Infeodations and matters of Judicature be taken from the rest of the Precedents brought by him to maintain the thing aimed at I suppose scarce one Stone will be left for a Foundation to such a glorying Structure as is pretended in the Title-page of that Book And yet I deny not but where such occasions have befaln the Parliament sitting it hath closed with them as things taken up by the way Fourthly It may be that the Author hath also observed that all the Records of Antiquity passed through if not from the hands of the Clergie onely and they might think it sufficient for them to honour their Writings with the great Titles of men of Dignity in the Church and Commonwealth omitting the Commons as not worthy of mention and yet they might be there then present as it will appear they were in some of the particular instances ensuing to which we come now in a more punctual consideration The first of these by his own words appear to be a Church-mote or Synod it was in the year 673 called by the Archbishop who had no more power to summon a Parliament than the Author himself hath And the several Conclusions made therein do all shew that the People had no work there as may appear in the several Relations thereof made by Matthew Westminster and Sir Henry Spelman an Author that he makes much use of and therefore I shall be bold to make the best use of him that I can likewise in vindicating the truth of the point in hand For whatever this Council was it is the less material seeing the same Author recites a Precedent of Aethelbert within six years after Austin's entry into this Island which was long before this Council which bringeth on the Van of all the rest of
the Kings hand against the Subjects a snare to the Kingdom and had not the Wittagenmote in their meeting allayed those distempers the Saxon-government had been little other than a Commonwealth reversed CHAP. XXII Of the manner of the Saxons Government in time of War. AS the condition of States or Kingdoms are diversly considered in War and Peace so also must their Government be For however War in it self be but a feaverish Distemper in a Commonwealth yet in some cases it is as necessary as a kindly Ague in due season is for the preservation of the Body which many times takes distemper rather from the excellency of its constitution than from the abundance of humours Nor did the temper of the Saxon Commonwealth ever shine more than in War while it set a Law upon that which ordinarily is master of all mis-rule and confusion and so fought by rule rather than by passion Their Chief in the first times was chosen by the Freemen in the Field either at the Wittagenmote or the Folkmote according to the extent of his command being carried upon a Shield born upon their shoulders like as now Knights of the Shire are This Emblem they entertained him with to declare their trust in him and the work that was expected from him His first title was Heretock afterwards he was called Duke or Dux the latter whereof turned to a bare Title in the conclusion but the former maintained its own honour so long as the name lasted After his election all sware to be at his order and not to forsake him This was a trick of imbased times for though the Lacedemonian Law was positive that none should flie or break his Rank but get the Victory or die yet were they neither bound by Oath or Penalty shame in those times being accounted worse than death by those brave minds But times growing more old grew also more base-spirited and men could not be drawn into the field holden in Rank by Oaths or Honour and this occasioned that Law of Ina the Saxon King that in such case a Country-Gentleman should be fined One hundred and twenty shillings if he were landed but if otherwise Sixty shillings and the Yeoman Thirty shillings and afterwards the penalty was increased to the forfeiture of all the estate of the Delinquent In their Wars they went forth by bodies collectively as they were united by the law of pledges this made them stick close together for the honour of their Families and Friends and rendered their encounters mortal and to the worsted party commonly fatal for once beaten in the field they could hardly recover either by rallying or gathering a new Army Probable it is that the Lords might have their Villains to follow them in the Battle but the strength consisted of the Freemen and though many were bound by tenure to follow their Lords to the Wars and many were Voluntiers yet it seems all were bound upon call under peril of Fine and were bound to keep Arms for the preservation of the Kingdom their Lords and their own persons and these they might neither pawn nor sell but leave them to descend to their Heirs and in default of them to their Lord and in default of him to their chief pledge and for want of such to the King. They mustered their Arms once every year both in Towns and Hundreds viz. the morrow after Candlemas and such whose bodies were unfit for service were to find sufficient men for service in their stead They were strict in their Discipline if they followed their rule which was made not by the arbitry of the General but by Parliament These amongst other scattered principles concerning Sea-affairs may serve to let us know that the Law-martial and that of the Sea were branches of the positive Laws of the Kingdom setled by the general Vote in the Wittagenmote and not left to the will of a lawless General or Commander so tender and uniform were those times both in their Laws and Liberties CHAP. XXIII Of the Government of the Saxon Kingdom in times of peace and first of the division of the Kingdom into Shires and their Officers IF the Saxon Government was regular in time of War how much rather in time of peace All great works are done by parcels and degrees and it was the Saxons ancient way in Germany to divide their Territory into several Circuits or Circles and to assign to each their several Magistrates all of them ruled by one Law like one soul working in several Members to one common good Thus they did here in England having found the Land already divided into several parts called Comitatus or Counties from the word Comes that signifies a Companion and the Counties thence called are nothing but Societies or Associations in publick charge and service But the Saxon word is Shire or Share that is a portion or precinct of ground belonging to this or that person or great Town and bearing the name of that person or Town and sometimes of the scituation of the people as North or South folk East or South Sex or Saxons This division by the names seems to be of Saxon original and though by the testimony of Ingulfus and other Writers it might seem to be done by Alfred yet it will appear to be more ancient if the Reader mind the grant of Peter-pence made by King Offa wherein is recorded the several Diocesses and Shires out of which that grant was made under the very same names that they own at this day and that was more ancient than Alfreds time by the space of eighty years Each of these Shires or Counties had their two chief Governours for distributive justice of these the Sheriff was more ancient and worthy Officer being the Lieutenant and aided by the power of the County in certain cases for his Commission extended not to leavy War but to maintain Justice in that County and within the same and in this work he was partly ministerial and partly judicial in the one he was the Kings Servant to execute his Writs in the other he regulated the Courts of Justice under his Survey He was chosen in the County-Court called the Folkmote by the Votes of the Freeholders and as the King himself and the Heretock were intituled to their honour by the peoples favour The Coroner though in original later was nevertheless very ancient he was the more Servant or Officer to the King of the two His work was to enquire upon view of Manslaughter and by Indictment of all Felonies as done contra Coronam which formerly were only contra Pacem and triable only by appeal And also he was to enquire of all Escheats and Forfeitures and them to seize He was also to receive appeals of Felonies and to keep the rolls of the Crown-pleas within the County It 's evident he was an Officer in Alfreds time for that King put a Judge to death for
make a Law somewhat short of a full freedom and yet outreaching that of Bondage which we since have commended to posterity under the Forest-Charter And yet for all that it proved a hard matter for Kings to hunt by Law and the Law it self is a Yoke somewhat too heavy for a Commonwealth to bear in old age if self-denying Majesty shall please to take it away CHAP. XXXV Concerning Judges in Courts of Justice THus far of the several Tribes and numbers of this Commonwealth which like so many Conduit-heads derived the influence of Government through the whole body of this Island and in every of which Judiciary power acted it self in all Causes arising within the verge of that Precinct some of which had more extraordinary trial before the King and his Council of Lords according as the parties concerned were of greater degree or the Cause of more publick concernment Examples hereof are the Cases between the Bishop of Winchester and Leoftin in Aetheldred's time and between the two Bishops of Winchester and Durham in Edward's time But custom made this Court stoop to smaller game in latter times and to reach at the practice of the County-Court by sending the Kings Writs to remove certain Causes from the cognizance of those rural Judicatories to their sublime determination And thus became the Council of Lords as an Oracle to the whole Nation and the King amongst the rest as the Priest that many times rendred the Answer or Sentence of that Oracle in his own sense and had it confirmed to him by an Oath se judicium rectum in Regno facturum justitiam per concilium procerum regni sui tenturum so as though he was the first in view yet the Council of Lords was the first in nature and the Cynosure to direct his tongue and actions From this Fountain issued also streams of Judicature into all parts by Judges itinerant under the Kings Commission to reform errors punish defaults in the ordinary rural Judicatories and to dissolve hard and knotty Cases and these were occasioned at the instance of the party and Alfred whose birth this was sent them forth in way of Association with the Sheriff Lord of the Fee or other ordinary Magistrate CHAP. XXXVI Of the Proceedings in Judicature by Indictment Appeal Presentment and Action FOr the proceedings in course the Saxons were wont to begin with matters belonging to the Church and afterward to Secular causes in which if the matters were criminal the most ancient way of proceeding was by Appeal of the party complaining But afterward in cases that concerned Damage Injury or Violence done to the Body of a man or his Estate the King was found to be therein prejudiced besides the prejudice immediately done to the Subject for a man disabled in Body or Estate is disabled to serve the King and the Publick and upon this ground a way was found out to punish the offender by Indictment besides the satisfaction done to the party wronged The proceedings against such Delinquents were by attachment of the party who thereupon gave Pledges for his appearance If the party could not be found a fugam fecit was returned and that was a conviction in Law and pursuit was made after the party by Huy and Cry. If he was thereby taken the ancient way was that of Hallifax-Law but in latter times he was imprisoned or admitted to Bail if the offences were bailable and if the party bailed made default or did not abide the Trial his Bail suffered as Principal If no Bail could be procured the Delinquent was imprisoned till he was legally acquitted but this imprisonment was only in nature of restraint If the Delinquent was found upon the Huy and Cry and would not yield himself he was in repute a common Enemy and as a Wolf any man might kill him as the Law was also the same in case of Vtlary At the time of tryal if at the Kings suit the Delinquent was indicted in this manner by any party present I D. C. do say for the King that I. S. is defamed by good men that he upon day of c. into the House and Goods of did cast fire and the same did burn or if it were for Bloodshed with a Sword did strike and wound him in the left arm and that this was done Feloniously or if the case required Traiterously and if I. S. deny the same I will for the King prove the matter against him as the King ought to do that is to say by Witnesses and Twelve men But if the complaint was at the suit of the party then the Prosecutor sued him upon Appeal in manner following I. C. appealeth D. H. here present for that E. Father Brother Son or Vncle according as the case was to I. C. being in the peace of God and of our Soveraign Lord the King at the dwelling house of E. at c. the said D. H. upon the day of in the year of with a Sword made a Wound of two inches long and six inches deep in the left pap of the body of the said E. whereof he died and this was done Feloniously and of Malice forethought And if the said D. H. shall deny the same the said I. C. is ready to prove the same against him in his body or as a Monk Woman or Clerk behoveth to prove the same that is by Champion for neither Monk Woman nor Clerk was by Law to justifie by Battle in their own person The several causes of Appeal and Indictment may be found in the Law-books to whom I refer the Reader it not being within the compass of this Discourse to fall upon the particulars I shall onely observe the difference between Indictments former and latter and between them and Appeals viz. that Appeals are positive Accusations in the name of the Prosecutor of the fact done by the party appealed whereas Indictments were onely a publication or affirmation of the same of a fact done by the party indicted and wherein Not guilty pleaded served onely as in nature of a Quere to usher in the votes of the Freemen concerning the fact Secondly the difference between former Indictments from these in these days consists in this that the ancient Indictments were in the name of one man those of the later sort are in the name of the Jury and the former were onely of a same the later of the fact A third way of bringing Controversies unto judgement concerned onely such matters as were of less consequence and these were introduced by way of Presentment in the name or behalf of the King in nature of a positive Accusation of one for a Crime first laid down generally and then asserted by a particular fact in this manner I say for our Soveraign Lord the King That H. here is perjured and hath broken saith against the King because whereas H. is or was Chancellour of the King and was
be a loser by so well-deserving service as in those days that was accounted Nevertheless the English look upon Henry as the fitter man for their turn being now at hand and Robert at Jerusalem and being a native born in England civilized into the English garb by education and of a wiser and fairer demeanour and more inclining to peaceable Government which both Normans and English much inclined to as being weary of thirty years service in the Wars And therefore it is not marvellous if they applied themselves to him in a way of capitulation and less wonderful if he hearkned thereunto and yet neither unadvisedly yielded unto by him nor traiterously propounded by them as some in zeal to Monarchy conclude the point The worst of the whole matter resting in this that the King bound himself to be just that he might be great and the people to submit unto Justice that they might be free like as their Ancestors were and themselves by the Law established ought to be For the capitulation was in substance setled by the ancient Laws of the Saxons mixed with some additions of Laws made by the Kings Father with the joynt advice of the grand Council of the Kingdom all which both the Norman Williams had often confirmed by solemn protestations and promises however their actions upon sudden surprisal were malae consuetudines and exactiones injustae by this Kings own acknowledgment Thus these three Norman Kings made their way to the Throne the first by Arms under colour of Title the second by a kind of Title under colour of Arms and the last by favour but all entred the same by capitulation election and stipulation and for the general had some regard to suit their course in order of retaining the good will of their people although in a different measure according to the differency of occasions CHAP. XLVI That the Government of the Normans proceeded upon the Saxon principles and first of Parliaments THE principles which I mean are these First the Legislative power and influence thereof upon the whole Secondly the Members of that Government with their several motions Thirdly the Laws and Customs or Rules of those Motions And first concerning the Legislative power Although it be true that the first Williams great and most constant labour was to have and to hold and had but little time or liberty to enjoy yet that time of rest which he had did apply it and himself in the setling of the Laws by the advice of Common-council I say not by advice of his own heart or two or three Norman Lords or of the Norman Nobility only as some men take the confidence to aver as if they had been eye-witnesses to the actions of those days but by the joynt advice of the grand-Council of the Lords and wise men of the Kingdom of England I will not insist upon force of argument to shew that common reason must of necessity sway the King into this course but shall reserve that to another place the testimonies of Writers must now serve the turn and herein the testimony of the Chronicle of Lichfield must have the first place which speaks both of a Council of Lords and saith that by their advice he caused to be Summoned a meeting of all the Nobles and wise men through all the Counties of England to set down their Laws and Customs This was in the fourth year of his Reign or rather after his entry and as soon as the Kingdom was brought into any reasonable posture of quiet and which besides the intention of governing the Kingdom according unto Law doth strongly pretend that the Parliament had the Legislative power and right of cognizance and judicature in those Laws that concerned the Kingdom in general and for the particular Laws or Customs of several places or Precincts it was referred to a Committee or Jury in every County to set them forth upon Oath Secondly that this Council had power to change Laws may likewise appear in that Act made concerning the introduction of the Canon-Law which shews not only the power of that Council in Church-matters but also that the Canon was no further in force than the same would allow and this was also done by Common council and the Council of the Archbishops Bishops Abbots and all the Princes of the Kingdom which connexion shews plainly that there was a Council besides that of the Prelates and Princes Thirdly in matters of general charge upon the whole body of the people the King used also the help of this Grand-council as may especially appear in the charge of Arms imposed upon the Subjects which was said to be done by the Common council of the whole Kingdom as is witnessed even by the Kings own Law. It may seem also that the grand Officers of the State were elected by such grand assembly of the wise men for we find that Lanfrank was elected to the See of Canterbury by the assent of the Lords and Prelates and of the whole people that is by the Parliament of England and as probable it is that Bishops were therein also elected for that the Bishop of Lichfield resigned his Bishoprick in such like Assembly if the meaning of Lanfrank be rightly understood who saith in his Letter that it was in conventu Episcoporum atque Laicorum Lastly that one Law of the Kings which may be called the first Magna Charta in the Norman times by which the King reserved to himself from the free-men of this Kingdom nothing but their free service in the conclusion saith that their Lands were thus granted to them in inheritance of the King by the Common-council of the whole Kingdom and so asserts in one the liberty of the free-men and of the representative body of the Kingdom These footsteps of the Parliament find we in the Conquerors time besides other more general intimations scattered amongst the Historians which may induce opinion to its full strength that this King however Conqueror he was yet made use of this additional power of Parliament to perfect his designs and it may be more often than either of his Sons that yet had less pretence of superlative power to countenance their proceedings William Rufus was a man of resolution no whit inferiour if not surpassing his Father and had wit enough for any thing but to govern his desires which led him many times wild and might occasion conceit that he was almost a mad King though he were a witty man and therefore it is the less marvail if he used not the help of the Common-council more than needs must where Kings many times are told of that which they are loth to know Nevertheless William the second could not pass over thirteen years without a parley with his Commons and Clergy unless he meant to adventure a parley between them and his Brother Robert who like an Eagle eyed his posture though he hovered afar off But Henry the first was more wise
the Canon Robbery is finable The different Law between the Saxons Angles and Danes now by the Normans is setled in the more merciful way and in case the delinquent made flight the pledge satisfied the Law for him But in the latter times of Henry the first the Law was again reduced to the punishment of this crime by death and so hath continued There shall be true weights and measures throughout the Kingdom and those shall be sealed And this was the constant Saxon Law. Perjury to be punished by fine and as formerly still inquirable amongst the Crown-pleas CHAP. LI. The like of Laws that concern common interest of Goods IF Cattle be taken by Distress the party that will replevy them shall pay for the return of the Cattle and give security to bring the Distress into the Court if with within a year and a day it be demanded This Law I take to be intended where the Cattle are taken damage feasant because nothing shall release the Distress in other cases but obedience to the Summons No Distress ad comparendum shall be taken but after three several Summons and so many defaults made and in such case Distress shall issue by especial order from the County-court I noted this partly to shew the difference of the Normans from the Saxons in the delay of execution of Justice by so much mean process and partly to shew the difference between the Norman times and these days wherein mens Cattle lie open to the distress of every oppressing or extorting Bayliff or unknown person and no Summons made at all whereby many poor mens Estates are either undone or they must submit to the unjust demands of their adversary No manner of Goods of above four pence in value shall be bought unless in the presence of four Witnesses of the Town And the vendor shall satisfie out of his own Estate if the sale be not effectual and in case the vendor have no warrant for such Goods by him sold. No living Cattle shall be sold but onely in Cities and before three Witnesses nor shall any thing forbidden be sold without Warranty No Fairs or Markets shall be holden but onely in Cities Boroughs Wall'd-Towns and Castles These Laws concerning sales and Markets were ancient Saxon Laws and tend all to the avoiding of cheating men of their Cattle by surreptitious sale of them made by such as had no right Goods found shall be published by the Finder to the Neighbourhood and if any makes claim and proof of them to be his he shall have them giving security to bring them into the Court in case any other shall within a year and a day make his claim thereto The Children of persons intestete shall equally divide the Heritage This is in terminis the Saxon Law and therefore concerning it I shall refer to the same formerly recited onely I shall add hereto the Law of Henry the first which may serve as an explanation of the former Any Freeman may devise his Chattels by will and if he die intestate his Wife Children Parents or next kin shall divide the same for his Souls good The first branch whereof was ancient and doubtless in continual use but the iniquity of the Norman rude times was such that the Lords under surmise of arrears or relief would seize all the personal estate after the Tenant's death and so the right of last Wills was swallowed up but this restoreth the power of last Wills into it's place an● in case the party died intestate preserveth a kind of nature of descent although they be more personal Nor doth that last clause of the Souls good disanul the same although the words may seem to carry away the benefit to some other hand For the whole matter is left to the discretion of such as are next to the Intestate CHAP. LII Of Laws that concern common interest of Lands THe Laws that concern Lands and peculiarly belonging to the Normans are such as concern principally the tenure of Lands which if duly considered although savoured somewhat of the King yet little of the Conquerour For generally it must be granted that Tenures long before and after this time were as the services ordered according to the Will of the giver in which as the King had the greatest share and he the most publick person of all so were his Donations ordered chiefly to advance the publick service and in this regard the Tenure by Knight service might more principally challenge the King's regard than the regard of all the great men besides But this was not the sore yea rather it was the beauty and strength of the Kingdom and for which the King deserved an honourable name above most of his progenitors who had not so much Land to dispose of as he had and therefore could not advance that service in any proportion equal unto him The sore that caused so many sighs was the incumbrances raised upon this most noble and free service which through the evil of times by this means became the most burdensome and the onely loathed and abhorred service of all the rest I say through the evil of times for it cannot lodge in my thoughts but that in the Norman times the incumbrances were nothing so great as of latter Ages and that much hath been imputed to the Laws of the Conquerour which they never deserved as may appear in these particulars which the Laws of Henry the First have preserved in memory Tenant of the King or other Lord dying his Heir shall pay no other relief than what by Law is due That which by Law is due is set down in the Laws of William the Conquerour The Relief of an Earl. 8 Horses sadled and bridled 4 Helmets 4 Coats of Mail. 4. Shields 4 Spears 4 Swords 4 Chasers 1 Palfray bridled and sadled The Relief of a Baron 4 Horses with Saddles and Bridles 2 Helmets 2 Coats of Mail. 2 Shields 2 Spears 2 Swords 2 Chasers 1 Palfray bridled and sadled The Relief of a Vovasor to his Lord. His best Horse His Helmet His Coat of Mail. His Shield His Spear His Sword. Or if he had no Arms then he was to pay s. 100 The Relief of the Country-man is the best Beast that is in his possession and of him that farmeth his Lands a years rent These are the Reliefs due by Law and now setled in Goods or Arms but afterwards turned into Money and it is likely that the ill customs in the former times did extort both Money and Arms or such sums of Money as they pleased and by the very words of the Law it seems they had brought it to an Arbitrary power to take what they could get and yet all against Law. The Kings Tenant shall advise with the King in marriage of his Daughter Sister Niece or Kinswoman and his Widow in like manner The sence hereof in short is that these might
up higher as for them to stoop lower And however it was dangerous now for the Duke to try masteries unless he meant to hazard all and to change the substance for the shadow Lastly to lay them all aside and to take the Normans as in themselves considered a People under such Laws and Customs as were the same with the Saxon and originally in them and from them derived into Normandy by Rollo or some other or take them as a People willing to lay aside their own Law as some Writers affirm and more willing to take up the Danish customs which were also very nigh akin to theirs and in part setled by the Danes in that part of the Kingdom where themselves most resided It must be concluded that a Government by Law was intended and such a Law that was no way cross to the Fundamental Laws of this Kingdom but concurring therewith in every of which regards the future Generations may justly claim their Immunities as Successours and Heirs unto the Normans albeit no Saxon could have enjoyed or derived the same to Posterity A second sort of men that made the King uncapable to hold by Conquest was the Clergie a considerable part of the Kingdom in those days whenas in every Nation they grew checkmate and in this Kingdom had well-nigh the one half of the Knights fees and thereby a principal part of the strength of the Kingdom besides the Consciences of them all and for a Reserve they had the Pope in the rear whose power in every Kingdom was little inferiour to that of the King 's own and therefore sufficient to stop an absolute Conquest unless the Clergie were first conquered But the King came in upon great disadvantages in both these regards for whereas his pretence upon his entry was to advance Justice principally toward the Clergie who formerly were wronged by Harold or voiced so to be this bound him from Injustice and Oppression And furthermore the Pope had him in a double bond one as Prince of the English Clergie the other as Judge of the Title of the Crown by the King 's own Election and that by Sentence for the King had merited of him if not to hold the Crown it self by Fealty to the Roman See yet by such services as that the Tripple-Crown should be no loser The King therefore must resolve to have no more to do with the Church than will stand with the Pope's liking unless he meaned to adventure himself and all he had into the danger of the great Curse of which the King would seem more sensible than perhaps he was Nor were those times of the Church so moderate as to bring forth Church-men that would catch the good will of the Laity by condescention or Popes of that height of perfection as to part with one tittle of their great Titles much less ought of that pitch of power which they had griped though it would save the World from Ruine In all which regards the Norman Duke was too far inferiour to attain by Conquest any thing in this Kingdom wherein the Pope or Clergie claimed ought to have or do A third sort of People avoided the dint of Conquest either by timely siding with the Norman or by constant resisting of him or by neutrality Of the first sort were many both Lords and others that by affinity and consanguinity were become English-men to the Norman use others were purchased thereunto by the Clergie that were zealous for the Pope's honour that was engaged in the Work. Of those likewise that were resolute in the defence of the Liberty of their Country there were not a few that purchased their Liberty who otherwise might under pretence of Treachery have forfeited the same to the rapacious humour of the Conquerour And this was not done onely by Valour for Normandy stood in a tottering condition with their Duke partly drawn away by the French that feared the Duke would be too strong for them and partly declining their own further aid lest their Duke should be too great for the Dutchy It was therefore wisdom in the Conquerour to settle the English aflairs in the fairest way to gain them for himself who had been so brave against him But the greatest number especially of the Commons looked on while the game was playing as contented with the cast of the Dice whatever it should be These were afterwards by the King looked upon not as Enemies as the president of Edwin of Sharneburn witnesseth sufficiently but such as either were or by fair carriage would be made his friends and therefore he concluded them under a Law of assurance that they that had been so peaceable should have and enjoy their Lands as entirely and peaceably as they had formerly done before his entry To conclude therefore this point if these three parties of the English Normans the English Clergie the stout English and the peaceable English be set aside from the Title of Conquest it will be probable that not one tenth part of the Kingdom were ever under other change than of the Governour 's own person CHAP. LVI A brief Survey of the sence of Writers concernign the point of Conquest THE clamours in story that the Conquerour altered and made Laws at pleasure brought in new Customs molested the Persons and Estates of the People with Depopulations Extortions and Oppressions and others of that nature have made latter times to conclude his Government to be as of a Conquerour meerly arbitrary and that he did what he list How different this conclusion is from the intent of those Writers I know not but if the King's Title and Government was as a Conquerour then was his Will the onely Law and can administer no cause of complaint of wrong and oppression and therefore if these be taken in nature of complaints they declare plainly that there was a Law in Title or else there could have been no transgression or cause to complain But if the Reader shall apprehend these passages in Writers to be no other than sober Relations then were it not amiss to consider from what sort of men these Complaints or Relations do proceed viz. from Writers that have been cloystered men little seen in affairs of State more than by common report and rumour prejudiced by the King's displeasure against their Cloysters and therefore apprehensive of matters in the saddest sence and many times far beyond the truth and might as well be supposed to mis-relate as to mistake For if we shall touch upon particulars I think no man will deny but the King allowed property indifferently as well to Normans as English if the premises be rightly considered and therefore though somewhat be true of the plundering of houses of Religion persecuting of the English Nobility deposing of Bishops and Abbots whereof they speak yet all might be deservedly done in a legal way and in execution of Justice whereof Histories are not altogether silent Nevertheless if in the prosecution the King did
cases and of the Writ de cautione admittenda Persons cited and making default may be interdicted and the King's Officer shall compel him to obey If the King's Officer make default he shall be amerced and then the party interdicted may be excommunicated So as the Process in the Spiritual Courts was to be regulated according to Law. Nor did it lie in the power of such Courts to order their own way or scatter the censure of Excommunication according to their own liking This together with all those that forego the Arch-bishop upon his repentance absolutely withstood although he had twice consented and once subscribed to them having also received some kind of allowance thereof even from Rome it self Clergy-men holding per Baroniam shall do such services as to their Tenure belong and shall assist in the King's Court till judgement of Life or Member Two things are hereby manifest First that notwithstanding the Conquerour's Law formerly mentioned Bishops still sate as Judges in the King's Courts as they had done in the Saxon times but it was upon causes that merely concerned the Laity so as the Law of the Conquerour extended onely to separate the Laity out of the Spiritual-Courts and not the Clergie out of the Lay-Courts Secondly that the Clergie especially those of the greater sort questioned their services due by Tenure as if they intended neither Lord nor King but the Pope onely Doubtless the use of Tenures in those times was of infinite consequence to the peace of the Kingdom and government of these Kings whenas by these principally not onely all degrees were united and made dependant from the Lord paramount to the Tenant peravale but especially the Clergie with the Laity upon the Crown without which a strange metamorphosis in Government must needs have ensued beyond the shape of any reasonable conceit the one half almost of the people in England being absolutely put under the Dominion of a foreign power Sanctuary shall not protect forfeited Goods nor Clerks convicted or confessed This was Law but violence did both now and afterwards much obliterate it Churches holden of the King shall not be aliened without License It was an ancient Law of the Saxons that no Tenements holden by service could be aliened without License or consent of the Lord because of the Allegiance between Lord and Tenant Now there was no question but that Churches might lie in Tenure as well as other Tenements but the strife was by the Church-men to hold their Tenements free from all humane service which the King withstood Sons of the Laity shall not be admitted into a Monastery without the Lord's consent Upon the same ground with the former for the Lord had not onely right in his Tenant which could not be aliened without his consent but also a right in his Tenant's Children in regard they in time might by descent become his Tenants and so lie under the same ground of Law For although this be no alienation by legal purchase yet it is in nature of the same relation for he that is in a Monastery is dead to all worldly affairs These then are the rights that the King claimed and the Clergy disclaimed at the first although upon more sober consideration they generally consented unto the five last But their Captain-Archbishop Becket withstood the rest which cost him his life in the conclusion with this honourable testimony that his death Sampson-like effected more than his life For the main thing of all the rest the Pope gained to be friends for the loss of so great a stickler in the Church-affairs as Becket was In this Tragedy the Pope observing how the English Bishops had forsaken their Archbishops espied a muse through which all the game of the Popedom might soon escape and the Pope be left to sit upon Thorns in regard of his Authority here in England For let the Metropolitan of all England be a sworn servant to the Metropolitan of the Christian World and the rest of the English Bishops not concur it will make the Tripple Crown at the best but double Alexander the Pope therefore meaned not to trust their fair natures any longer but puts an Oath upon every English Bishop to take before their consecration whereby he became bound 1. To absolute allegiance to the Pope and Romish Church 2. Not to further by deed or consent any prejudice to them 3. To conceal their Counsels 4. To aid the Roman Papacy against all persons 5. To assist the Roman Legat. 6. To come to Synods upon Summons 7. To visit Rome once every three years 8. Not to sell any part of their Bishoprick without consent of the Pope And thus the English Bishops that formerly did but regard Rome now give their Estates Bodies and Souls unto her service that which remains the King of England may keep And well it was that it was not worse considering that the King had vowed perpetual enmity against the Pope But he wisely perceiving that the King's spirit would up again having thus gotten the main battle durst not adventure upon the King's rear lest he might turn head and so he let the King come off with the loss of Appeals and an order to annul the customs that by him were brought in against the Church which in truth were none This was too much for so brave a King as Henry the second to lose the scare-crow-power of Rome yet it befel him as many great spirits that favour prevails more with them than fear or power For being towards his last times worn with grief at his unnatural Sons a shadow of the kindness of the Pope's Legat unto him won that which the Clergy could never formerly wrest from him in these particulars granted by him that No Clerk shall answer in the Lay-courts but onely for the Forest and their Lay-fee This savoured more of courtesie than Justice and therefore we find not that the same did thrive nor did continue long in force as a Law although the claim thereof lasted Vacancies shall not be holden in the King's hand above one year unless upon case of necessity This seemeth to pass somewhat from the Crown but lost it nothing for if the Clergy accepted of this grant they thereby allow the Crown a right to make it and a liberty to determine its own right or continuing the same by being sole Judge of the necessity Killers of Clerks convicted shall be punished in the Bishops presence by the King's Justice In the licentious times of King Steven wherein the Clergy played Rex they grew so unruly that in a short time they had committed above a Hundred murthers To prevent this evil the King loth to enter the List with the Clergy about too many matters let loose the Law of feud for the friends of the party slain to take revenge and this cost the bloud of many Clerks The Laity haply being more industrious therein than otherwise they would have been
Circuit had six Justices which the King made Justices of the Common pleas throughout the Kingdom Neither yet did the first Commission continue so long as four years for within that time Richard Lucy one of the Justices had renounced his Office and betaken himself to a Cloister and yet was neither named in the first Commission nor in the latter nor did the last Commission continue five years for within that time Ralph Glanvil removed from the Northern Circuit to that of Worcester as by the story of Sir Gilbert Plumpton may appear though little to the honour of the justice of the Kingdom or of that Judge however his book commended him to posterity I take it upon the credit of the reporter that this itinerary judicature was setled to hold every Seven years but I find no monument thereof before these days As touching their power certainly it was in point of judicature as large as that of the Court of Lords though not so high It was as large because they had cognizance of all Causes both concerning the Crown and Common-pleas And amongst those of the Crown this onely I shall note that all manner of falshood was inquirable by those Judges which after came to be much invaded by the Clergie I shall say no more of this but that in their original these Iters were little other than visitations of the Country by the grand Council of Lords Nor shall I adde any thing concerning the Vicontiel Courts and other inferiour but what I find in Glanvil that though Robbery belonged to the King's Court yet Thefts belonged to the Sheriff's Court and if the Lords Court intercepts not all batteries and woundings unless in the complaint they be charged to be done contra pacem Domini Regis the like also of inferiour Trespasses besides Common-pleas whereof more shall follow in the next Chapter as occasion shall be CHAP. LXII Of certain Laws of Judicature in the time of Henry the second ANd hereof I shall note onely a few as well touching matter of the Crown as of property being desirous to observe the changes of Law with the times and the manner of the growth thereof to that pitch which in these times it hath attained We cannot find in any story that the Saxon Church was infested with any Heresie from their first entrance till this present Generation The first and last Heresie that ever troubled this Island was imbred by Pelagius but that was amongst the Britains and was first battered by the Council or Synod under Germanus but afterwards suppressed by the Zeal of the Saxons who liked nothing of the British breed and for whose sake it suffered more haply than for the foulness of the opinion The Saxon Church leavened from Rome for the space of above five hundred years held on its course without any intermission by cross Doctrine springing up till the time of Henry the second Then entred a Sect whom they called Publicans but were the Albigences as may appear by the decree of Pope Alexander whose opinions I shall not trouble my course with but it seems they were such as crossed their way and Henry the second made the first president of punishing Heresie in the Kingdom under the name of this Sect whom he caused to be brought before a Council of Bishops who endeavoured to convince them of their errour but failing therein they pronounced them Hereticks and delivered them over to the Lay power by which means they were branded in the fore-head whipped and exposed to extremity of the cold according to the decree of the Church died This was the manner and punishment of Hereticks in this Kingdom in those days albeit in seemeth they were then decreed to be burnt in other Countries if that Relation of Cog shall be true which Picardus noteth upon the 13th Chapter of the History of William of Newberry out of which I have inserted this Relation Another Case we meet with in Henry the second 's time concerning Apostacy which was a Crime that as it seems died as soon as it was born for besides that one we find no second thereto in all the file of English story The particular was that a Clerk had renounced his Baptism and turned Jew and for this was convicted by a Council of Bishops at Oxford and was burned So as we have Apostacy punished with death and Heresie with a punishment that proved mortal and the manner of conviction of both by a Council of the Clergie and delivered over to the Lay-power who certainly proceeded according to the direction of the Canon or advice of the Council These if no more were sufficient to demonstrate the growing power of the Clergie however brave the King was against all his Enemies in the field Treason was anciently used onely as a Crime of breach of Trust or Fealty as hath been already noted now it grows into a sadder temper and is made all one with that of laesa Majestas and that Majesty that now-a-days is wrapped up wholly in the person of the King was in Henry the second 's time imparted to the King and Kingdom as in the first times it was more related to the Kingdom And therefore Glanvil in his book of Laws speaking of the Wound of Majesty exemplifies Sedition and destruction of the Kingdom to be in equal degree a Wound of Majesty with the destruction of the person of the King and then he nameth Sedition in the Army and fraudulent conversion of Treasure-trove which properly belongs to the King. All which he saith are punished with Death and forfeiture of Estate and corruption of Bloud for so I take the meaning of the words in relation to what ensueth Felonies of Manslaughter Burning Robbery Ravishment and Fausonry are to be punished with loss of Member and Estate This was the Law derived from the Normans and accordingly was the direction in the Charge given to the Justices itinerant in Henry the second 's time as appeareth in Hoveden But Treason or Treachery against the Oath Fealty or Bond of Allegiance as of the Servants against the Lord was punished with certain and with painful deaths And therefore though the murther of the King was Treason yet the murther of his Son was no other than as of another man unless it arose from those of his own Servants The penalty of loss of Estate was common both to Treason and Felony it reached even unto Thefts in which case the forfeiture as to the Moveables was to the Sheriff of the County unto whose cognizance the case did belong and the Land went to the Lord immediately and not to the King. But in all cases of Felony and of a higher nature the party though not the King's Tenant lost his personal Estate to the King for ever his Free-holds also for a year and a day after which they returned to the Lord of the Soil by way of Escheat
saith That he will set down frequentius usitata and it is past question but that the tryal by twelve men was much more ancient as hath been already noted One thing more yet remaineth concerning the Widow of the Tenant whose Dower is not onely provided for but her reasonable part of her Husband 's personal Estate The original hereof was from the Normans and it was as popular as that of Wardships was Regal and so they made the English women as sure to them as they were sure of their Children The Justices shall by Assize try Disseisins done since the King 's coming over Sea next after the peace made between him and his Son. This is called the Assize of Novel disseisin or of disseisins lately made It seems that the limitation was set for the Justices sake who now were appointed to that work which formerly belonged to the County-courts and to prevent intrenchments of Courts a limitation was determined although the copy seemeth to be mistaken for the limitation in the Writ is from the King 's last Voyage or going into Normandy Justices shall do right upon the King 's Writ for half a Knights Fee and under unless in cases of difficulty which are to be referred to the King. The Justices itinerant ended the smaller matters in their Circuits the other were reserved to the King in his Bench. Justices shall enquire of Escheats Lands Churches and Women in the King's gift And of Castle-guard who how much and where So as the Judges itinerant had the work of Escheators and made their Circuits serve as well for the King's profit as justice to the Subjects They used also to take Fealty of the people to the King at one certain time of the year and to demand Homage also These matters of the King's Exchequer made the presence of the Judges less acceptable and it may be occasioned some kind of oppression And as touching Castle-guard it was a Tenure in great use in these bloody times and yet it seemeth they used to take Rent instead of the personal service else had that enquiry how much been improper Of a Tenants holding and of several Lords That one man may hold several Lands of several Lords and so owe service to them all is so common as nothing can be more nevertheless it will not be altogether out of the way to touch somewhat upon the nature of this mutual relation between Lord and Tenant in general that the true nature of the diversity may more fully appear The foundation or subject of service was a piece of Land or other Tenement at the first given by the Lord to the Tenant in affirmance of a stipulation between them presupposed by the giving and receiving whereof the Tenant undertook to peform service to the Lord and the Lord undertook protection of the Tenant in his right to that Tenement The service was first by service solemnly bound either by Oath which the Lord or his Deputy by the Common-Law hath power to administer as in the case of Fealty in which the Tenant bound himself to be true to the honour and safety of his Lords person and to perform the service due to the Lord for the Tenement so given or otherwise by the Tenants humble acknowledgment and promise not only to perform the services due but even to be devoted to the Lords service to honour him and to adventure limb and life and be true and faithful to the Lord. This is called Homage from those words I become your man Sir and yet promiseth upon the matter no more but fealty in a deeper complement albeit there be difference in the adjuncts belonging to eách For though it be true that by promise of being the Lord's man a general service may seem to be implied yet in regard that it is upon occasion only of that present Tenure it seemeth to me that it is to be restrained only to those particular services which belong to that Tenement and therefore if that Tenement be holden in Socage although the Tenant be bound to homage yet that homage ties not the Tenant to the service of a Knight nor contrarily doth the homage of a Tenant in Knight-service tie him to that of Socage upon the command of his Lord though he professeth himself to be his man. Nor doth the Tenant's homage bind him against all men nor ad semper for in case he holdeth of two or divers Lords by homage for several Tenements and these two Lords be in War one against the other the Tenant must serve his chief Lord of whom the Capital house is holden or that Lord which was his by priority who may be called the chief Lord because having first received homage he received it absolutely from his Tenant with a saving of the Tenant's Faith made to other Lords and to the King who in order to the publick had power to command a Tenant into War against his own Lord. If therefore he be commanded by the King in such cases unto War he need not question the point of forfeiture but if he be commanded by a chief of his other Lords into War against a party in which another of his Lords is engaged his safest way is to enter upon the work because of his Allegiance to that Lord yet with a salvo of his fealty to that other Lord. But in all ordinary cases Tenants and Lords must have regard to their stipulation for otherwise if either break the other is discharged for ever and if the fault be in the Tenant his Tenement escheats to his Lord and if the Lord fail he loses his Tenure and the Tenant might thenceforth disclaim and hold over for ever Nevertheless the Lords had two Priviledges by common custom belonging to their Tenures which although not mentioned in the stipulation were yet more valuable than all the rest the one concerning matter of profit the other of power That of profit consisted in aids and relief The aids were of three kinds one to make the Lords eldest Son Knight the other to marry his eldest Daughter the third to help him to pay a relief to his Lord Paramount which in my opinion sounds as much as if the Tenants were bound by their Tenures to aid their Lord in all cases of extraordinary charge saving that the Lord could not distrain his Tenant for aid to his War and this according to the Lords discretion for Glanvil saith that the Law determined nothing concerning the quantity or value of these aids These were the Norman ways and savoured so much of Lordship that within that age they were regulated But that of reliefs was an ancient sacrifice as of first-fruits of the Tenement to the Lord in memorial of the first Lords favour in conferring that Tenement and it was first setled in the Saxons time The Lords Priviledge of power extended so far as to distrain his Tenants into his own Court to answer to himself in all causes that concerned his
even of such as know it do seriously consider how far it may yet and even now be charged upon the account of this Nation Serious as it was it was soon forgotten nor would the King be long holden with promises some unhappy Star struck him in his birth he had been too hard for his promises and now having the Pope at his Elbow he can dispence with his Oath and bid defiance to an Execration and in flat defiance of the Grand-Charter professeth oppression accumulates forreign Counsellors and forreign Guards contemns his own people ushers in the Pope's Extortions upon them to fill up the measure thrives in nothing but in the match of his Son and Successor with a Sister of Spain and yet that also helps to hasten on the publick poverty and that a Parliament that brought forth a bloudy issue although not by any natural power but occasionally For the Barons mean now no longer to trust to promises strangers are banished the Realm and others of the English bloud stepped into their places and Revenues But this was not all the King must confirm the Grand-Charter and thereto he addeth not onely his own Oath but causeth the Prince his Son to confirm the same in like manner It is likewise propounded to him that the chief Officers of the Kingdom may be chosen such as the Parliament shall like of And that other Laws meet for the government of the Kingdom might be established of all these the King made no bones And to make men believe that he was in good earnest he was contented to disrobe and disarm himself and invest the Barons both with Sword and Scepter retaining nothing but the Crown for himself This had been safety enough for the Kingdom but that it was a conclusion without an agreement for as it was on the King's part made from a principle of shame and fear so it was determined in anger for after that the King had been thus drest and girt for the space of Four or Five years whatsoever he thought all the while it is no matter he began first to stretch his Conscience and having the Pope's Dispensation to help soon makes his Oath to fly assunder although his Son had for the present more Conscience But the other girt held more stoutly for the Lords had the Sword chained to their Arm by the King 's own grant Liceat omnibus in regno nostro contra nos insurgere ad gravamen nostrum opem operam dare ac si nobis in nullo fenerentur and the Lords maintained their hold though not without some jealousies amongst themselves And it is very probable had the King been a little longer breathed with patience he might have had his will upon easier terms for the Lords were not so jealous of one another as the Commons were jealous of the Lords that they meaned to rule onely for themselves But the King now being in a wood and bemired so as he must now resolve to get all or lose all and so either satisfie his natural desires or the remainder of his politick power entred the field with the aid of those Commons that chose rather to be oppressed by one King than many Lords And thus the Lords received the first blow and gave the first foil Afterwards being worsted by their own divisions and jealousies they left a victory to the King that might have made him absolute if he had been moderate but pursuing revenge too far he was distasted of his own party that looked on him as a Polyphemus that intended to devour the Enemy first that he might more freely feast upon themselves in the issue This made victory follow the King afar off and taught the King that the end of Civil War must be attended with moderation in the Conquerour so far as may stand with publick safety or otherwise he that is Conquerour to day by Sword may be conquered to morrow by Jealousie Thus many humours consumed and all parts tired after four years continual War the State cometh to its right Wits The King's gains in all this bloudy sweat may be summed up in two heads First that he had liberty to chuse his principal Officers of State by advice of the Lords and them also to displace by like Counsel Secondly in that he gained though at a dear rate wisdom to observe the state of affairs and to apply himself according to occasion so lived Henry the third for three or four years after these troubles long enough to let the World know that he was able to govern like an English King and to teach his Son by his own late experience to be a wise governour betimes For Edward the first being trained up in the Tragedy of a Civil War wherein he was one of the chief actors and having expiated the bloudy way of his riotous youth by his Holy War as they called it now he betakes himself to amends making by Justice in Government having found by his Father's experience that a Kingdom well governed like good husbandry preserves the owner but being neglected destroys both He came over in his third year in August was crowned in September summoned a Parliament in February following but adjourned it till after Easter and then it is found that the Church of late had been ill governed the Clergy-men grieved by many ways the people otherwise handled than they ought to be the Peace ill kept the Laws less used and Delinquents less punished than was meet and in the sence of these inconveniencies were the Laws of Westminster the first made wherein the world may see the great difference between the Prince and the King in one and the same man. The most part of those Laws were little other than plaisters applied to particular botches of those times wherein the King dealt with a tender hand as if he feared to ulcerate any part and especially the Clergie and therefore delivered the last Law in a petitionary way to the Clergie because it concerned the execution of Justice in prohibited times and yet bound up all with a salvo to himself and his prerogative like a wise King that would neither lose right nor do rong nor yet stickle to debate with his Subjects now whenas his eye was upon a further mark For Leolin the Prince of Wales had affronted him and though he could not endure affronts yet could he dissemble them for advantage and so he suffered the Parliament to run its course that he might have done the sooner Otherwise he had a seed of his Father's conceit that Laws are not made for Kings as appeared afterward for after he had gotten his Army into the field he took a fifteenth which was granted to his Father and this was inaudito more but there was no disputing with power and therefore the Subject must be contented rather to score it up against the future than require present pay so dangerous a thing it is for England that Kings should have occasion to
with a stiff spirit and a weak mind brought sudden fire into the course of government till it consumed it self in its own flame For this King having newly slipt out of a bondage of wise Government under his Father ran the wild chase after rash desires spending his former time in inordinate love and his latter time upon revengeful anger little inferiour to rage and so in his whole government was scarce his own man. His love was a precedent of a strange nature that commanded him from all the contentments of his Kingdom to serve one man a stranger and prostitute to all manner of licentiousness meerly for some personal endowments It shews that his judgement was weak and his affections strong and in that more weak because he discovered it before he was crowned like some of the weakest of the weaker Sex the birth of whose minds are born assoon as they are conceived and speak assoon as they are born It is true that the bravery of spirit may work after absoluteness in Kings under the colour of some kind of wisdom But it is one thing to rule without Law and another to live without Rule the one dashes against the Law of an English King and may put on the name of Policy but the other destroys the Law of mankind and can bear no better name than of brutish desire All the while Gaveston was in view we find nothing concerning Commonwealth or monument of Parliament saving two Ordinances made by the King and such Lords as suted to the King's way rather than to his wants The first was that de militibus the other de frangentibus prisonam for all the King's labour was to royallize Gaveston into as high a pitch as he could and so to amaze his own eye-sight with contemplating the goodliness of his person So as Gaveston is become the Image of the King and presents his beams and influence into all parts of the Kingdom and according to his Aspect they often change and wane and yet at the best were but as in a misty night The Barons liked not this condition of State-Idolatry they were willing to adore the King but they could not bow to an Image they desired nothing more than that their King might shine in his proper glory Thrice is Gaveston banished thrice he returns the last occasioned another Civil War wherein Gaveston lost his head Thus the Lords removed the Eclipse but little the better thereby they find it a vain labour to compel the Sun to shine by force when it hath no light Though Gaveston be gone the mist of foreign Councils prevail this was bred in the Bloud fed with Bloud and ended in Bloud Through the Glass of foreign Councils all things seem of foreign colour the King to the People and the People to him The King at length begins to see himself undervalued and that it began in himself ventures himself into the Wars with Scotland to win honour goes with much splendour but returns with the greatest blot that ever English King suffered confounded abroad and slighted at home For the bravest men by ill success are lost in common opinion or to speak in a higher strain where God doth not bless man will not The King thus almost annihilated catches hold of Rome fawns on the Clergy passes to them the Ordinances of Articuli Cleri and de prisis bonis Cleri which lost the Free-men no Right although it concluded the Crown And to caress the Commons made the Statute de Vice-comitibus and the City of London likewise by the Statute de Gavelletto But God saw all sorts of men run at riot and sends in upon the Nation Plague Famine and other extraordinary Testimonies of his displeasure even to the wonderment of other Nations and this brought a kind of sobriety into Affairs made all sorts tame and for the present onely prepared them for better times For the King's time of longing again is come and he must have new Play-fellows finds the Spencers or rather was found of them they grow in honour almost beyond the reach of the Nobles but not beyond their envy and are more secure than Gaveston in this that in their first sprouting the King's Council served himself and them to keep in with the Commons by making good Laws such as the Statutes at York of Essoyns Attaints of Jurors Levying of Fines and Estreats into the Exchequer c. all of them promising good Government The Barons nevertheless liked not the Spencers greatness and being by several occasions exasperated joyn in one and occasion a new War The King aided by the Commons who yet thought better of the King than of the Barons whom they saw prejudiced rather out of self-apprehensions than the publick good prevailed against the Barons and made them the first president of death upon the Scaffold Now the Spencers are Lords alone thinking themselves above the reach of the once formidable Barons and the Commons too inferiour for their respect Thus lifted up they take a flight like that of Icarus They had so much of the King's heart as they could not spare any part thereof to the Queen and she being as loth to spare so much for them as they had retired with the Prince to a relief which they brought from beyond Sea and with whom both Lords and Commons joyn The favourites missing of their wonted wings come down faster than they ascended and together with them the King himself all of them irrecoverably Thus favourites instead of Cement between Prince and people becoming rocks of offence bring ruine sometimes to all but always to themselves The King foresaw the storm and thought it safest first to cry truce with the people and come to agreement with them by common consent for the extent of his Prerogative in certain particular cases questionable and this summed up became a Statute for future times to be a ne plus ultra between the King and people The like agreement likewise was concerning services of Tenants to their Lords and an Oath framed to vindicate them from all encroachments And something was done to calm the Clergie for the demolishing of the Templar-Knights but the wound was incurable words are not believed if actions do not succeed nor will Oaths now made to bind Kings Bishops Counsellors of State Sheriffs Mayors Bailiffs or Judges to justice nor directions for regulating of Courts nor Ordinances against false Moneys and Weights nor all of them settle the people but they adhere to the Queen burning with jealousie against the King and both her self and the Lords with rage against the Spencers The King flies and being forsaken of the people the Lords the Clergie his own Son and the Wife of his own bosom and of God himself as the most absolute abject that ever swayed the Scepter lost the same and being made a monument of Gods revenge upon inordinate desires in a King and of the English people being enraged not long surviving his
by the access to the Crown of the services of such as held of those Lords that were attainted or disinherited And yet by a hidden providence the King was little the better when it came to the pinch For when Edward the second 's Queen came from beyond the Seas though with but a small force all forsake the King neither regarding the former terrour of the Army of a King nor the right or service nor Oath of Fealty nor Promises nor Laws nor other Engagements and so the King becomes a prey to an enraged woman or which is worse to a jealous Wife So little can the name of a King do when his person is despised and so vain for him to trust in his Militia that hath already disarmed himself of the hearts of his Subjects The sum then of all the labours of the Nobles during these times will rest in this that they won the day and yet lost the field although they lost their own blouds and Estates yet they saved all to the people and left Laws in force able to debate with Prerogative in the hand of any King that should succeed Thus stood the matter in fact upon such grounds as it had the validity whereof it is not my work to censure neither by the ballance of Law or Gospel but leave it as a sore time that scarce will endure touch nor bear a King further than he was good or brave CHAP. LXVI Of the state of the English Clergie until the time of Edward the Third And herein concerning the Statute of Circumspecte agatis Articuli Cleri and of general Councils and National Synods IT was a time of much action throughout the whole Christian State and Rome now having attained to its full glory began to be eyed on all parts as an irregular motion crossing all affairs that it may like the sole Empress command all and be controuled by none and this wrought some stirrings in France complainings in England and facing between the Emperour and the Pope How chargeable this was to the Pope's Treasury it is not material but it occasioned or was pretended to be the occasion of all the intolerable exactions ensuing there being scarce one year passed over without some extraordinary exaction levyed upon the Church-men either by Provisors Tenths Procurations Levies for the Holy War Quindizms Benevolences or other such like and where money was not to be had by levies of Ornaments or of rich Apparel by intimation begging perswading commanding threatning and in this course they continued till they had out-faced shame it self and that the whole Law of Rome became comprehended in this one Quicquid libet licet In general therefore the Church of Rome cannot be said to thrive during these extorting times although Rome did for if the Laity were pillaged by the King the Clergie much more both by Pope and King if the one complained the other cried the one sometimes found relief from the King but the other was helpless for the Pope had no Ears to hear nor the King Hands to help He neither durst nor would cross the Pope although the Clergie told him that by these exactions they were impoverished in such manner as they were disabled to do him service for their Lay-fees Thus Rome becomes a burthen to Rome and the Members weary of bearing their Head. Hereafter must the Pope beware of falling out with Kings for the English Clergie now though late see that all is not Gold that glitters nor is it any great priviledge to be the Pope's men further than the Pope will be a good Master but this was not to be expected Popes were grown so excellent as they could not amend and England so enamoured of them as it is become their verè hortus deliciarum as the Pope called it when he saw the rich vestments of the English Church-men and therefore they must now be contented to be the Pope's viands as often as his hungry maw doth call or otherwise they must fall out An excellent posture of affairs and brave preparative to dispose the hearts of all sorts for entertainment of the easie yoke of Christ's government which was now at the door and ready to be revealed Nevertheless poor and mean as the Clergie was they had courage enough not onely to stickle both with King and people for their own liberties but also to invade the liberties both of the Crown and Commons having this advantage that they had to do with a King and people that were two and themselves well seconded by the Pope that had no less power in those times of publick distraction and was bound to serve the Cattle well that yielded him so much milk The particular matters of debate may appear in their Paper of Grievances composed in Henry the third's time and their Resolutions thereupon their Complaints were renewed again in the time of Edward the first if we may give credit to Baronius after the Statute of Circumspecte agatis To the end therefore that the whole may lie before us I shall set down the matter or substance of both these Papers severally in regard they sound much alike and note the difference all which I shall do to the end that it may more plainly appear what the Church-mens Idaea was and how far the common Law and King's Prerogative would agree thereto The Complaints are of this nature 1. That the Church-possessions in their vacancies are wasted and that Escheators do not onely seize the personal Estate of the Abbot or Prior deceased but such Corn in the Barn and other Goods belonging to the houses for their maintenance as also the profits of Churches impropriate 3 4 5. Elections are either disturbed by the King's Letters preceding or by delay of the Royal assent subsequent to the said Elections 6. The Lay-power without the advice of the Clergie do put in eject or restore Incumbents to Benefices void 7. Prelates are summoned to answer to the Lay-power in the Writs Quare excommunicavit and Quare non admisit 8. Clerks are distrained in their Lay-fees to answer before the Lay-power in Action of Debts Trespass or other personal Actions and in case they have no Lay-fees the Ordinary is distrained by his Barony to cause the Clerk to appear 9. The Laity are forbidden to take Oath or to inform upon Oath before the Prelates and to obey the Prelates commands in such cases 10. Persons taken and imprisoned upon Excommunication are ordinarily dismist without satisfaction to the Prelate and sometimes are not taken by the Sheriff notwithstanding the King 's Writ And as well the King as his Officers do ordinarily communicate with such as are excommunicated and likewise command others to communicate with them 14. Clerks imprisoned for Felony are refused to be delivered to the Ordinary unless upon security to appear before the Justices in Oyer and sometimes are hanged before their Ordinary can demand them and sometimes their heads are all shaven
that they may not appear to be Clerks 16. Justices itinerant do imprison Clerks defamed for Felony or otherwise out-law them if they do not appear And otherwise proceed against Clerks after their purgation before the Ordinary 18. The Lay-power seizes upon the Estates of Clerks degraded for Crimes 19. Clergie are compelled to answer and give satisfaction for offences against the Forest-Laws before the Lay-power And in case of default the Bishop by distress is compelled to order satisfaction as well in such cases as in personal Actions 22. Priviledges of Sanctuary are invaded by force 23. Executors of Bishops are hindred from administring the Estate without License first obtained from the King. 24. The King's Tenants Goods are seized after their decease by the King's Bayliffs 25. Intestates goods are seized by their Lords and their Ordinary hindred from Administration 26. The King's prohibition passeth in case of Tythes and Chappels 27. The like in cases of Troth plight Perjury Cerage Heriet or other Church-duties as money for reparations of Churches and fences in Church-yards pecuniary punishment for Adultery and costs of suit in Ecclesiastical Court Sacriledge Excommunication for breach of the Liberties of the Church contrary to the Grand Charter 30. In cases of prohibition if the Ecclesiastical Judge proceed contrary to the same he is attached and compelled to shew his Acts in Court if the Lay-Judge determine the cause to be Temporal the Ecclesiastical Judge is amerced if he proceed against the prohibition and it is tryed by Witnesses of two ribaulds and in case it be found for the Ecclesiastical Judges cognizance yet there is no costs allowed for such vexation 32. That Jews in matters Ecclesiastical aforesaid are by the King's prohibition drawn from the Ecclesiastical Judge unto the Lay-Magistrate 34. Question about Lands given in Frankalmoin are tryed in the Lay-Courts and by reason of such Tenure the owners though Clergie men are compelled to do suit at the Lay-Courts and are charged with impositions and are distrained hereunto although the Lord have other Land of the Donor in Frankalmoin subject to his distress 39. Prelates summoned to higher Courts are not allowed to make Attorneys to appear for them in the inferiour civil Courts 41. Grantees of Murage or other unwonted impositions compel the Church-men to pay the same 42 43. The Clergie are charged with Quarter Cart-service and purveying 44. The Chancery sendeth out new Writs contrary to the liberties of the Church and the Law of the Land without the assent of the Council of the Kingdom Princes and Prelates 45. The King doth compel the Clergie to Benevolences to the King at his Voyage into foreign parts 46. Amercements granted to Clergie-men are turned into Fines by the Justices and by them taken 47. Clergie-men are fined for want of appearance before the Justices itinerant and of the Forest upon common summons 48. Quo warranto's granted against the Clergie for their Liberties and the same seized unless they be set down in express words in their Charter notwithstanding that by long custom they have enjoyed the same and many times contrary to express grant This is the sum of their Paper of Grievances and because they found the King either wilful or unconstant they resolve upon a Remedy of their own by Excommunication and Interdiction not sparing the persons of any principal or accessory nor their Lands no not of the King himself and for this they joyn all as one man. Now what scare this made I know not but Henry the third in the Stat. of Marlb and Edward the first in his Stat. at Westminster and other Statutes the first spake fair and seemed to redress some of these complaints as also did Edward the second and yet the Common Law lost little ground thereby That which Henry the third did besides his promises of reforming was done in the Stat. of Marlbridge The successors of Abbots Priors and Prelates c. shall have an Action of Trespass for Trespasses done nigh before the death of their decessors upon the Estates of their Corporations And shall prosecute an Action begun by their Predecessors And also shall have an Assize against Intruders into any of the Possessions belonging to the said Corporations whereof their Predecessors died seized This might seem a remedy provided against the first Malady complained of and questionless bound all but the King and so might perchance abate somewhat the edge of that Article But it being the Clergies reach to grow rich and the Pope's cunning to help on that Work that they might be as stores for supply of his Treasury and had forbidden Abbots and other Prelates c. the liberty of disposing their Estates by last Will Kings therefore as supreme Patrons to these bodies in their vacancies used to seize all the Estates of the Prelates with the Temporalities to their own use as well to preserve the Riches of the Kingdom to it self and the possessions of such Corporations from spoil as to be a cloke of their own covetousness And under the Estates of the Prelates or Heads of these Corporations all the Goods and Chattels belonging to the said Corporations were comprehended in regard that all was by Law adjudged to be in the sole possession of such Head and without whom all the rest were accounted but as dead persons No Clergie-man is bound to attend at the Sheriff's Turn William the Conquerour first exempted the persons of the Clergy from attendance upon Temporal Courts yet they were still urged thereto and especially by a Law in Henry the first 's time but by this Law they are discharged and in some measure a provision made against the grievance in the 39th Article before-mentioned These amends we find made to the Clergie by Henry the third besides his confirming the Grand Charter And his Son Edward the first pursued the same course especially in his first times when he was but tenderly rooted as may appear in the Statute of West 1. Clergie-men nor their Houses shall be charged with Quarter nor their Goods with Purveyance or Cart-service under peril of imprisonment and damages by action or imprisonment The great endowments of Lands Rents and Revenues given to the Church-men by the Laity was for the maintenance of Hospitality and works of Charity The Founders and Benefactors hereby obtained a right of Corody or Entertainment at such places in nature of Free-quarter which in the necessitous times of Henry the third became so common that every one that had power never questioned right and the King above all the rest By means whereof the Church-revenues were exceedingly wasted for remedy whereof all Offenders are by this Statute made liable to fine and imprisonment and double damages in case of Action of Trespass the King onely excepted against whom they had no defence but would rather have won him to have been their defence against the exactions from Rome that
Freemen in such cases it being contrary to the Grand Charter never asked by the Clergie formerly nor no complaint before now for denial for my part therefore I shall not apprehend it of a higher nature than the King 's Writ which in those days went forth at random if the 44th Article of the Clergies complaints foregoing be true It being so contrary to the common sence of Parliament to give the bodies of the Freemen to the will of the Clergie to whom they would not submit their Free holds But the Writ proceeds in enumeration of particulars Reparations and adornings of Churches and Fences of Church-yards Violence done to a Clerk Defamation to reform not to give damage Perjury oblations payments of Tythes between Rector and Parishioner Right of Tythes between two Rectors to a fourth part of the value Mortuaries due by custom A Pension from a Rector to a Prelate or Advocate The most of which were under the power of a prohibition in the time of Henry the Third who was King but yesterday as the Articles of complaint formerly set down do manifest Nor had the Clergie ever better Title than connivance of some such favourites as King Steven whose Acts may peradventure be urged against Kings but not against the people unless their own act can be produced to warrant them The learning in the Princes case will I suppose admit of a difference for it can never be made out that the King's Council in Parliament was the Magnum concilium Regni but onely the House of Lords and therefore whatever passed in Parliament by their onely advice might bind the King but could never reach the Commons nor their Liberties And thus the Grand Charter in the first conception was conclusive to the King but was not the act of the Parliament because the Parliament cannot grant a Charter to it self of that which was originally custom And therefore this Law however countenanced can never be concluded to be other than a Permission not onely because it was never the Act of the Commons of England but because it is contrary to the liberty of the Freemen And it is beyond all imagination that the Commons should out themselves from the protection of the Common-Law and yoke themselves their Free-holds and Estates under the bondage of the Canons nor ought such a construction to be admitted without express words to warrant it As for the conclusion it is worse and not onely dishonourable to the King in binding his Arms from protecting his Subjects by the Common Laws and so in some respects making them Outlaws but dishonourable to it self whilst it makes Prohibitions grounded upon Laws to be nullities by a late trick of non obstante which was first taken up by the Pope then by Henry the third and by this King granted to the Clergie and thus are all set at liberty from any rule but that of Licentiousness Nevertheless this Law did thrive accordingly for we find scarce any footsteps in story of any regard had thereof till it became grey-headed For it was not long e're the King stood in need of money and was necessitated to try the good wills of the Clergie more than once this occasioned them to be slow in answer and in conclusion to deny that they should aid the King with any more money Papa inconsulto The King hereupon disavows the Clergy and leaves them to the Romish oppressions which were many and then the Clergie rub up all old sores and exhibit their complaints to their holy Father to this effect 1. That the King's Justices intermeddle in Testamentary causes accounts of Executors and cognizance of Tythes especially to the fourth part of the Living 2. That the Clergie were charged to the King's Carriages That the King's Mills were discharged from paying of Tythes That Clerks attending on the Exchequer were necessitated to non-residency And that after their decease their Goods were seized till their acounts were made That Ecclesiastical possessions were wasted during vacancies 3. That Clerks were admitted to free Chappels by Lay men 4. That the King's Justices took cognizance of Vsury Defamation violence done to Clerks Sacriledge Oblations Fences of the Church-yards and Mortuaries 5. That prohibitions are granted without surmise 6. That Clerks are called to answer in the King's Court for crimes and being acquitted the Informers escape without penalty 7. That Clerks are not allowed their Clergie 8. That after purgation made Clerks are questioned in the King's Court for the same offence 9. That persons in Sanctuary are therein besieged 10. That the Writ de Cautione admittenda issueth forth although the Church be not satisfied and excommunicate persons being imprisoned are enlarged in like manner 11. That Debts between Clerks due are determined in the temporal Courts 12. That Bishops are compelled by Distress to cause Clerks to appear in Lay-courts without cause 13. That the Church loseth it's right by the ceasing of Rent or Pension by the space of two years 14. That Nuns are compelled to sue in the Lay-courts for their right in possessions befalling by decease of their Kinred 15. That Churches are deprived of their Priviledges till they shew Quo warranto they hold them 16. That Ecclesiastical Judges are stopped in their proceedings by Sheriffs and great men 17. That Bishops refusal of Clerks presented are examined in the Lay-courts 18. That Patrons of Religious Houses do oppress them by extream Quarter 19. That Bigamy and Bastardy are tried in Lay-courts 20. That the King suffers his Livings to be vacant for many years 21. That the Clergie are wronged by the Statute of Mortmain Here 's all and more than all that 's true and more than enough to let the Reader see that the Writ Circumspecte agatis was but a face put on for the present after laid aside and the Clergy left to the bare Canon They likewise shew what the Clergy aimed at and in that they did not obtain it was to be attributed to the resolution of the Laity and not any neglect in themselves for the Arch-bishop died in the service and it is thought that grief for these matters was no little cause thereof But the times within a while grew troublesome and the King in pursuit of the French Wars being unadvised in his way angred the people by his arbitrary levie of Men and Money as it brought forth a State-scoul little inferiour to a Quarrel And to pacifie the Clergie he granted them the Writ de consultatione habenda in all matrimonial and testamentary cases which were of their least doubted priviledges and this qualified the first Article of complaint next foregowing if such cause they had of complaint and this was all that the Clergie got at Edward the first 's hands Edward the second was a man that was neither well-affected to Rome nor weak in spirit and yet so unhappy that his way neither promised good success nor ever had it and so he became a Servant unto
the humours of his Servants to keep his head above water but especially after he was chased by the Scots and quite out of breath he calls for help of all but first of the Clergie and bespeaks them with the Ordinance of Articuli Cleri wherein he gives some satisfaction to the complaints formerly mentioned which it seems by Baronius were exhibited in Parliament Ecclesiastical cognizance extendeth unto Tythes Oblations and Mortuaries and to pecuniary recompence In the first times neglect or denial of Church-duties was punished in the King's Court by Fine Afterwards the Bishop was joyned in that Work and the Tythable Goods were seized eight parts whereof were taken to the Lords and the Bishops use by moyeties a ninth part left to the Owner and the tenth to the Church Nor had the Bishops any peculiar Courts of cognizance of causes till the times of the Normans nor as yet in those times had they power to all intents For though it be true that the Roman Tribute of Peter-pence was allowed by the Conquerour's Law to the Bishop's Court yet we find no Law for Tythes and other profits to be recovered by the Ecclesiastical Court till about the end of Henry the second 's Reign or King Steven's time For at a Council at London in Henry the second 's time it was ordained that three Summons in the Pope's name should be made to such as payed not their Tythes and in case they then refused they should be Anathema And after that time in a Council at Oxford under Steven Archbishop of Canterbury it was decreed that the Laity should be entreated first to pay their Tythes and then if necessity require that they should be compelled by Ecclesiastical censure So as their power crept up by degrees in recovering of Church duties as it did in Testamentary matters and at length Henry the third worn and spent with the Barons Wars about his latter end yielded to Boniface the Archbishop his importunate demands and first gave liberty to the Clergie to be their own Judges and yet the Lay-Judges although divers of them were Clergie men did not suddenly forbear till this Law came which gave some satisfaction to the first and fourth Articles of Complaint foregoing Ecclesiastical cognizance extendeth not to a fourth part of the Tythes of any Living nor to pecuniary mulcts for sin saving by way of commutation The Complaint of the Clergie in Henry the third's time was against the King's prohibition in case of Tythes indefinitely for in those times and afterwards in Edward the first 's time the King's Court had the cognizance of all Tythes and therefore in the Statute of West 2. c. 5. the Writ of Indicavit was allowed in case of right of any portion of Tythes yet the Church still gained ground and about or before the death of Edward the first the Temporal Judge had yielded unto the Clergie the cognizance of a portion of Tythes under the value of the fourth part for in the Article next foregoing the Clergies complaint was that the Kings Justices held cognizance of the fourth part and here they were confined thereto by this Law which the Clergie could never remove For violence done to Clerks the offender shall render damage in the Kings Court but Excommunication Penance and Commutation shall be in the Bishops Court. The Canon-Law had an ancient claim to the protection of Clerks both as touching their persons and estates and prevailed so far as they were thereby emboldened to offer violence unto others But as I formerly shewed by a Law in Henry the Second's time the Temporal Judge resumed his original power and this became a sore evil between the Clergie and Laity for though it were allowed that Clerks should not be sued but before the Ecclesiastical Judge in such cases yet it was no warrant for the Laity likewise to be called before the Ecclesiastical Judge in such cases and therefore the Clergies complaints shew that the matter was doubtful and that the Lay-Judge generally maintained his Jurisdiction although sometimes he disclaimed it as it may appear in the case of a Trespass in the nature of a riot committed upon the Priory of St. John's of Jerusalem in the seventh year of Henry the Third when as it was adjudged per Curiam that it belonged to the Ecclesiastical Court to punish But in Edward the First 's time by the Ordinance of Circumspecte agatis and Articles concerning prohibitions the difference was made between damages and pro reformatione and the same affirmed by this Law and so the matter setled and the fourth Article of the Clergies complaint in some measure was satisfied Defamation within Cognizance of the Ecclesiastical Court and corporal penance therefore and Commutation The words are general and peremptory with a non obstante the Kings prohibition and yet the Law afterwards restrained the sence to defamation for crimes or offences triable in the Ecclesiastical Court and this gave further satisfaction to the fourth Article of the Clergies complaint foregoing Tythes of new Mills may be recovered in the Ecclesiastical Court. This Tythe of Mills was a new encroached Tythe never mentioned in any former Law of this Kingdom nor demanded by the Synod at London Anno 1173. which mentions Fruit-Trees young broods of living creatures that are tame Herbage Butter Cheese with other particulars but mentions not new Mills It is true that anciently Mills paid Tythes but such they were which were ancient and had paid the same by custom and such as by Law in the Confessors time were declared to be given a Rege Baronibus populo But by the second Article of the Clergies complaint next foregoing it appears that the Kings Mills refused to pay this Tythe now whether the new Mills were called the Kings Mills as being made upon the publick streams by the Kings license or whether the Mills newly made within the Demesnes of the Crown it is not to be insisted upon but it is evident that till this Law made the new Mills would not Tythe their labours One and the same matter may be tryed at the Common-Law after Sentence in the Spiritual Court in divers respects The great sore that was complained of was that the Clergie after purgation in the Ecclesiastical Court made were proceeded against in the Kings Court in case of breach of peace or Felony as may appear out of the 16th Article of the Clergies first complaints and the 8th Article of that taken out of Baronius Nevertheless the present Law subjoyns an example of the questioning a Lay-man in the Ecclesiastical Court in case of violence done to a Clerk as a matter which may be tryed in the Ecclesiastical Court and yet reviewed by the Kings Court. The Writ de Excommunicato deliberando shall not issue forth but upon evident breach of the Kings Liberty This might be intended in satisfaction of the Tenth Article of the Clergies complaint
in Baronius and the Tenth Article in the Clergies complaint first recited although that complaint both in the 10 11 12 and 33 Articles seem to be but clamour upon Officers and not the Kings Court of Justice Clerks Officers to the Exchequer are to be corrected by their Ordinaries and yet not tyed to residence during their attendance on the Exchequer This is in part an answer to the second Article of the Clergies last complaint and a justification thereof as a thing that is pro bono publico Clergie-mens Goods shall not be Distrained either in the High-way or Sanctuary-grounds unless such as have been of late purchase The complaint exhibited in Henry the third's time and the 8th Article was only in ordinary personal Actions but in the complaint made in Edward the second 's time Article 12. is that it is without cause that they are so distrained This Law yieldeth them somewhat viz. immunity from distress within their ancient possessions which had been by ancient custom priviledged but yields nothing as touching their latter purchased Lands because they had no such custom High-ways and Sanctuaries shall be free for such as abjure so as they shall neither be restrained from liberty nor necessaries kept from them Felons may make free confession to the Priest without danger The grievance in the 22th Article of the Clergies complaint in Henry the Thirds time and the ninth in that of the times of Edw. 2. are hereby relieved provided that the Delinquent keeps himself in due order Houses of Religion shall not be oppressed with Corodies Pensions or entertainments of great men This answered the grievance in the 42. and 43. of the first complaint and the 18th of the latter and in effect little other than what was formerly setled by West 1. cap. 1. The Kings Tenant may be cited before the Ordinary out of their own Town and if Excommunicated for want of appearance the Writ de Excommunicato Capiendo shall be awarded A remedy this was against the grievances in the 12 and 33 Articles of the first complaint and in the 10th Article of the last schedule of complaints And thus the Clergie have gotten the day of the Kings Tenants which they had been striving for ever since the Conquest as may appear by what hath been formerly said and now the Kings Tenants are in no better condition than other men viz. they may now be Excommunicated without the Kings license nor is the answer Nunquum fuit negatum to be referred to the point of Excommunication for that power was denyed them but unto the citing them out of their own Parish which cannot be found to be denyed to the Clergie by any thing that yet appeareth A Clerk presented and found unable by the Ordinary shall be tryed again by the Ecclesiastical and not the Lay-Judge Although the fitness or sufficency of the party presented is to be examined by the Ordinary yet the Civil Magistrate hath power in action brought to enquire and determine whether the Ordinaries work was rightly done and so the 17th Article of the last complaint answered Elections shall be free The Laws was of the same with this in the Stat. W. 1. cap. 5. which see before and it may be that the iniquity of the times continued notwithstanding and so occasioned the renewing of this Law. A Clerk having taken Sanctuary shall not be compelled to adjure Nor after confession of the Crime or appealing others before the secular Judge shall be denyed his Clergie Although the Temporal Courts proceeded not so far as to pass sentence against a Clerk that had taken Sanctuary yet they proceeded to enquiry as may appear by what was said formerly concerning the Stat. West 1. cap. 2. and therefore though this Law in the 15th Chap. alloweth that a Clerk in Sanctuary shall enjoy his Ecclesiastical liberty yet the words legi Regni se reddens are interposed and the reason is because the King upon Indictment found had right to the Delinquents goods and profits of his Lands until due purgation and then his Lands were by a Writ out of the Chancery to be restored to him again nor could any purgation regularly pass before the party was Indicted No Religious House shall be charged with Tax to any Superiour without the Realm of England nor shall send to any visitation out of England This was neither at the request of the Clergie nor act of kindness intended unto them but for the good of the Kingdom to prevent the bleeding of the Treasure of the Kingdom into Foraign parts Patrons of Abbies shall have their custody during their vacancies This was the ancient Law now revived by the Clergies consent and intended for the safeguard of the Revenues of the Houses and their maintenance and therefore it is with a sicut superius dictum est cap. 5. The Goods of the Clergie freed from purveyance unless they will. It was a favour given by Edw. 2. to the Clergie to gain their good will after the death of Gaveston the shameful defeat received in Scotland and some particular testimonies of God's displeasure whereof he began to be somewhat sensible Franchises holden by prescription or Charter confirmed and Tryals by Quo Warranto allowed to be in Eyer It was the common share of the great men but especially of the Clergie to have their Franchises exposed to the prey of the Eagles or to such as hawked for them and it is likely the King had not so easily for gone his prize if all the fat had fall'n to his own share but perceiving that more benefit came to his instruments than was meet and himself little the better thereby he sacrificed his Judges to the people but it was to his own behoof and so gained both credit and favour from the people and profit to himself and in some measure satisfied the 48 49 50. Articles of the Clergies complaint in the time of Henry the Third and the 15th Article of their last complaint Lands or Tenements aliened to a Religious house shall escheat to the Lord if the alienor take the same back to hold of that House The ground hereof principally was the prejudice done to the Lord by destruction of the Tenure albeit that it had been an ancient grievance complained of in the Saxon times That the Clergie were covetous and swallowed down estates and thereby weakned the Kingdom But now they are become even cheaters serving the turns of treacherous Tenants that would give their Lands by compact with the Church-men to receive them again from them to hold of the Church which was a liberty that men thirsted after in those times wherein the Church-men were more adored than their Images It seems this Law was made after Bracton's time if that be true in the second Institutes for he saith that a man may give his Lands to any one whether Christian or Jew or religious person
time and was questionless put in practice so far forth as with convenience to the Judges might be but now the convenience of the people is preferred and they must not be brought up to the King's Court but the Justices must come down to them And yet in case of difficulty the Bench where the Common-pleas are holden must determine the matter and where the time in the Iter in one County is too scant the Remanets shall be adjourned over to be tryed elsewhere in that Circuit which sheweth that the Judges itinerant had their time proportioned out to every County These Tryals also were so favoured as in the then holy times of Advent and Septuagessima or Lent they might be tried which although it was gained by Prayer made by the King to the Bishops as the words of that Law are concluded yet it shews that the Parliament had so much light as to hold the time not inherently holy but meerly sequestred by the Will of the Clergie The Plaintiffs also in Mortdancester may be divers if there be divers Heirs of one Ancestor by one Title And if there be joynt-Tenants and the Writ be against but one and the same pleaded the Writ shall abate but if joynt-Tenancy be pleaded and the Plea be false the Defendant shall be fined and imprisoned And if in the Action the Verdict be for the Plaintiff he shall recover Damages Darrein presentment shall be taken onely in the common Bank. Tryals in the common Bank or other Courts at Westminster have ever had an honourable esteem above those in the County by Nisi prius although all be equally available This might be one cause why the Titles of Churches were still retained at the common Bank whenas all other rode Circuit for that Churches affairs in those times were of high regard Speed of Tryal also was not little regarded herein for Justices by Nisi prius properly were but for enquiry till the Statute at Westm the second made them of Oyer and Terminer in the cases of Quare Impedit and Darrein presentment and gave them power to give Judgment And thus the Commons gained still in point of conveniency Free-men shall be amerced according to the degree of the fault saving to them their Free-hold and to Merchants their main Stock and to Villains their Waynage and Clergie-men shall be amerced according to their Lay-fee Barons shall be amerced by their Peers others by the Vicinage In this regard is to be had first of the persons that are to be amerced then of the parties by whom and lastly of the nature and quantity of Amercements The persons amerced are ranked into four Classes Barons Clergie Free-men and Villains But in regard of the parties by whom they are to be amerced they are but two Barons and Free-men for the Clergie Villains and Free-men are to be amerced by the Free-men of the Neighbourhood In what Courts these Amercements shall be the Stat. Marlbr tells us not before the Escheator nor other that make enquiry by Commission or Writ nor before the Justices of Assize or Oyer and Terminer but onely before the Chief Justices or Justices itinerant The Statute of Westminster adds a fifth Classis of Cities and Towns by express words which seems not so necessary unless in pillaging and oppressing times for they were taken to be within the Statute of Magna Charta though not therein named The rule of the quantity of Amercements is now set down in general and left to the discretion of the Peers or Vicinage which formerly by the Saxons were specially set down in the Law. The rule in general is with a ne plus ultra viz. not further or more than that the party amerced may spare and yet hold on in the maintenance of his course according to his degree And it must be also according to the quantity of the offence for the greatest Amercements must not be ranked with the least offences so as in every degree the main sustenance of the party is saved yea the Villains however mean they be they must have their maintenance And this sheweth that Villains had a maintenance which was under the protection of the Law and not under the gripe of their Lords to all intents unless they were the Kings Villains who it seemeth were meerly under the Kings mercy as being both their Lord and King against whom they could hold nothing as properly their own And therefore in all other cases even then the Villains were born under a kind of liberty as in the Saxons time formerly hath been declared which the Law protected against their own Lords No man shall be compelled to make repair or maintain any Bridges Banks or Causies other or otherwise than they were wont to be made repaired or maintained in the time of Henry the second The limitation to the times of Henry the second sheweth that his Justice was such as maintained the common rights of men but in the times of Richard the first and more especially of King John those Rivers Waters and Fishings formerly used in common were encroached upon enclosed and appropriated to particular mens uses which occasioned many Bridges Banks and Causies to be made and repaired to the great charge of private men all which are discharged by this Law. No Sheriff Constable Coroner or other Bayliff shall hold any Pleas of the Crown Escheators are also expressed in the old books of Magna Charta and the Abridgements however it seemeth that it is within the intent of the Law which was made to avoid the extraordinary oppression that these Officers exercised upon the people For Escheators under colour of inquiry of Estates of men would enquire of matters concerning the lives of men and Sheriffs that had power of Tryals in cases of Theft as hath been already shewn abused the same for their own benefit because in such cases they had the forfeitures This Law therefore takes away such occasions viz. from the Sheriffs and Coroners and Bayliffs or Justices other than by express commission thereto assigned all power to hold Pleas of the Crown by tryal leaving unto them nevertheless power of enquiry of which anciently they had the right If the Kings Tenant dieth supposed in arrear an Inventory shall be made of his Stock by honest men but it shall not be removed till Accounts be cleared and the overplus shall go to the Executors saving to the Wife and Children their reasonable part The first clause hereof was a Law in Henry the first 's time and a customary Law in Henry the second 's time being a remedy against an old Norman Riot of the Lord's seizure of the whole personal Estate of the party deceased under colour of a Law. The second part concerning the overplus hath this additional subjoyned in the Charter of King John If any Free man die intestate his Chattels shall be divided by his Parents and his Friends in the presence of
and Kent are saved out of this Law by the Statute the first whereof saves the Land to the Heir from the Lord and the second saves the same to the Heirs Males or for want of such to the Heirs Females and to the Wife her moity until she be espoused to another man unless she shall forfeit the same by fornication during her Widow-hood And by the same Law also the King had all Escheats of the Tenants of Archbishops and Bishops during the vacancy as a perquisite But Escheats of Land and Tenement in Cities or Burroughs the King had them in jure coronae of whomsoever they were holden All Wears shall be destroyed but such as are by the Sea-coast The Lieutenant of the Tower of London as it seemed claimed a Lordship in the Thames and by vertue thereof had all the Wears to his own use as appeareth by a Charter made to the City of London recited in the second Institutes upon this Law and this was to the detriment of the Free-men especially of the City of London in regard that all Free-men were to have right of free passage through Rivers as well as through Highways and purprestures in either were equally noxious to the common liberty And therefore that which is set down under the example or instance of the Rivers of Thames and Medway contained all the Rivers in England albeit that other parts of the Kingdom had not the like present regard as the City of London had The Writ of precipe in capite shall not be granted of any Freehold whereby a man may be in danger of losing his Court thereby It seemeth that it was one of the oppressions in those times that if a Suit were commenced in the inferiour or Lords Court concerning a Freehold a Writ of precipe in capite might be had upon a Surmise that the Freehold was holden in capite which might prove an absolute destruction to the inferiour Court and was the spoil of the Demandants case and therefore I think the Charter of King John instead of the word Court hath the word Cause There shall be but one known Weight and Measure and one breadth of Cloaths throughout the Realm of England This Law of Weights and Measures was anciently established amongst the Saxons as formerly hath been shewed and continued in the Normans times and confirmed by Richard the first and King John. And as touching the measure of the breadth of Cloaths although it might seem to abridge the liberty of particular persons yet because it was prejudicial to the common Trade of the Kingdom it was setled in this manner to avoid deceit and to establish a known price of Cloaths And it seemeth that Wine was ordinarily made in England as well as Ale otherwise the Measures of Wine could not have been established by a Law in England if they had been altogether made in other Countries Inquisition of Life and Member shall be readily granted without Fees. This was a Law of latter original made to take away a Norman oppression for by the Saxon Law as hath been already noted No man was imprisoned for Crime not bailable beyond the next County-court or Sheriff's Torn but when those rural Courts began to lose their power and the Kings Courts to devour Tryals of that nature especially by the means of the Justices itinerant which were but rare and for divers years many times intermitted during all which time supposed Offenders must lie in Prison which was quite contrary to the liberty of the Free men amongst the Saxons This occasioned a new device to save the common liberty by special Writs sued out by the party imprisoned or under bail supposing himself circumvented by hatred and malice and by the same directed to the Sheriff and others an Inquisition was taken and Tryal made of the Offence whether he deserved loss of Life or Member and if it were found for the supposed Offender he was bailed till the next coming of the Justices and for this the Writ was called the Writ of inquisition of Life or Member and sometimes the Writ de odio atia But these Inquests were soon become degenerate and subject to much corruption and therefore as soon met with a countercheck from the Law Or first rather a regulation for it was ordained that the Inquest should be chosen upon Oath and that two of the Inquest at least should be Knights and those not interessed in the Cause But yet this could not rectifie the matter for it seemed so impossible to do Justice and shew Mercy this way that the Writ is at length taken away and men left to their lot till the coming of Justices itinerant But this could not be endured above seven years for though the King be a brave Souldier and prosperous yet the people overcome him and recover their Writs de odio atia again Lords shall have the Wardships of their Tenants Heirs although they hold also of the King in Petit Serjeanty Socage Burgage or Fee-farm Inferiour Lords had the same right of Wardships with the King for their Tenures in Knight-service although their Tenants did hold also of the King unless they held of him in Knight-service which was a service done by the Tenant's own person or by the person of his Esquire or other deputy in his stead But as touching such service as was wont to be done to him by render or serving him with Arms or other utensils this was no Knight-service though such utensils concerned War but was called Petit Serjeanty as in the Law-books doth appear Nevertheless Henry the Third had usurped Wardships in such cases also and the same amongst others occasioned the Barons Wars No Judge shall compel a Free-man to confess matter against himself upon Oath without complaint first made against him Nor shall receive any complaint without present proof This Law in the Original is set down in another kind of phrase in the first part thereof which is obscure by reason thereof in express words it is thus No Judge shall compel any man ad legem manifestam which implieth that the matter was otherwise obscure if the party that was complained of or suspected did not manifest the same by his own declaring of the truth or matter enquired after and therefore they used in such cases to put him to Oath and if he denied the matter or acquitted himself the Judge would sometimes discharge him or otherwise put him to his Compurgators and this was called lex manifesta or lex apparens And it was a trick first brought in by the Clergie and the Temporal Judges imitated them therein and this became a snare and sore burthen to the Subjects To avoid which they complain of this new kind of Trial and for remedy of this usurpation this Law reviveth and establisheth the onely and old way of Trial for Glanvil saith Ob infamiam non solet juxta legem terrae aliquis per
legem apparentem se purgare nisi prius convictus fuerit vel confessus in curia and therefore no man ought to be urged upon such difficulties unless by the express Law of the Land. The old way of Trial was first to bring in a Complaint and Witnesses ready to maintain the same and therefore both Appeals and Actions then used to conclude their pleas with the names of Witnesses subjoyned which at this day is implied in those general words in their conclusions Et inde producit sectam suam that is he brings his sect or suit or such as do follow or affirm his complaint as another part also is implied in those words Et hoc paratus est verificare For if the Plaintiffs sect or suit of Witnesses did not fully prove the matter in fact the Defendant's Averment was made good by his own Oath and the Oaths of Twelve men and so the Trial was concluded No Free-man shall be imprisoned or disseised of his Freehold or Liberties outlawed or banished or invaded but by the Law of the Land and judgement of his Peers Nor shall Justice be sold delayed or denied This is a comprehensive Law and made up of many Saxon Laws or rather an enforcement of all Laws and a remedy against oppression past present and to come And concerneth first the person then his livelihood as touching the person his life and his liberty his life shall be under the protection of the Law and his liberty likewise so as he shall be shut into no place by Imprisonment nor out of any place by Banishment but shall have liberty of ingress and egress His Estate both real and personal shall also be under the protection of the Law and the Law also shall be free neither denied nor delayed I think it needless to shew how this was no new Law but a confirmation of the old and reparation added thereto being much impaired by stormy times for the sum of all the foregoing discourse tendeth thereto Merchants shall have free and safe passage and trade without unjust Taxes as by ancient custome they ought In time of War such as are of the Enemies Countries shall be secured till it appear how the English Merchants are used in their Countries That this was an ancient Law the words thereof shew besides what may be observed out of the Laws of Aetheldred and other Saxon Laws So as it appeareth that not onely the English Free-men and Natives had their liberties asserted by the Law but also Forreiners if Merchants had the like liberties for their persons and goods concerning Trade and maintenance of the same and were hereby enabled to enjoy their own under the protection of the Law as the Free-men had And unto this Law the Charter of King John added this ensuing It shall be lawful for every Freeman to pass freely to and from this Kingdom saving Fealty to the King unless in time of War and then also for a short space as may be for the common good excepting Prisoners Outlaws and those Country-men that are in enmity and Merchants who shall be dealt with as aforesaid And it seemeth that this Law of free passage out of the Kingdom was not anciently fundamental but onely grounded upon reason of State although the Freemen have liberty of free passage within the Kingdom according to that original Law Sit pax publica per communes vias and for that cause as I suppose it was wholly omitted in the Charter of Henry the Third as was also another Law concerning the Jews which because it left an influence behind it after the Jews were extinct in this Nation and which continueth even unto this day I shall insert it in this short sum After death of the Jew's debtor no usury shall be paid during the minority of the Heir though the debt shall come into the King's hand And the debt shall be paid saving to the Wife her Dower and maintenance for the Children according to the quantity of the Debtors Land and saving the Lord's service and in like manner of debts to others The whole doctrine of Vsury fell under the Title of Jews for it seemeth it was their Trade and their proper Trade hitherto It was first that I met with forbidden at a Legatine Council nigh 300 years before the Normans times but by the Confessor's Law it was made penal to Christians to the forfeiture of Estate and Banishment and therefore the Jews and all their substance were holden to be in nature of the King Villains as touching their Estate for they could get nothing but was at his mercy And Kings did suffer them to continue this Trade for their own benefit yet they did regulate it as touching Infants as by this Law of King John and the Statute at Merton doth appear But Henry the Third did not put it into his Charter as I think because it was no liberty of the Subjects but rather a prejudice thereto and therefore Edward the First wholly took it away by a Statute made in his time and thereby abolished the Jews Tenants Lands holden of Lands escheated to the King shall hold by the same services as formerly In all alienations of Lands sufficient shall be left for the Lords distress Submitting to the judgement of the learned I conceive that as well in the Saxon times as until this Law any Tenant might alien onely part of his Lands and reserve the services to the alienor because he could not reserve service upon such alienation unto the Lord Paramount other than was formerly due to him without the Lord's consent and for the same reason could they not alien the whole Tenancy to bind the Lord without his express license saving the opinion in the book of Assizes because no Tenant could be enforced upon any Lord lest he might be his Enemy Nevertheless it seemeth that de facto Tenants did usually alien their whole Tenancy and although they could not thereby bar the Lord's right yet because the Lord could not in such cases have the distress of his own Tenant this Law saved so much from alienation as might serve for security of the Lord's distress But Tenants were not thus satisfied the Lords would not part with their Tenants although the Tenants necessity was never so urgent upon them to sell their Lands and therefore at length they prevailed by the Statute of Quia emptores to have power to sell all saving to the Lords their services formerly due and thus the Lords were necessitated to grant Licenses of alienation to such as the Tenants could provide to buy their Lands Nor was this so prejudicial to the Lords in those days when the publick quiet was setled as it would have been in former times of War whenas the Lord's right was maintained more by might and the aid of his Tenants than by Law which then was of little power The 35th Chapter I have formerly mentioned in the Chapter concerning
sad experience of the latter Government of Kings in these times had taught the Knighthood of England to hold for the future Ages No Tenant in ancient Demesnes or in Burgage shall be distrained for the service of a Knight Clerks and Tenants in Socage of other Mannors than of the King shall be used as they have been formerly Tenants in ancient Demesne and Tenants in Burgage are absolutely acquitted from foreign service the one because they are in nature of the King's Husbandmen and served him and his Family with Victual the other because by their Tenure they were bound to the defence of their Burrough which in account is a Limb or Member of the Kingdom and so in nature of a Castle guard Now as touching Clerks and Tenants in Socage holding of a Subject they are left to the order of ancient use appearing upon Record As concerning the Clergy it is evident by what hath been formerly noted that though they were importunate to be discharged of the service Military in regard that their profession was for Peace and not for Bloud yet could they never obtain their desire for though their persons might challenge exemption from that work yet their Lands were bound to find Arms by their Deputies for otherwise it had been unreasonable that so great a part of the Kingdom as the Clergie then had should sit still and look on whilst by the Law of Nature every one is engaged in his own defence Nor yet did the profession of these men to be men for Peace hold always uniform some kind of Wars then were holden sacred and wherein they not onely adventured their Estates but even their own Persons and these not onely in a defensive way but by way of invasion and many times where no need was for them to appear Tenants in Socage also in regard of their service might plead exemption from the Wars for if not the Plough must stand still and the Land thereby become poor and lean Nevertheless a general service or defence of the Kingdom is imposed upon all and Husbandmen must be Souldiers when the debate is who shall have the Land. In such cases therefore they are evocati ad arma to maintain and defend the Kingdom but not compellable to foreign service as the Knights were whose service consisted much in defence of their Lord's person in reference to the defence of the Kingdom and many times policy of War drew the Lords into Arms abroad to keep the Enemy further from their borders and the Knights then under their Lords pay went along with them and therefore the service of Knighthood is commonly called servitium forinsecum Of these Socagers did arise not onely the body of English Foot-men in their Armies but the better and more wealthy sort of them found Arms of a Knight as formerly hath been observed yet always under the pay of the common Purse And if called out of the Kingdom they were meer Voluntiers for they were not called out by distress as Knights were because they held not their Land by such service but they were summoned by Proclamation and probably were mustered by the high Constables in each Hundred the Law nevertheless remaining still entire that all must be done not onely ad fidem Domini Regis but also Regni which was disputed and concluded by the Sword. For though Kings pretended danger to the publick oftentimes to raise the people yet the people would give credit as they pleased Or if the King's Title were in question or the Peoples Liberty yet every man took liberty to side with that party that liked him best nor did the King's Proclamation sway much this or that way It is true that precedents of those times cry up the King's power of arraying all Ships and men without respect unless of age or corporal disability but it will appear that no such array was but in time of no less known danger from abroad to the Kingdom than imminent and therefore might be wrought more from the general fear of the Enemy than from the King's command And yet those times were always armed in neighbouring Nations and Kings might have pretended continual cause of arraying Secondly it will no less clearly appear that Kings used no such course but in case of general danger to the whole Kingdom either from foreign Invasion as in the times of King John or from intestine Broils as in the times of Henry the third and the two Edwards successively And if the danger threatned onely one coast the array was limited onely to the parts adjacent thereunto Thirdly it seemeth that general arrays were not levied by distress till the time of Edward the first and then onely for the rendezvouze at the next Sea-coast and for defence against foreign Invasion in which case all Subjects of the Kingdom are concerned by general service otherwise it can come unto no other account than that Title Prerogative and therein be charactered as a trick above the ordinary strain Fourthly those times brought forth no general array of all persons between the ages of sixteen years and sixty that was made by distress in any case of Civil War but onely by Sheriffs summons and in case of disobedience by summons to appear before the King and his Council which sheweth that by the common Law they were not compellable or punishable Lastly though these arrays of men were sometimes at the charge of the King and sometimes at the Subjects own charge yet that last was out of the road-way of the Subjects liberty as the subsequent times do fully manifest And the like may be said of arrays of Ships which however under command of Kings for publick service were nevertheless rigged and paid out of the publick charge The sum of all will be that in cases of defence from foreign Invasion Kings had power of array according to the order of Law if they exceeded that Rule it may be more rightly said they did what they would than what they ought CHAP. LXXI Of the Peace WAR and Peace are two births by several venters and may like the day and night succeed but can never inherit each to other and for that cause they may claim to belong to one Father and that one and the same power should act in both and yet it is no good Maxime That he that is the chief Commander in War ought to be the chief in the order of Peace For it naturally befalls that War especially that which we call Civil War like some diseases in the body does rather breed ill humours than consume them and these must be purged by dieting the State and constant course of Justice unto which the rugged Waves of War have little or no affinity if they have not enmity Nevertheless the wisdom of our Ancestors thought it most meet to keep their Kings in work as well in time of Peace as of War and therefore as they anciently referred the principal care thereof to the Lords who together
and Masters under Cade and Straw that might have brought the Commonwealth into a hideous Chaos had not the Lords and Great men betimes bestirred themselves and the King shewed an extraordinary spirit or rather a kind of rage that put it self forth beyond the ordinary temper of his mind Much of this mischief was imputed to Wickliff's Doctrine for it is an ordinary thing to proclaim all evils concurring with the very joynt of Reformation to be the proper fruits thereof But I look upon it as a fruit of corruption that endeavours to stop the breath of Reformation in the birth And there is somewhat of a hidden influence from above in the thing for it was not onely the Cup of England to be thus troubled but France and other places had their portion suitable The King's minority rendred him unequal unto these contrary motions he was in his Eleventh year when he entred the Throne and which was worse his years came on faster than his parts but his work posted before them all The common help of Protectors left him yet more unhappy for they were prepossessed with strong engagements of particular Interests and so were either not wise enough or not good enough for all This brought forth a third inconvenience the change of Protectorship and that change of Affairs and Interests an uncertain good that brings forth a certain evil for variety of Instruments and Interests move several ways and though the end be one the difference concerning the way many times doth as much hinder the Journey as so many blocks in the way The Protectorship was thrice changed the King's Uncles had the first essay any one of them was big enough for one Kingdom but all of them together were too great to make one Protector The Duke of Lancaster would have done well alone if he had been alone and minded that work alone but he being somewhat engaged with the Wickliffists and so entangled with the Clergy and other restless spirits and drawn off by his private aim at the Crown of Castile saw this work too much and so he warily withdrew himself leaving the Directory to a Committee of Lords a soveraign Plaister questionless where the times are whole but not for these distractions wherein even the Committee it self suffered its share Thus the breach is made the wider and for a cure of all the Government is committed into one hand wherein the Earl of Warwick acquitted himself well for he was wise enough to observe such as the people most honoured And thus passed over the two first years of the King's Reign The remainder of the King's minority was rather in common repute than in true account For the King however young took little more from the Protector than he saw meet to colour his own commands with opinion of Regularity and so his Will came to full strength before his Wisdom budded Thus lifted up he sets himself above all interests of Parliaments Protectors Counsellors Uncles Wise men and Law leaving them all to be rules for those below And so long as the King's desire is thus served he is content to be reputed a Minor and be as it were under protection of others though not under their direction and is content to continue thus until his Two and twentieth year Some might think him very moderate had he been moderate but he forbears suing out his Livery so long as he may live without care and spend without controul For by this time the humour of his great Grandfather budded in him he pawned his Heart to young men of vast desires and some say so inordinately as he prostituted his Chastity unto them And it is no wonder if the Revenues of the Crown are insufficient for such Masters This the people soon felt and feared their own Free-holds for they are bound saith he not to see the Crown deflowred for want of maintenance it is very true nor to see the Crown deflowred of its maintenance A Parliament therefore is called in which divers Lords associate and prepare Physick for the King 's lavish humour which being administred wrought for Ten years after till it had purged him of his Life and the Kingdom of their King. It was an Act of Parliament that gave power to Fourteen Lords and others to regulate the profits and Revenues of the Crown and to do Justice to the people this was to continue for one whole year The Parasites no sooner found the effect hereof to their cost but the King grows sick of it and finds an Antidote to over-rule Acts of Parliament by Acts of Privy-Council declares this ill-favoured Commission void and the Contrivers Advisers and Enforcers Traytors To make it more Majestical he causeth the Judges to subscribe this Order and so it becomes Law in repute This foundation thus laid he buildeth in haste an Impeachment of these Commissioners of High Treason and supposing that they would not readily stoop himself stoops lower for he would put his Right to trial by Battle which was already his own by the judgement of the Masters of the Law For so they may be well called seeing they had thus mastered it In this the King had the worst for he lost his Honour and himself God hath a care of common Right even amongst Idolaters Then comes the Parliament of wonders wherein the Kings Party are declared Traytors and the chief Judges with their Law judged by another Law. The King not meddled with thinks it high time to come out of his Minority and assumes the Government of the Kingdom and himself to himself being now Three and twenty years of Age old enough to have done well if he had cared for it But resolving to follow the way of his own will at length it led him to his own ruine Onely for the present two things delayed it viz. the Authority Wisdom and Moderation of his Unkles especially of the Duke of Lancaster now come out of Spain and the great affection which the King pretended to the Queen who had also gained a good opinion amongst the people The benevolent aspect of the people not for their own advantage but for the publick quiet procured many Parlies and Interviews between the King and people and many Laws for the upholding of the Court and Government although both War Laws Justice and Councils all are faint as all is faint in that man that hath once dismann'd himself This he perceives well enough and therefore Peace he must have by any means The Queen dies himself being nigh Eight and twenty years old takes a Creature like a Wife but in truth a Childe of Eight years old and this is to get peace with France It is no wonder if now he hunts after unlawful game and that being ill taken brings all things out of order For abused Marrige never wants wo. Civil men are now looked upon as severe Cato's and his Unkles especially the Duke of Gloucester with a jealous eye which accomplished his death in
the conclusion The Dukes of Lancaster and York forsake the Court Favourites step into their rooms The old way of the eleventh year is re-assumed Belknap and others are pardoned and made of the Cabinet The pardon of the Earl of Arundel is adnulled contrary to the advice of the major part and the Archbishop the Earl's Brother is banished The Lords forsake the wilful King still the King's Jealousie swells The Duke of Hertford is banished or rather by a hidden Providence sent out of the way for a further work The Duke of Lancaster dies and with him all hope of moderation is gone for he was a wise Prince and the onely Cement that held the Joynts of the Kingdom in correspondency And he was ill requited for all his Estate is seized upon The Duke of Hertford and his party are looked upon by the people as Martyrs in the Common Cause and others as Royalists Extremities hasten on and Prerogative now upon the wing is towering above reach In full Parliament down goes all the work of the tenth and eleventh years Parliament which had never been if that Parliament had continued by adjournment The King raiseth a power which he calleth his Guard of Cheshire-men under the terrour of this displaying Rod the Parliament and Kingdom are brought to Confession Cheshire for this service is made a Principality and thus goes Counties up and Kingdoms down The King's Conscience whispers a sad message of dethroning and well it might be for he knew he had deserved it Against this danger he entrenches himself in an Act of Parliament that made it Treason To purpose and endeavour to depose the King or levy War against him or to withdraw his Homage hereof being attainted in Parliament And now he thought he was well guarded by engagement from the Parliament but he missed the right conclusion for want of Logick For if the Parliament it self shall depose him it cannot be made a Traytor or attaint it self and then hath the King gained no more than a false birth But the King was not thus quiet the sting of guilt still sticks within and for remedy he will unlaw the Law and gets it enacted That all procurers of the Statute of 10 Richard the Second and the Commission and procurers of the King's assent thereto and hinderers of the King's proceedings are adjudged Traytors All these reach onely the Branches the Root remains yet and may spring again and therefore in the last place have at the Parliament it self For by the same it is further declared That the King is the sole Master of the Propositions for matters to be treated in Parliament and all gainsayers are Traitors Secondly That the King may dissolve the Parliament at his pleasure and all gainsayers are Traitors Thirdly That the Parliament may not proceed against the King's Justices for offences by them committed in Parliament without the King's consent and all gainsayers are Traitors These and the like Aphorisms once voted by the Cheshire-men assented unto by the Parliament with the Kings Fiat must pass for currant to the Judges and if by them confirmed or allowed will in the King's opinion make it a Law for ever That the King in all Parliaments is Dominus fac primum and Dominus fac totum But the Judges remembred the Tenth year and Belknap's entertainment and so dealt warily their opinion is thus set down It belongeth to the Parliament to declare Treason yet if I were a Peer and were commanded I should agree So did Thorning under-write and thereunto also consented Rickill and Sir Walter Clopton the last being Chief-Justice of the King's Bench the first chief-Chief-Justice of the Common-pleas and the second another Judge of the same Bench. The sum in plainer sence is that if they were Peers they would agree but as Judges they would be silent And thus the Parliament of England by the first of these four last-mentioned conclusions attainted themselves by the second yielded up their Liberties by the third their Lives and by the last would have done more or been less And to fill up the measure of all they assigned over a right of Legislative power unto six Lords and three Commons and yet the King not content superadded that it should be Treason for any man to endeavour to repeal any of their determinations The Commonwealth thus underneath the King tramples upon all at once for having espied the shadow of a Crown fleeting from him in Ireland he pursues it leaves the noble Crown of England in the base condition of a Farm subject to strip and waste by mean men and crosses the Irish Seas with an Army This was one of England's Climacterical years under a Disease so desperate that no hope was left but by a desperate Cure by sudden bleeding in the Head and cutting off that Member that is a principle of motion in the Body For it was not many Moneths e're the wind of affairs changed the King now in Ireland another steps into the Throne The noise hereof makes him return afar off enraged but the nigher he comes the cooler he grows his Conscience revives his Courage decays and leaving his Army his Lordship Kingdom and Liberty behind as a naked man submits himself to release all Homage and Fealty to resign his Crown and Dignity his Titles and Authority to acknowledge himself unworthy and insufficient to reign to swear never to repent of his resignation And thus if he will have any quiet this wilful man must be content for the future neither to will nor desire And poor England must for a time be contented with a doleful condition in which the King cannot rule and the Parliament will not and the whole body like a Chaos capable of any form that the next daring spirit shall brood upon it CHAP. II. Of the State of the King and Parliament in relation of it to him and him to it A King in Parliament is like the first-born of Jacob The excellency of Dignity and the excellency of Power but alone unstable as water Examples of both these we have in these two Kings Whereof the first was Crowned by the Parliament and Crowned it the latter also Crowned it but with Thorns and yet the Parliament in all held on that wise way that it neither exceeded its own bounds nor lost its own right I shall enter into the consideration of particulars under these heads First In relation more immediately to the interest of the King Secondly To the interest of the Kingdom in general The King though higher than all the people by the head and so hath the Prerogative of Honour as the most worthy yet his strength and abilities originally do rise from beneath otherwise he is but like a General without an Army the Title big but airy and many times his person subject to so much danger that instead of drawing the Eyes of all the people to look upon him with admiration they are drawn to look to him with observation and in this
Issue or Demurrer and then to the Common-Law where upon Trial if the Defendant make default the Plaintiff shall have Judgement and Execution And if the Heir be in Ward to the King the Mother shall sue and recover her Dower in the Chancery And they tell us that it had power to prohibit Spiritual Courts and Courts of Common-Law yea to over-rule or reverse Judgements and yet the Common-Law held it's ground when it was concerned for neither were all suits there by Bill as in cases of Equity nor determined according to such rules nor did the power of Judicature rest in the breast of one Chancellor but in him joyntly with other Council of the King which were also learned Judges of the Law. For the Report informeth that Edward the Second had granted a Rent in Tail to the Earl of Kent who dying his Son under age and Ward to the King Edward the Third seised amongst other Lands the Rent and granted it to Sir John Molins Upon Petition the King refers the matter to the Arch-bishop and others of the Council calling to them the Chancellor A Scire Facias goes forth to Sir John Molins he upon appearance pleaded to the jurisdiction as a case belonging to the Common-law but it would not be allowed because it was to repeal the King's Charter And whereas it was objected that the reference was to the Archbishop and others and therefore the cause ought not to be determined in the Chancery it was resolved that it did properly belong to the Chancery by the Law And in the argument of the case it appears clearly that the King's Council there were learned in the Law. And the same is yet more evident by the Title of Bills in those days exhibited in the Chancery which was directed to the Chancellor and the King's Council and the Rule given Per tout les Justices Which I rather note for the shortness of the form of Bills in those days far different from these times wherein the substance of the complaint however small in it self is oftentimes blown out into so great a bubble that it breaks to nothing And the Statutes formerly mentioned do assert the same thing as touching the King's Council For though they speak of the Council or Chancery in the English Tongue yet in the original the words are Conceil en Chancery Having thus touched upon the matters under the Judicatory of the Chancery and Judges in the same In the next place the manner of proceedings comes to consideration For it seems they had been formerly very irregular and that contrary to the Grand Charter upon a bare suggestion in the Chancery the party complained of was imprisoned and no proceedings made thereupon For remedy whereof it was ordained That upon suggestions so made the Complainant was to find Sureties to pursue the Suggestions and that the Process of Law should issue forth against the party without imprisoning him and that if the Suggestions were not proved true the Complainant should incur the like penalty that the Defendant should have done in case he had been found Guilty But afterwards this later Clause was altered by another Statute because it was full of uncertainty and it was ordained that in such case the Complainant shall be imprisoned until he shall satisfie the Defendant of his Damages and furthermore shall make Fine and Ransom to the King. But because that the Defendant many times held his advantage even to extremity this course lasted not long but a new Law was made which put the power of awarding Damages in such cases into the Chancellour to do according to his discretion And thus the Chancery obtained power to award Damages which they never had formely and the Chancellour a Precedency both in the Chancery and of the Council in the Court of Star-chamber and in many cases in the Exchequer By the first he had a power in matters of Meum and Tuum by the last in matters Mei and Regis and by the other in matters Mei and Regni A considerable man certainly he was in the motions of Government but how much more if he be made Arch-bishop of Canterbury Cardinal and Legate à Latere or Arch-bishop Lord Treasurer and Legate à Latere as these days had divers times seen Extraordinary advancements bestowed upon the Nobility brings Honour to the Throne but if they be not men of noted Worth and Uprightness they make the Scepter stoop by stirring up envy in the Nobility and indignation from the people For seldom is it seen that Advancements are fed from the Crown though they be bred from thence but either maintained by new supplies from the peoples Purses or the ruine or decay of some Officers more ancient than themselves or both And such was the condition of the Chancellour he sucked fat from beneath and Bloud and Spirits from the Grand Chief Justiciar of England and so reduced that Honourable Potentate unto the degree of Chief Justice of the King's Bench leaving scarcely unto him the Name or Title of Lord. One thing more remaineth touching the election or nomination of this Great man. At the first he was no better than a Register or the King's Remembrancer or Secretary having also the Honour to advise the King in such matters as came within the circuit of the Writings in his custody and questionless Eo usque it is suitable to all the reason in the World that he should be of the King 's sole Nomination and Election But when it befals that instead of advising the King his word is taken to be the Rule and a Judicatory power put upon that and unto this is superadded that honourable trust of keeping and governing the Great Seal of the Kingdom with the continual growing power occasionally conferred upon him by the Parliament He is now become no more the King's Remembrancer but the Lord Chancellor of England and Supream Officer of State. And it seems but reasonable that he should hold his place by publick Election as well as the Grand Justiciar whose Plumes he borrowed and other Grand Officers of State did before him For he that will have his Servant to work for another must give the other that Honour of Electing him thereto nor was this laid aside nor forgotten by these times but a claim was put in for the Election or allowance of this principal Officer amongst others the Parliament obtaining a Judgement in the case by the King's Confession and so the thing is left to the judgement of future ages Viz. Whether a King that can do no man wrong can dissemble the Royal Assent in Parliament or declare himself legally in that manner by Proclamation CHAP. V. Of Admirals Courts THis is a third Court that maintained the King's Judicatory power in a different way from that which is commonly called the Common-Law and by many is therefore supposed to advance the King's Prerogative but upon mistaken grounds It is very true that the
This reducing of Treason into a narrower ground made the Regiment of Felonies to swell A hard thing it was in a Warring time for men to conceit themselves well drest until they were compleatly armed Some used it for a Complement and amongst others honest men had as good cause to use it as some that were ill-affected had a bad and of the last sort some did aim at private revenge though many aimed against the publick quiet But however the intentions of men thus harnassed might be different the looks of them all are so sour that it is hard to know a man for Peace from a man for War. And therefore the people were now so greedy after Peace as they are ready to magnifie or multiply all postures of arm'd men into the worst fashion being well assur'd that the readiest way to keep themselves from the hurt of such men is to have none of them at all But Edward the Third had more need of them than so and will therefore allow men to ride armed but not to Troop together to rob kill or imprison any man and if any person did otherwise it should be Felony or Trespass but not High Treason All this was in favour to the people and yet it was not all for when Mercy groweth profuse it becomes Cruelty Murther is very incident to times of War yet is an Enemy to the Peace of so high a nature that though the King's Pardon may do much yet both King and People declare it an impardonable crime by the Common Law and that the King's Prerogative shall not extend so far as to pardon the same This Justice done to the party dead was a mercy to them that were alive a means to save bloud by bloudshed and not so much by the King's Grant as by his Release One thing more in these cases of bloud the people obtained of the King which they had not so much by Release as by Grant and that was the taking away of Englishire an ancient Badge of the Imperial power of the Danes over the Saxons and which had either continued through the desidiousness of the Saxons in the times of Edward the Confessor unto the Normans time or by them taken up again and continued until these times that Edward the Third was so far desirous to declare his readiness to maintain the Liberties of the people as to be willing to restore them where they failed and in particular took away the manner of presentment of Englishire blotting out the Title and Clause concerning it out of the Articles of Inquiry for the Judges Itinerant And thus whether Native or Foreiner all men are now made in death equal and one Law serves all alike Next unto bloud these times grew more sensible of Ravishments than former times had done For though they had determined a severe penalty against so foul a crime and made it in the nature of a Felony capital which was enough to have scared any man from such attempts yet for the proof of the matter in Fact much rested upon the will of the Woman which for the most part grounded upon self-respects and private prudence laboured to conceal that which could not be made whole by revealing and by after-consent skin'd over the sore as to themselves which corrupted inwardly and endangered the whole Body To cure which a Law is made to restrain such late connivance in the Woman by depriving her both of her Joynture and Inheritance which otherwise had been saved to her by such compliance as after-consent unto such violations CHAP. X. Of the Course of Civil Justice during these times HOwever the course of the Law concerning matters of the Crown passed in a troubled Wave yet in matters of Common Pleas it passed in a Calm and full Channel as the Reports in Print do sufficiently witness nor was there any change of Principles but onely some alteration tending to a clearer manifestation of the same I will not touch upon every particular but onely upon two which reflect somewhat upon the publick Policy the one touching the course of Inheritance in some particular cases the other touching pleading in the Courts of Civil Justice The first of these was occasioned from Conjuncture of Affairs the case being such that Edward the Third had now gotten himself a new Kingdom unto that of England and must look to maintain that by power which he obtained by force and conducing thereunto must have continual employment of the English in that Service as being most trusty to his Cause And that it is unreasonable that such English as had devoted themselves to his Service in this Cause and in order thereunto had transported themselves and their Families into those foreign parts should thereby lose the benefit of Lieges in the Birth-right of their Children born in those foreign parts Upon consideration had thereof and of a former leading Opinion of the Lawyers Parliament a Declarative Law was made That all Children born without the Kings Legiance whose Father and Mother at the time of their birth shall be under the Faith and Legiance of the King of England shall have the benefit of Inheritance within the same Legiance as other Inheritors have These are the words of the Statute and do occasion a double observation one from the matter the other from the manner of the Expression The Subject matter is so delivered not as an Introduction of a new Law but as a Declarative of the old that lay more obscurely hidden for want of occasion to reveal it and the substance thereof resteth onely in this To enable the Children of English Natives born beyond the Seas not the Children of those that are of foreign birth though within the Kings Territories in those parts as the Opinion hath been Nor doth any ancient Precedent or Case warrant the same as might be at large manifested if it might conduce to the end of this Discourse And for the same cause after this Statute whenas the Commons would have had a general Naturalizing of all Infants born beyond the Sea within the Kings Segniories the same would not be granted otherwise than according to the former Statute and the Common Law. That which in the next place concerneth the manner of Expression is this That a Child is said to be born out of the Kings Legiance and yet the Father and Mother at the same time to be of the Faith and Legiance of the King of England It seemeth to me that it intendeth onely those Children of English Parents born within the Kings Territories beyond the Seas because the words ensuing concerning Certification of Bastardy of such Children are That the same shall be made by the Bishop of such place upon the Kings Writ directed to him which could never have passed into those places that are not of the Kings Territories And so the Issue will be That the Legiance of those born in those parts though they are Leiges to the King yet they
wounds the heart and being of as little use in a Commonwealth as of benefit therefore is laid aside nor need I to speak any more concerning it There is one thing more somewhat like a Torniament but that it is in good earnest and that is called Duel This cometh likewise within the Cognizance of this Court but in a Ministerial way and as subservient to the Common Law in cases of Appeal and Right Hereof needs likewise little more than the naming and therefore I shall leave the Reader that would understand the particular managing thereof unto the discourse compiled by the Duke of Gloucester in Richard the Second's time Lastly As touching the antiquity of this Court though it may be great yet the power thereof was doubtful and scarce taken notice of in any publick Act of State till about these times whenas a complaint was made by the Commons for the encroachment of that Court upon the Liberty of People and bounds of the Courts of Common Law. Nor is it strange that such unquiet times brought forth such Precedents but much more strange that the Common Law held up its head against such violent irruptions of War. CHAP. XII Of the Peace YOu have seen the Kingdom in Armour now see it in Robes and you will say that its Majesty therein is as grave as it was in the other brave It is true the tempers are so contrary as it may be wondred how one and the same should be wise and willing for both but when God will do much he gives much and can make a People as one man like unto Caleb fitted both for War and Peace Besides the Times were now much conducing hereto It is vain to endeavour to allay Humours in the Body which are maintained by Agitation they must be purged out or the whole will still be endangered and therefore although Kings hitherto did endeavour to establish a peaceable Government yet being led by ill Principles of private Interests they laboured to little purpose But now the Scene is altered and one wise moderate King that was as wise as valiant did more than they all And first set a rule upon his own desires contenting himself with the condition of an English King and then upon his people making them contented with the condition of English men The order herein was no less observable for the former wrangling Times having trained up the mindes of men in a tumultuous way nor could they skill to pace in the steps of Peace the King led them into Foreign parts to spend their heat till being either weak or weary they are contented to return home and study the happiness of a quiet Life These men thus ordered the rest at home are made more cool like a Body after Physick and all are now contented to submit to Law and Magistracy 〈◊〉 fitting time now it was for Justices of Peace to come upon the Stage in their best garb For though the work was more ancient yet like some loose Notes laid aside in several places it was not to be found but at a distance and after long delay But Edward the Third sums up all into one brief and brings a compleat Model thereof into the World for future Ages to accomplish as occasion should lead the way The course was now established to have Justices setled in every County there to be resident and attending that Service First they were named Guardians or Wardens of the Peace but within a few Years altered their Title to Justices First they were chosen out of the good and lawful men of each County After that they were two or three chosen out of the worthiest men and these were to be joyned with Lawyers Then was one Lord and three or four in each County of the most worthy men adjoyned with Lawyers Afterward in Richard the Second's time the number of the Justices in each County might attain to the number of Six and no Steward of any Lord to be admitted into the Commission but within half a year all is at large so be it that the choice be out of the most sufficient Knights Esquires and Gentlemen of the County Again within two years the number in each County is set at Eight yet in all these the Judges and Serjeants were not reckoned so as the work then seemeth not so much as now a days although it was much of the same kind and yet it grew up into that greatness which it had by degrees Before they were setled by Edward the Third there were Custodes pacis which might be those whom we now a days call the High Constables of the Hundred whose work was purely Ministerial Afterward about the second year of Edward the Third the Guardians of the Peace had power of Oyer and Terminer in matters of riding armed upon the Statute 2 Edw. 3. After that they have power of enquiry by Indictment in certain Cases within four years after they have power of Oyer and Terminer in Cases of false Jurors and Maintenance and about ten years after that they obtained like power in matters of Felony and Trespass The way of Commissions in case of Life and Member thus opened another occasion of Commission offers it self for a determinative power in case of offences against the Statute of Labourers and the Cognizance hereof is soon setled upon Commissioners in the Counties specially chosen for that Service which questionless as the Times then stood was as commendable work as it was necessary For Souldiers were so many that Labourers were very few and those that once are accustomed to Arms think ever after meanly of the Handicraft nor will they ever stoop thereto after their Spirits are once elevated by mastery of Adventures And secondly those few Labourers that remained of the Sword Plague and other disasters of these wasting times understood their advantage and set a value upon their Labours far above their merit apprehending that men would rather part with too much of a little than to let their work lie still that must bring them in all they have But these Commissioners lasted not long though the work did The Justices of Peace are looked upon as meet for that service and it is a vain thing to multiply Commissions where the work may be done by one that before this time had obtained an additional Cognizance of all Causes of Riots Batteries wandering dangerous persons and offences in Weights and Measures and in Purveyance To them I say all this work concerning Labourers is also committed by the Parliament and herewith a way was laid open for Crimes of greatest regard under Felony to be determined by Trial in the Country according to the course of Common Law. The issue of all which was not onely ease to the people but a great escape from the rigour of the Council-Table in the Star-chamber and the Kings Bench at Westminster on the one side and also
his game in that Country another plays King by your leave in this and steps into the Throne teaching the King thereby this Lesson though too late That Non-residency is dangerous for a Priest but unto a Prince fatal unless his Subjects be fast to him when he is loose to them CHAP. XIII A View of the Summary Courses of Henry the Fourth Henry the Fifth and Henry the Sixth in their several Reigns HE that played this prank was the banished Duke of Hertford Son of John of Gaunt and by his death now become Duke of Lancaster by Title and as the Times then were it proved not hard to get more For in uncertain Commonwealths it is an easie thing for a man of opinion that hath less than his due to get more than he ought As Son of John of Gaunt this Duke had the peoples good wishes he a wise and a brave man and under oppression gained the more upon the people by how much they love brave men and compassionate such as suffer wrong especially from such persons from whom they all found the like measure All these concurring with the King's absence invited the Duke to adventure himself upon the influence of the peoples favour to gain his own right and what more the people would allow him and if no more yet his Honour is saved he came for his own and attained his end Thus then he comes over without Army or Foreign Power or other help saving the advice and interest of Archbishop Arundel who was his Companion in suffering Partner in the Cause and no less welcome to the Clergie than the Duke himself was to the people and so gained power to the Duke though he brought none Upon their arrival the Aspects of all are benign the Dukedom waits for him and in that as in a Mirrour he beholds the way fair and easie yet further it pities him to see the Kingdom so torn in pieces and spoiled The people knew him able and hoped him willing to amend all they offered him their Service which he accepts and therewith the Crown So hard a thing it is for to put a stop to a Conquerour in his career By this time was the Duke of Hertford thus become Duke of Lancaster and King of England under the name of Henry the Fourth by a design that in the proof was more easie than commendable and which being effected cost more skill to make that seem fair which was so foul than to accomplish the thing He therefore first heaps together Titles enough to have buried the clamour of Usurpation if it would have succeeded Conquest was a Title freest from Dispute whilst Power holds but it looks better from a Foreign Enemy than one sworn to the English Crown and therefore after that had served his turn he disclaimed it as that which was though meet enough to have yet unmeet to hold His right by Designation from his Predecessor he glanced upon but durst not adventure it too deep into the peoples consideration whose Ancestors had formerly over-ruled the Case against King John. He then stayed upon a concealed Title from a concealed Son of Henry the Third of whom they who listed might be perswaded but few believed the thing nor did himself but thence takes his slight up to a Jus Divinum or some hidden Fate that called him to the work but even there his Wings failed him and so he falls flat upon the Peoples Election De bene esse Some of these or all together might make Title enough for a great Man that resolved to hold by hook what he had got by crook and therefore trussing them up all together he enters his claim to the Crown As coming from the Bloud Royal from King Henry and through the Right that God his Grace hath sent me with the help of my Kin and Friends to recover the same which was in point to be undone for want of good Governance and due Justice The extract of all is that he was chosen by the People and Parliament then sitting And albeit that by the Resignation of Richard the Second the Parliament might seem in strict construction of Law to be expired together with the Kings power who called them together yet did not that Parliament so apprehend the matter but proceeded not onely to definitive Sentence of deposing him but declared themselves by their Commissaries to be the Three States and Representative of the People of England maintaining thereby their subsistency by the consistence of the Members together although their Chief was for the present like a head in a Trance till they had chosen Henry the Fourth to succeed in the Throne by this means preventing the conceit of discontinuance in the very Bud of the Notion Much like his entry was his continuance a continual tide of Foreign and Domestick War and Conspiracy enough to exercise his great Courage although he was more wise than warlike being loth to take up Arms for well he knew that a sick Title never sleeps but in a Bed of Peace and more loth to lay them down For besides Victory whereby he gained upon his Enemies in time of War he knew how to make advantage of them in time of Peace to secure his Friends to keep others in awe to enforce such Laws as stood with reason of State and the present posture of Affairs and where Laws failed to fill up the period with Dictates of his own Will. And upon this account the Product was a Government full of Ulcers of Bloudshed without regard of persons whether of the Lay or Religious Order without Legal Trial or priviledge of Clerk. So was Archbishop Walden dethroned Archbishop Scroop put to death and Dukes were dismounted without Conviction or Imputation saving of the Kings displeasure Taxes multiplied although begotten they were upon the Parliament like some monstrous Births shewn to the World to let it know what could be done but concealed by Historians to let it know what may not be done Yea the Priviledges of Parliament invaded in point of Election A thing that none of his Predecessors ever exemplified to him nor none of his Successors ever imitated him in Nor had he purposed it but that he was loth the People should know more of the Government than needs must To keep off Foreign Troubles he made Peace with France for longer time than he lived yet was ever infested with the Sword of St. Paul in behalf of Richard the Second's Queen and with the Factions between the Houses of Orleans and Burgundy in which he had interested himself to preserve the Foreign Neighbourhood in Parties one against another that himself might attend his own security at home He would have moved the Scots but they were already under English Banners nor could he reach so far having so many Enemies even in his own bosom The Welsh were big with Antiquity and Mountains of Defence they begin to bethink themselves of their Antient Principality hold the Kings Arms at hard duty
till by Laws Enacted in Parliament they lost their Liberties of bearing Office Ministerial or of Judicature of holding Castle of Convention without the Kings License yea of Purchase and by degrees were brought down from the height of a Free Principality to be starved in their power and inferiour to a Free People And thus the Welsh on the one side the discontented Lords on the other and Mortimar's Title in all so busied the King as though he lopped off the Tops as they sprang up yet they sprang forth as they were lopped nor was it the Kings lot all this while to find out the root of All or to strike at that Lastly when time had made all Troublers weary yet he still sits upon Torns he was jealous of his Subjects jealous of his Son yea jealous of himself it being ever the first and last of his thoughts how to keep his Crown For the most part of his Reign he was troubled with the walking Ghost of Richard the Second ever and anon he was alive he was here he was there and so the peoples minds were always kept at random but when all these Spirits are conjured down Richard the Second's Ghost is yet within Henry's own breast So ruled Henry the Fourth an unhappy confident man that durst undertake more than he would did more than he ought was successful in what he did yet never attained his end to be sure of his Crown and quiet of mind For a Plaister to this Sore he turned somewhat towards Religion but shewed it more in zeal to Church-men than in works of Piety and therefore may be thought to regard them rather as his best Friends in right of Archbishop Arundel than as in relation to Religion Yet as if he overlooked that he desires their Prayers becomes a strict observer of superstitious Rites is fiery zealous against the Lollards intends a Journey into the Holy Land and War against the Infidels the common Physick of guilty Kings in those days Briefly he did will to do any thing but undo what he had done and had done more had his Journey to the Holy Land succeeded But whether hastned or delayed by a Prophecie of the ending of his days falls not within my Pen to censure entring upon the Work he died in the beginning of his purposes in the midst of his fears never came to the Holy Land and yet yielded up his last breath in Jerusalem The Parliament was then sitting and was witness of the death of Henry the Fourth as it had been of his entrance upon the Throne as if purposed to see the course of the Crown in the doubtful current between the two Houses of Lancaster and York and to maintain their own Honour in directing the Scepter according to their warranty upon a late Intail by Act of Parliament Yet did not all rest upon this for the Heir of Henry the Fourth was a Man every inch of him and meant not to Moot upon the point His Father died a King and he his Heir had the Crown and was resolved to hold it A rough young man he had been formerly and bold enough to out-face small doubts in point of Succession for he could for need out-face common Civility it self This might have lien in his way for he that cannot govern himself can much less govern a Kingdom Yet a hidden providence concluded quite contrary and rendred him a clear Testimony of a strange change by the anointing Oyl like that of Saul that forthwith had the Spirit of another man. So though not hammered thereto by Affliction as was Edward the First yet was he his parallel in Government and superiour in Success Being seated in the Throne all men thought it dangerous to abide the adventure of the Turn of this Kings Spirit The Clergie had but yesterday tried the Mastery with the Laity and gained it but by one Vote there was no dealing with the Clergie whilst Archbishop Arundel lived nor with him whilst Henry the Fourth lived or his Merits were in memory but now they both are dead the Clergie and the Laity are upon even ground This might make the Clergie now not over-confident The Lords looked on the King as a man like enough to strike him that stands next The wise men saw he would be doing all men were tired with Intestine Quarrels and jumped in one That he that would be in action should act abroad where he might get Renown and a Purchase big enough for his Spirit Scotland was a Kingdom yet incompetent to the King's Appetite France was the fairer Mark and better Game and though too big for the English gripe yet the Eagle stooped and sped himself so well as within six years he fastned upon the Sword and Scepter and a Daughter of France and might have seized the Crown but chose to suffer a blur to lie upon his Title derived from Edward the Third rather than to incur the censure of Arrogancy over a stooping Enemy or to pluck the fruit from the Tree before it was fully ripe which in time would fall ●nto his lap by a better Law than that of the Sword Otherwise it might be well conceited that he that hath both Right and Power and will not seize disclaims Besides the King was as well Inheritor to his Father's Fate as Crown still he had success but the end was so far distant that he died in the way thereto The brave Dauphine of France maintaining War after his Father the French King had yielded up the Bucklers to Henry the Fifth till Henry the Fifth died and the English did forgo what they had formerly gotten in France by the Sword of that great Commander Nor did the English gain any thing in the conclusion of this War but an honourable windy repute of being one of the five Chief Nations of Christendom if honour it be to be reputed amongst the Nations a Conquerour of France the chief Leader unto the dethroning of three Popes at once the Election of Pope Martin and of giving a Cure to that deadly Wound of the Popedom which had spent the bloud of two hundred thousand mens lives lost in that Quarrel These Foreign Engagements made the King less sollicitous of the point of Prerogative at home and the rather because he knew the way to conquer his private Enemies Arms and his Subjects Hearts without loss of Honour in the one or Reverence in the other He loved Justice above the rank of his Predecessors and in some respects above himself for he advanced Gascoign for doing Justice though to the King 's own shame He liked not to intrude himself into Elections and therefore though requested by the Monks of Canterbury he would not nominate a Successour to Archbishop Arundel but left the whole work to them In the Authority of his place he was moderate and where his Predecessors did matters without the Lords consent when he made his Unkle the Marquiss of Dorset Duke of Exeter and had given
him a Pension to maintain that honour he asked the Lords consent thereto To the Clergie he was more than just if not indulgent led thereto by his Father's example as being wrapped up in the same Interest as I conceive rather than out of any liking of their ways now growing more bold upon Usurpation than in former times Or it may be that having prevailed in that work in France which to any rational man must needs appear above the power of the King and all the Realm of England he looked upon it as more than humane and himself as an instrument of Miracles And was stirred up in his Zeal to God according to his understanding in those dark times to give the Clergie scope and to pleasure them with their liberty of the Canon-Law that began now to thunder with Fire and Terrour in such manner that neither greatness nor multitude could withstand the dint as was evidenced in that Penance inflicted upon the Lord Strange and his Lady in case of Bloud-shed in Holy Ground and their hot pursuit of the Lord Cobham unto a death of a new nature for somewhat done which was sometimes called Treason and sometimes Heresie And thus became Henry the Fifth baptized in the Flames of the Lollards as his Father had sadly rendred up his spirit in the same I say in this he is to be looked upon as one misled for want of light rather than in opposition against the light For in his last Will wherein men are wont to be more serious and sincere amongst his private regards he forgets not to reflect upon Religion to this purpose We further bequeath saith he to the redundant Mercy of the Most Excellent Saviour the Faith Hope and Charity the Vertue Prosperity and Peace of the Kings our Successours and of our Kingdom of England that God for his goodness sake would protect visit and defend them from Divisi●●s Dissentions and from all manner of decitfulness of Hereticks And thus the Piety Justice and Moderation of Henry the Fifth adorned and crowned the honour of his Courage and Greatness with that honourable Title of Prince of Priests And had he been blessed with a clearer light he might as well under God have obtained the Title of Prince of Princ●s wanting nothing that might have rendred him a precedent of Fame But the time is now come that the Tide of England's Glory must turn and the sudden Conquest in France by Henry the Fifth not unlike the Macedonian Monarchy must disgorge it self of what it had hastily devoured but never could digest Three things concurred hereunto one dangerous the other two fatal to the flourishing condition of any Nation First The King is a Minor in the least degree that ever any Prince sate on English Throne He entred thereinto neither knowing what he did nor where he was and some say he sate therein in his Mothers Lap for his Life had been more in the Womb than abroad A sad presage of what followed for many men think that he was in a Lap all his days Nor are the chief men to be blamed herein for it is a certain Truth That it is much better that the Election of a King should be grounded upon a rule that is known though it be by descent of Inheritance than upon none at all For if a Child should succeed or a Lunatick yet where the Principle of Government resteth upon the Representative of the people there is the less cause of Complaint the Government being still the same both for Strength Wisdom and Uniformity though it may be the Nation not so active and brave For a Commonwealth can admit of no Minority though a Monarchy by descent may Secondly This deficiency in Nature might have been supplied but that these times were unhappy in the great power of the Lords to please whom the Government is parcelled out into two shares One is made Protector of the King's person the other Protector of the Kingdom too many by one For let their persons be never so eminent for Abilities if they be not as eminent for Humility and Self-command their hearts will soon over-rule their heads into a Faction And therefore though the Earl of Warwick was a wise man and the Duke of Gloucester a wise man yet the Earl of Warwick with the Duke of Gloucester were not wise On the other side the Protectorship of the King's person being in the Duke of Exeter and that of the Realm in the Duke of Gloucester things succeeded passing well for they both had one publick aim and the Duke of Exeter could comply with the Spirit of the Duke of Gloucester who otherwise was not so pliant But after five years the Duke of Exeter dying and the Government of the King's person devolving to the Earl of Warwick who sided with the proud Cardinal of Winchester against the Duke of Gloucester and so not onely consumed the rest of the Kings Non-age in a restless disturbance of Affairs but also despoiled Henry the Sixth of the spirit of a King for the future and so the Kingdom of a King. For it was not the condition of Henry the Sixth to be endowed with a spirit of such height but might well have been led by Advice and needed not the Earl of Warwick's rugged Brow to over-look him who was not content to have the King onely attendant upon his Advice but must likewise have him under his Rod to be corrected for his Faults and that by a Commission under the King 's own Hand and Seal dated in the Eleventh year of the King's Reign and so under colour of curbing he killed that spirit in the King which otherwise doubtless had both spirit and pride enough to act himself above his due height and could not have been so long a Child and so little a Man as he was It is very true that Henry the Fifth by Will seemed to countenance his Brothers and it cannot be denied but the Duke of Gloucester was of such noble parts that they could hardly dilate in any work inferiour to the Government of a Kingdom Nevertheless to yield much to the Will of a diseased King in such cases is as ill a preceden● as the making of a King by Adoption And it had been better for the people to have adhered to the Duke of Gloucester alone than by joyning him with another bring into a precedent such a luxuriant Complement of State as a Protectorship of a Kingdom which is of such little use to a Commonwealth and of so bitter Fruit to the Party as must needs bring Repentance when it is too late For he that can manage the Protectorship of a Realm without anger of good men or envy of bad men is fitting to live onely with Angels and too good for the World. Nor did the Duke of Gloucester meet with better measure how wise soever he was and truly devoted to the good of the Realm For after four and twenty years Government so wisely and
faithfully carried on by him that Justice it self could not touch his person unjustice did and he received this reward from his Nephew Henry the Sixth that he died in the dark because the Cause durst not endure the light Now is Henry the Sixth perswaded that he is of full Age he had laid aside his Guardian the Duke of Gloucester but forgetting to sue out his Livery he betakes himself from the Grace of God into the warm Sun as the Proverb is changing the Advice of a faithful experienced wise Counsellour for the Government of an Imperious Woman his Queen who allowed him no more of a King than the very Name and that also she abused to out-face the World. And after she had removed the Duke of Gloucester out of the way undertook the sway of the Kingdom in her own person being a Foreigner neither knowing nor caring for other Law than the Will of a Woman Thus the Glory of the House of Lancaster goes down and now a Star of the House of York appears in the rising and the people look to it The Queen hereat becomes a Souldier and begins the Civil Wars between the two Houses wherein her English party growing wise and weary she prays Aid of Ireland a Nation that like unto Crows ever wants to prey upon the Infirmities of England The Wars continue about sixteen years by ●its wherein the first loss fell to the English party the pretensions being yet onely for good Government Then the Field is quiet for about four years after which the clamour of ill Government revives and together therewith a claim to the Crown by the House of York is avouched Thereupon the Wars grew hot for about four years more and then an ebb of as long Quiet ensues The Tide at last returns and in two years War ends the Quarrel with the death of Fourscore Princes of the Bloud-Royal and of this good man but unhappy King. Unhappy King I say that to purchase his Kingdoms Freedom from a Foreign War sold himself to a Woman and yet lost his Bargain and left it to Observation That a Conscientious man that marries for by-regards never thrives For France espied their advantage they had maintained War with England from the death of Henry the Fifth with various success The Duke of Bedford being Regent for the English for the space of fourteen years mightily sustained the fainting condition of the English Affairs in those parts and having crowned his Master Henry the Sixth in Paris in the ninth year died leaving behind him an honourable Witness even from his Enemies That he was a brave Commander a true Patriot and a faithful Servant to his Lord and Brother Henry the Fifth and to his Son Henry the Sixth But now the Duke of Bedford is dead and though France had concluded a Peace with the English yet they could not forget the smart of their Rod but concluded their Peace upon a Marriage to be had with a Woman of their own bloud and interest And what they could not effect by Arms in th●●r own Field they did upon English ground by a Feminine Spirit which they sent over into England to be their Queen and in one Civil War shedding more English bloud by the English Sword than they could formerly do by all the men of France were revenged upon England to the full at the English-mens own charge For what the English gain by the Sword is commonly lost by Discourse A Kingdom is never more befooled than in the Marriage of their King if the Lady be great she is good enough though as Jezabel she will neither reverence her Husband obey her Lord and King nor regard his people And thus was this Kingdom scourged by a Marriage for the sin of the wise men that building upon a false Foundation advised the King in the breach of Contract with the Earl of Arminiack's Daughter And thus the King also for that hearkning to such Counsel murthered the Duke of Gloucester that had been to him a Father yielded up his Power to his Queen a masterless and proud woman that made him like a broken Idol without use suffered a Recovery of his Crown and Scepter in the Parliament from his own Issue to the Line of York then renewing the War at his Queens beck lost what he had left of his Kingdom Country and Liberty and like the King that forgot the kindness of Jehojada lost his Life by the hand of his Servant CHAP. XIV Of the Parliament during the Reigns of these Kings THe Interest of the Parliament of England is never more predominant than when Kings want Title or Age. The first of these was the Case of Henry the Fourth immediately but of them all in relation to the pretended Law of the Crown but Henry the Sixth had the disadvantage of both whereof in its due place The pretended Law of the Crown of England is to hold by Inheritance with power to dispose of the same in such manner by such means and unto such persons as the King shall please To this it cannot be denied divers Kings had put in their claims by devising their Crown in their last Will but the success must be attributed to some power under God that must be the Executor when all is done and which must in cases of Debate concerning Succession determine the matter by a Law best known to the Judge himself Not much unlike hereunto is the Case of Henry the Fourth who like a Bud putting up in the place of a fading Leaf dismounts his Predecessor First from the peoples regard and after from his Throne which being empty sometimes he pretended the resignation of his Predecessor to him other whiles an obscure Title by descent his Conscience telling him all the while that it was the Sword that wrought the work But when he comes to plead his Title to Foreign Princes by protestation laying aside the mention of them all he justifies upon the unanimous consent of the Parliament and the people in his own onely person And so before all the World confessed the Authority and Power of the Parliament of England in disposing of the Crown in special Cases as a sufficient Bar unto any pretended Right that might arise from the House of Mortimar And yet because he never walks safely that hath an Enemy pursuing him still within reach he bethinks himself not sure enough unless his next Successours follow the dance upon the same foot To this end an Act of Parliament leads the Tune whereby the Crown is granted or confirmed to Henry the Fourth for life and entailed upon his Sons Thomas John and Humphrey by a Petition presented 5 Hen. 4. Thus Henry the Fourth to save his own stake brought his Posterity into the like capacity with himself that they must be Kings or not subsist in the World if the House of York prevails And so he becomes secured against the House of York treading on his heels unless the Parliament of England shall
suit and according to the course of the Admiralty by complaint saving matters of death to the cognizance of the Admiral But this was soon found defective for Justice done in the dark is many times more respective and less respected and therefore within a few years it is provided That Offenders against the Kings Truce upon the Sea or in any of the Ports shall be proceeded against in the Chancery before the Chancellor who hath power given him of calling to his assistance some of the Judges to execute the Statute of 2 H. 5. foregoing by a handsome contrivance For that Statute was once and again suspended for the rigour that was used by the former Conservators who being borderers upon the Sea for their own peace spared as few as they could which had so discouraged the Seamen that the Kingdom had been almost utterly bereaved of its strength at Sea. Nevertheless all this while these Laws were but penal and not remedial for the parties wronged and therefore another Law is made to give the Chancellor and Judges power to make restitution and reparation Thirdly The Chancery gained upon the Ecclesiastical Court. For whereas by the Canon the Church-men were to be judged by their Superiours according to Ecclesiastical and Ordinary Jurisdiction and the iniquity of the times was again returned to that height that Parents could not enjoy their own Children but the little ones were allured stoln away and detained in Cloisters nor did the Church-men afford remedy in such cases A Law was made that upon complaint hereof made to the Chancellor the Provincial should be by him sent for and punished according to his discretion Lastly The Chancery encroached upon the Common Law For whereas the stirs between the two Houses of York and Lancaster began to rise men made their dwellings in places of security and strength Women likewise and other persons flying thither for refuge especially such of them as had most to lose these were contrary to the Law of common honesty urged to engage their Estates unto the desires of such to whom they had fled for refuge and sometimes compelled to marry before they could gain their liberty It was now provided that all such complaints should be heard and determined by the Chancellor Secondly As touching the Ministerial power of the Chancery this likewise was enlarged in making of Process to compel appearance in cases of forcible Entries Murders Manslaughters Robberies Batteries Assemblies in nature of Insurrections Riots and Plunder committed by Servants upon their Masters goods before their Masters death and suchlike offences now grown common and in need of sudden remedy Thus as the work and power of the Chancery grew so did the place and person of the Chancellor grow more considerable raised now from being the Kings Secretary for no better was he in former times to be the Kingdoms Judge and of such trust that although the King might make election of his own Secretary yet the Parliament would first know and allow him that must be trusted with the power over the Estates of so many of the people And therefore did in these times both place and displace him as they saw expedient In a word he is become the Kingdoms Darling and might be more bold with the Common Law than any of his Peers CHAP. XIX Of the Courts of Crown-Pleas and Common Law. AS the Chancery on the one side did swell and increase so was the Kings-bench in an ebb the Council-Table in the Star-Chamber on the one side and the Itinerant-Courts in the Country intercepted and drew away much to their own shares making themselves fat the Kings-bench lean and the Rural Courts for Crown-Pleas almost to starve The Crown-Pleas formerly had been determinable in the Kings-bench Gaol-delivery Oyer and Terminer and many of them by Justices of the Peace Coroners and Sheriff The Gaol-delivery was afterwards united to the Judges of Assize and if one of them were a Clergy-man then to the other and chief men of the County This was useful for the Publick but not beneficial for some men and therefore they laboured for Commissions especially directed to parties that they thought would partake but these were found soon to be dangerous soon taken away and the Gaol delivery restored to the Judges of Assize as formerly The Commissions of Oyer and Terminer were sued forth upon extraordinary Emergencies and Offences wherein the State was much concerned for speedy Execution In former times both these and Gaol-deliveries were but rarely had and then granted unto some that perchance knew more of the Case than before-hand was meet to be known Edward the Third amended this Errour and ordered that no Commissions of Oyer and Terminer should issue forth but unto Commissioners named by the Court and not by the party complaining But the Judges of Assize are now on the growing hand both for Honour Use and Power the rather because their persons are of high repute in the Benches at Westminster which are the Master-pieces of Judicature and their Iters are constant and ordinary Nevertheless the Judges of Assize though they have the Gaol-delivery annexed to them yet have they not that absolute power of the Kings-bench but are still under the rule of their Commission which is not alterable but Parliament and which by it was altered by way of adding new powers as new crimes arose that required the eye of the State to provide And so the Judges of Assize by degrees grew to be the ordinary Administrators of Justice throughout the Kingdom yet holding still forth to them a limited power to hear and determine in some Cases but in others onely to enquire and certifie as in the case of false Returns by the Sheriff of persons elected for the Parliament And also in cases concerning the Statutes of Labourers and unlawful Games and Pastimes in which case the Certificate is to be made to the Chancellor And also in cases concerning Liveries contrary to the Statutes wherein the Certificate is to be made to the Kings-bench which power in this last case continued in that manner by the space of thirty years and then by another Statute they had the power to determine such cases before themselves In like manner they had power to hear and determine cases of falshood in counterfeiting and corrupting of Money by washing clipping c. And also defaults committed by Sheriffs Bayliffs and their Officers against the Statutes of Forcible Entries and of wearing of Liveries as aforesaid These were signs of much confidence and trust in them and yet notwithstanding not in these nor in these were the Penalties by Fine left to the Arbitry of the Judges no nor to the Justices of the Kings-bench but were by the very Letter of the Law determined Nor would the Parliament trust these men with doing Justice in the cases aforesaid in their own Counties where they dwelled nor did it think expedient to
Sixth was in view and the minds of men left unassured neither trusting much to Edward the Fourth nor he to them And after that Henry the Sixth was gone out of the way Edward the Fourth could not readily change his posture used Arguments of force and power and for the most part looked like a man in Arms with his hand on his Sword ready to draw upon the next man that stands in his way Thus are the people partly driven and partly drawn into an Oath of Allegiance unto Edward the Fourth under peril of Attainder and the Parliament assured unto him once more For immediately upon the departure of Edward the Fourth beyond Sea after Ten years of his Reign the Parliament never staying for the issue of Providence declared the Throne void of Edward the Fourth and Henry the Sixth King. The Judges likewise of the Courts of Westminster determined the same thing as may appear by the Law-Reports of those times in Print wherein reattachments were often granted by them upon discontinuance of Process by this Demise of Edward the Fourth And thus Henry the Sixth is once more King for six Months viz. from October to April at which time the Ballance turns Edward the Fourth returns gets into the Throne Henry the Sixth is again Dethroned all things are as they were and all confirmed by Act of Parliament For that Body is ever wise enough to side with Power rather than to spend much time upon fruitless Orders and Votes that will pierce no Armour and therefore like the times must needs be subject to fits of distemper at the coming in of every Tide and did build and pull down enact and disenact turn and return the English Crown from York to Lancaster and back again and in conclusion for some time did do little but undo Nor can they be justly censured herein for Councils of men are not ordained to hinder divine Providence or over-rule Fate but to foresee and close with Occasions in the most advantageous way for the publick good and when both Winds and Currents are uncertain to ride at flote till they can discern the most commodious Haven to Winter in To impute therefore fault unto the Parliament in such Cases for want of Uniformity and Immutability of Councils is somewhat like the Notion that Batchelors conceit of Wives they would have but they do not know what other 〈◊〉 an Idea of their own fancy Now if it be enquired which course prevailed in order either to the Kings Royalty or the peoples Liberty I shall answer Neither of these but the House of York prevailed to hold the Crown and might have advanced the Authority thereof had they not fall'n out amongst themselves for the spoil and Edward the Fourth was not altogether disposed thereto The success that he had in the Field and his Souldiery made him look big like a King of the greater size but Kings sleep not securely upon such Pillows When the Militia is on Horseback it is as ready to be a Guard upon the King as for him and when it is most sober not so easily governed as a Commonwealth And therefore Edward the Fourth now in Arms though he found it a hard Notion to maintain the peoples Liberty where no man is free from the Souldier yet he enclined thereto We read of a multitude of Taxations of all sorts and of Benevolences the worst of all those sorts For Souldiers must have money or if not they will have it but the King would not force things so far as his power could reach he will have Money but it shall be by order of the Parliament He might have pretended much upon the Commission of Array yet did it not but chose rather to be Lord of the Seas And because it was too great a Farm for his private Purse he prays aid of the Parliament by the way of Tumage and Poundage which was in demand nine years before the Parliament granted it And when it was granted it was with such restrictions that it is evident the King preferred the right of the Parliament therein above his private honour Secondly Titles of Honour are but windy Notions and every one knows what claim is made by Kings to have the sole interest in conferring the same This Edward the Fourth neglected so far as he interested the Parliament both in the conferring of them and resuming the same Thirdly The course of Trade was now more especially looked to not by the King and Privy Council but by the Parliament And because it was much decayed partly by reason of the ill government thereof and partly by the excessive lavishness of these times many Laws are made for remedy of both And first the Staple was setled sometimes at Calis alone sometimes at it and Middleborough and by this means England gained Trade from both Nations but the principal thanks is to be given to the interest between the King and the House of Burgundy Then course is taken for the bringing of the Staple Commodities onely to those places and the return to be made in Money and not Commodity by exchange Then for the well making of Staple-Manufactures and restraining Importation of Foreign Manufactures of such kinds Then against transporting of English Coyn and importing of Foreign Coyn other than Bullion And as touching the second grievance it seems gallantry or vanity of Apparel was a sore Disease of these times which were become times of Fashions and wherein the King led the way by his own example For he desired to be brave and that he might be more brave he passed Laws that the people should be less brave assessing a sort of Apparel for every degree and therein stooped so low as to define the fashions of their very shoes Fourthly The Parliament retained their ancient right of reducing the course of Judicature For whereas Sheriffs had hitherto holden their course of Trial of the moaner sort of Felonies and Trespasses and Offences determinable onely by Imprisonment or Fines and Amerciaments whereby mens Estates did lie under the continual pillage of these covetous and extorting Officers It was established by the Parliament that these men should have for the future only power of enquiry and to certifie at the next Sessions and there the Trial to be and Fines and Amerciaments to be set Taxed and Estreated unto the Exechequer and from thence to be levied and thereof the Sheriff give account This was a great security to the peoples Estates but gave them not a full remedy For though the Trial was now more fair yet these Officers were Judges of suspicion and had still power upon suspicion to imprison their persons and seize their Estates under colour to save them for the King in case Conviction followed For remedy hereof the Justices of the Peace have now power given them to Bail in Case of light suspicion and it is further declared that no mans Estate shall be first
so things were done according to his mind though he did them not And thus his Excellency seemed more eminent in finding and making instruments fitting to do his work than in doing his own work Nevertheless all this was but from hand to mouth no Fundamental Law is altered all this while If the Laws were made by Parliament the King made them not If the Judges turned the Law to the King's ear the Law was still the Crown though the King wore it But Henry the Eighth was no such man he had not this skill of undermining nor desired it he was tender of the least diminution of his Honour industrious in finding out the occasion and a most resolved man to remove it out of the way though it reached as high as the Triple Crown A man underneath many passions but above fear What need he care for pretences his Father loved Riches he Power When he came to traverse his ground he found quickly where the Church-men trespassed upon him and began with them resting upon the wisdom of his Father and the infallibility of the Pope Henry the Eighth had taken to Wife Katherine his Brothers Dowager and continued in that condition Eighteen years without wrinkle of Fame till the great Success of Charles the Fifth the Queens Brother against the Pope and French scared the King into a jealousie of his greatness and the Emperour 's failing in courtesie to Cardinal Wolsey the King 's Achates stirred the Cardinals spirit to revenge for the loss of his hopes in the Popedom For the Cardinal finding the King's mind to linger after another Bedfellow by whom he might have a Son he made the French Embassadour his Instrument to mind the King of his unlawful Marriage with the Queen and to mention unto him Margaret D' Alanson a Princess of France both in Bloud and Beauty The King liked the notion of Divorce but disliked the motion concerning the French Lady himself being prepossessed with a fair Object at home the Lady Anne Bullen then attending upon the Queen And thus being moved he entred into a scrutiny concerning the condition of his Marriage wherein he had been formerly touched both by the French and Spaniards themselves upon several motions made First Between Charles the Fifth and afterwards between the Dauphine and the Lady Mary afterwards Queen Hereat the Cardinal winked all the while till the infallibility of the Chair of Rome came upon the Stage then bestirring his Wits he lodged the Case upon Appeal thither as he hoped beyond all further Appeal and so held the King there fast till himself might accomplish his own ends But the Wheel once set a running would not stay The King espies the Cardinal in his way and bears him down Then finding the fallacy of the infallible Chair he hearkens after other Doctors follows their light and being loth to hear what he expected from Rome he stopped the way to all Importation of such Merchandize as might be any ways prejudicial to the Prerogative Royal with the penalty of the loss of Land or Liberty and Fine the two latter being formerly warranted by Law. The first served as a scare for though it were but by Proclamation men might justly fear that he who was so stout against the Pope would not stick to scourge his own Subjects out of his way in the time of his heat The King thus entred the Lists both against Pope and Cardinal now under Praemuniri whereof he died meets the English Clergie thus losing their Top-gallant standing up in the Reer against him and talking at large Nevertheless the King stops not his career puts them to the rout for maintaining the power Legatine They soon submit crave pardon give a sum of Money and perfume their Sacrifice with that sweet Incense of Supream Head of the Church of England This was done not by way of Donation for the Convocation had no such power but by way of acknowledgement in flat opposition to the Jurisdiction of the Pope It became the common subject of discourse amongst all sorts but of wonderment to the Pope Yet for fear of worse he speaks fair for he was not in a posture to contest but all would do no good The Queen had appealed to Rome the Pope by Wolsey's advice makes delays The Parliament espying the advantage at once took all Appeals to Rome away and established all Sentences made or to be made within this Land notwithstanding any Act from Rome and enjoyned the English Clergie to administer the several Acts of publick Worship notwithstanding any Inhibition or Excommunication from any Forein pretended Power The grounds upon the Preamble of the Law will appear to be Two. First That the King of England is Supream Head in rendring Justice within the Nation in all Causes therein arising which is more than the Recognizance of the Clergie two years before this Act did hold forth Yet this acknowledgement is not absolute but in opposition to Forein pretensions Secondly That the Clergie in England having power may in matters Spiritual determine all doubts without Forein help and administer such Duties as to their place do belong Not hereby determining that the Church-men ever had such power by Law nor that they ought originally to have such power They never had it for no sooner were they dis-joyned from the Laity in these affairs but immediately they were under the Pope and received their power from him And de Jure they cannot challenge such power but by a positive Law such as this Law of Henry the Eighth which also giveth but a restrictive and limited power viz. In matters Testamentary of Divorce Matrimony Tythes Oblations and Obventions So as if they will challenge such power they must thank the Parliament for it and use the same accordingly as persons deputed thereunto and not in their own right or right of their places In all this the King's Supremacy is but obscurely asserted and rather by implication shewing what in reason may be holden than by declaration of what was making way thereby First Into the Opinions of men before they were enjoyned to determine their Actions but within Two years ensuing or thereabout the Law is made positive The King shall be taken and accepted the onely Supream Head on Earth of the Church of England and have power to visit correct repress redress reform restrain order and amend all such errours heresies abuses offences contempts and enormities as by any manner of Spiritual Authority or Jurisdiction ought or may lawfully be reformed Which in the Preamble is said to be made to confirm what the Clergie in their Convocation formerly had recognized The corpse of this Act is to secure the King's Title the King's Power and the King's Profit As touching the King's Title it is said that in right it did formerly belong to him which is to be granted by all so far as the power is rightly understood But as touching the King's Profit it cannot
Canon And upon this account the King's Ancestors had possessed themselves of the Cells in the hands of Foreigners in times of War and now a deadly feud is stirred between Henry the Eighth and the Pope their holy Father The Children cannot expect to thrive whenas their Father is cast out of doors and so all must out together Yet the manner is observable they must not be cast out but must go out the inferiour and greater part are dead persons have learnt obedience they can neither bark nor bite and therefore they may sleep and what is done must be done with such of them as are alive Upon a Visitation these are brought under the Test and found in such a condition that they had better give way and voluntarily surrender than abide the Trial. Once more the smallest are picked out whilst the greater stand by and wonder but either do not foresee or in despair of altering the King's Resolution do nothing but expect the sad hour which within Four years comes upon them all every one of them chusing rather to surrender and expect the King's Mercie for maintenance during life than adventure against the dint of his Justice and Power and so lose all for they were ill befriended amongst all sorts of the people Thus came the personal Estate and Stock of these Houses to the Kings immediate Treasury and their yearly maintenance to the disposing of the Crown Which might have advanced the same well-nigh to the value of Two hundred thousand pounds yearly but that the King intended to let the people enjoy the fat as well as he that they might be mutually engaged to maintain hold of the Prey that they had joyntly gotten Out of all which nevertheless the Crown had a small rent or service annual for the acknowledgement of their Tenure besides the First-fruits of Spiritual Dignities and the Tenths both which he formerly had already obtained The first whereof was but casual and occasional in the payment arising onely at the entrance of the party into his Promotion and which was gained by the Pope from Edward the First although at his Parliament at Carlisle in his Thirty fourth year he withstood the same This was above Three hundred and twenty thousand pounds in the whole sum The latter was Annual and amounted to above Thirty thousand pounds And thus the Popes Usurpations are turned into duties to the Crown but were much lessened in regard that these Cells and Monasteries were accounted amongst these Ecclesiastical Promotions which by their dissolution fell off in that account Nevertheless the advancement that might by a parcimonious King have been made of the fall of this Cedar was such that the Crown might have been rendred of it self absolute and all-sufficient But Henry the Eighth was not thus minded the Affairs of Europe were gotten into a high pitch Princes generally over-active Henry the Eighth inferiour to none of them what comes in goes out and he is a rare example of that divine Proverb As Riches increase so do the Mouths of them that eat he still stands in need of his peoples Love Purses and Power So Divine Providence orders the matter that Kings can never attain further end of their undertakings without the aid of the people than their labour lest they should be too big to be Christians and the people too mean. CHAP. XXVIII Of the condition of the Parliament in these Times THey are no good Expositors that consider their Text by piece-meal onely nor they good Historians that will tell you the bare Journal of Action without the Series of Occasion Such as these will speak much of the actions of Henry the Eighth what advancement he brought to the Crown and make a compleat Monarchy wherein the King may act what he resolveth resolve what he pleaseth and please what he lusteth whenas in truth the thing is nothing so For though many of his actions in relation to particular persons cannot be justified by any Law so in truth did they never proceed from any Law but meerly from the passion or will of the man and connivance of the people who could bear that from this King that their Ancestors would never endure under any other And yet in all the grand concernments of the Nation the Law kept still upon the top nor did the King enter into any competition therewith or lead the way thereunto other than by especial allowance of the Parliament For first It is evident though the King was Supream Head of the Church yet this was not like the head of a mad man led by phancy without the Law of reason or reason of Law But it was defined circumscribed and formed thereby with Qualifications and Limitations as hath been already expressed in the former Chapter Seondly It is no less clear that the Legislative Power rested in the Parliament and not in the King when he was in his greatest height For as Head of the Church he had no such power in Church-matters or if he had such a right it was taken away by the Acts of Parliament Nay when the Pope was yet possessed of this Headship the Parliament did determine the manner of the Worship of God in some particular cases as in the keeping of the Lord's Day the Statute of Edward the Fourth to the Honour of God did provide for the observing thereof and to the Honour of God it was taken away by a Statute in the time of Henry the Eighth if the words of either Statute may be believed But more especially after that this Headship was translated to the King the Parliament provided that the Canons should be examined and allowed by the King and Thirty two persons one part of the Clergie the other of the Temporalty chosen by the King. And those that shall be assented unto and confirmed by the King and the Thirty two persons or the Major-part of them shall be obeyed and put in execution the residue shall be void Provided nothing shall be done against the Kings Prerogative or the Laws and Customs of this Realm So as the King had much but he had not all and what he had the Parliament gave him by a Law that was executory all the days of Henry Eighth by divers continuances and was not any power devolved to the Crown under the Title of Supremacie nor by vertue of the Act of Parliament concerning it but by the continual influence from the Parliament upon the Crown as well before that Act as after derived upon it The King hath then this right of Law making but it is with the Thirty two he hath it but not his Successors And lastly he hath it but by a derivative power from the Parliament and a Committee for that service And in a word he hath the Power but the Parliament hath still the Law of that Power The second Priviledge of the Parliament hitherto concerneth onely Laws concerning Church-Government In the next place cometh to be considered
formerly hath been already manifested Thirdly As touching Matrimonial Causes their former power of making Laws concerning them and Testamentary Causes is now absolutely taken away onely concerning Matrimonial matters they had so much of the Judicatory power concerning the same put upon them as might well serve the Kings own turn and that was for determining the matter between himself and the Lady Katherine Dowager depending before the Archbishop Cranmer For the King supposed the Pope a Party and therefore meaned not that he should be his Judge And thus though the Clergie had acknowledged the King to be their Supream Head yet in this he was content to acknowledge their Supremacy above him to judge between himself and his Queen and in other matters concerning himself So as upon the whole matter the Convocation were gainers in some things in other things they were onely losers of that which was none of their own CHAP. XXX Of the power of the Clergie in their Ordinary Jurisdiction THose Spirits are truly degenerate that being sensible of miserie cannot stir up desires of Change although the way thereto lies open before them And this shews the nature of the Romish Yoke that it lay upon the Spirits of men did intoxicate and make them drunk with their condition Otherwise the Usurpations Oppressions Extortions and Incroachments of the Popedom upon the Bishops Sphere and the people under their charge could never have provoked such complainings amongst all sorts in several ages from time to time And now that Henry the Eighth undertakes to set them free so as they would acknowledge his Supremacy they all are struck dumb till a Praemuniri taught them to speak and so were scared into a better condition than they would have had and into a more absolute Estate of Jurisdiction than they received from their Predecessors The Pope had now usurped a power supra-ordinary over all Appeals gained the definitive Sentence to the Roman See and had holden this power by the space of four hundred years and the King finding the root of all the mischief to his Crown from abroad springing from that Principle meaned not to dispute the point with the Casuists but by one Statute took away all Appeals to Rome and determined Appeals from the Bishops Court in the Archbishops Court and the Appeals from the Archbishop's Commissarie in the Court of Audience So as though in the Kings own Case the Convocation had the last blow yet in matters concerning the Subjects the Archbishop was either more worthie or more willing with that trust For though the Convocation might have determined all as well as the Pope yet for dispatch sake of a multitude of Appeals now depending at Rome and to prevent long attendance on the Convocation that now had much to do in matters of more publick nature the utmost Appeal in such cases is made Provincial This whether priviledge or prejudice the Ecclesiastical Causes gained above the Civil whose definitive Sentences was reserved to the Parliament And thus is the Archbishop made Heir to the Pope in the greatest priviledge of a Pope to be chief Judge on Earth in matters Ecclesiastical within his own Province A trick that in my opinion much darkned the Glory of the Kings Title of Supream Head which the Church-men had formerly offered up to the honour of the Crown of this Realm For be it so that the Title is in the Crown by Remitter yet cannot the same carry along with it any more than a lawful power and whether all the Pope's former power allowed him by the Canon or gained by Usurpation and Custom shall be said a lawful power or whether the power of Review by Appeal shall be derived to the Crown under the general Notion of Supreamacy upon the Clergies submission is to me a doubt albeit I must give honour to the Judgement in Print in regard that after the submission of the Clergie the matter concerning the Divorce of the Lady Katherine Dowager came before the Pope by Appeal and there depended the King himself also waiting upon that See for Justice and a definitive Sentence in that matter and thereby acknowledged the Pope's power De facto Notwithstanding the Clergies foregoing submission and being occasioned by the delay at Rome he procured this Statute concerning Appeals to be made whereby at one breath he took the Appeals to Rome away and setled them as formerly hath been mentioned all which was done two years before the Title of Supremacy was annexed or declared for to be to the Crown by Act of Parliament And therefore as to me it appears the power of Supream Cognizance of Appeals was not in actual possession of the Crown by the Clergies submission so was it actually vested in the Archbishop before the Title of Supremacy was confirmed by Act of Parliament and so it never was in the Crown actually possessed much less had the Crown the same by Remitter For the King's turn once served by the Convocation and the matter of the Divorce of Queen Katherine setled the King perceiving the slow progress of the Convocation the Members of the same not being yet sufficiently tuned to the present Affairs And moderate Archbishop Cranmer likewise foreseeing that the Odium of these Definitive Sentences would be too great for him to bear another Appeal is provided more for the honour of the Crown to be from the Archbishop to Delegates to be appointed by the King his Heirs and Successors so as though their Nomination be the Kings yet their power is deduced immediately from the Parliament which took the same from the Archbishop and conferred it upon them A second advantage not inferiour hereto which the Archbishop gained out of the ruines of the Popedom was the power of Licenses and Dispensations or Faculties In the Pope it was a transcendent power without any rule but what was tuned to him by the Bird in his own breast and was the ground of much license or rather licentiousness in the world But in the Archbishop they seem to be regulated To be First in Causes not repugnant to the Law of God. Secondly such as are necessary for the Honour and Security of the King. Thirdly such as were formerly wont to be remedied at the See of Rome yet in truth left as much scope for the Conscience of the Archbishop to walk in as the Pope had in former times A large Teather and greater priviledge than ever the Crown had by which although the King himself be like Saul higher by the Head than all the people yet in many things Samuel is higher than he The moving cause hereof is not difficult to find out the King had but lately married the Lady Anne Bullen a thing that many startled at and the King himself not extreamly resolved in he would therefore have his way like that of the Zodiack broad enough for Planetary motion of any one that could not contain himself within the Ecliptick line of the Law and so
and made all practices contrary to the rule damageable to the party Thus far concerning the matters in Cognizance now touching the power of the Keys English Prelacy having laid aside the pretentions of Rome they put the world to a gaze to see which way they would go In the innocent infancy of Prelacy it was led by the hand by the Presbytery and would do nothing without them afterwards having gained some degree of height and strength they entred themselves to be Chariot-horses to the Roman Sun till they had set all on fire Now unharnest it is expected they should return to their former Wits nevertheless forgetting their ancient Yoak-fellows the rural Presbyters they stable with the King use his name sometimes but more often their own serving him with Supremacie as he them with authority beyond their Sphere They raise him above Parliament he them above Councils so as they do what they list let the Plebeian Presbyter will or nill they are the onely numeral Figures and the other but Cyphers to make them Omnibus numeris absoluti Nevertheless the Canon still remains the same Episcopi se debent scire Presbyteros non Dominos nec debent in clerum dominari Episcopus se sedente non permittat Presbyterum stare Episcopi noverint se magis consuetudine quam dispensatione Presbyteris majores Kings may make them Lords but as Bishops they hold their former rank assigned by the Canon as Lord s the King never gave them the Keys and as Bishops the Canon did not yet as under the joynt Title of Lord-Bishops they hold themselves priviledged to get what power they can Two things they reach at viz. The absolute power of Imprisonment and of Excommunication in all causes Ecclesiastical The Common Law would never yield this some Statutes in some Cases did pretend First As touching Imprisonment the Statute of Henry the Fourth concerning Heresie doth lisp some such power of what force the same Statute is hath been already observed In case of incontinency of Church-men it is more directly given them by a Statute in Henry the Seventh's time before which time the Statute it self doth intimate that an Action did lie against them for such Imprisonment which Law also was made useless by another in Henry the Eighth's time who gave a way to Statutes for the punishing them at the Common Law. First with Death which continued for some Moneths and that being found too heavy it was punished by another Law with Forfeiture and Imprisonment And the same King likewise gave way to a Law for the like punishment in case of Heresie By that Law that revoked the Statute of Henry the Fourth formerly mentioned although till Trial the same was bailable And thus continued till the time of Edward the Sixth But as touching Excommunication it was to no purpose for them to struggle the Common Law would never permit them to hold possession quietly but did examine their Authority granted Prohibition enjoyned the Ordinary to grant Absolution where it saw cause Nevertheless in some cases Henry the Eighth gives way to some Statutes to allow them this power as in the ●evying of Tenths In the next place the Prelacy had not this Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in themselves so as to grant it to others but the Parliament did dispose thereof not onely to Bishops but to Chancellors Vicars general Commissaries being Doctors of the Law and not within holy Orders and limiting their Jurisdiction in cases concerning the Papal Jurisdiction and their manner of sending their Process and Citations to draw men from their proper Diocess and also their inordinate Fees in Cases Testamentary The Prelates therefore might possibly make great claim hereof for generally they were still of the old stamp loved to have all by Divine Right and lived they cared not by what wrong But the Laity enclining too much to the new Religion as then it was termed refused to yield one foot unto their pretentions And so like two Horses tied together by their Bits they endeavour after several courses ever and anon kicking one at another yet still bestrode by a King that was joynted for the purpose and so good a Horseman that neither of them could unhorse him till Death laid him on the ground And thus was the Roman Eagle deplumed every Bird had its own Feather the great men the Honours and Priviledges the meaner men the Profits and so an end to Annates Legatine levies Peter-pence Mortuaries Monasteries and all that Retinue the vast expences by Bulls and Appeals to Rome to all the cares expences and toil in attendance on the Roman Chair The beginning of all the happiness of England CHAP. XXXI Of Judicature THese two Kings were men of towring Spirits liked not to see others upon the Wing in which regard it was dangerous to be great and more safe not to be worthy of regard Especially in the times of Henry the Eighth whose motion was more eager and there was no coming nigh to him but for such as were of his own train and would follow as fast as he would lead and therefore generally the Commons had more cause to praise the King for his Justice than the Nobility had Both the Kings loved the air of profit passing well but the latter was not so well breathed and therefore had more to do with Courts which had the face of Justice but behind were for the Kings Revenue Such were the Court of Requests of mean Original mean Education yet by continuance attained to a high growth The Court of Tenths and first-Fruits The Court of Surveyors The Court of the Lord Steward of the Houshold The Court of Commission before the Admiral The Court of Wards The Court of the President of the North The Prerogative Court The Court of Delegates The Court of Commission of Review Others of more private regard And that which might have given the name to all the rest the Court of Augmentation Besides these there were some in Wales but that which concerned more the matter of Judicature was the loss of that grand Liberty of that Country formerly a Province belonging to this Nation and now by Henry the Eighth incorporated into the same and made a Member thereof and brought under the same Fundamental Law a work that had now been long a doing and from the time of Edward the Third brought on to perfection by degrees First by annexing the Tenure of the Marches to the Crown Then upon occasion of their Rebellion by loss of many of their wonted Liberberties Afterwards Henry the Eighth defaced the bounds of divers the ancient Counties and setled them anew and the bounds of the Marches also and appointed Pleas in Courts of Judicature to be holden in the English Tongue And last of all re-united them again to the English Nation giving them vote in Parliament as other parcel of the English Dominions had True it is that from their
apparent into the Case making the same Treason So as it implieth that English Allegiance tieth the Subject not onely to the safety of the Person of the King but also to the Queen and Heir apparent otherwise the offence is made and declared Treason against the King. Secondly The Election of the Object is to be considered for whether the one or other Statute be observed it will appear that although the King was the next object expressed yet a further was intended and that the Crime is not intended in regard of his natural Capacity as a man but of his politick Capacity and in relation to the Common good of the Nation And this is evident not onely from the several Prefaces of the Laws but also from the manner of Election whereby the Title of Heir apparent is taken up and not the Eldest Son or Daughter or these and not the other Children all which are equally dearly beloved in natural regard Thirdly Though at the Common Law Treason be properly a Crime against Allegiance yet as in Cases of Felony crimes may be by the Statute made as Treason which at the Common Law are not against the Legiance of an English man for this remaineth ever one and the same but one and the same fact may be made Treason and unmade by the Statute-law as befel this Law of Henry the Eighth by a Law within twenty years after like as also in former times one and the same fact hath many times received the like measure Other Treasons besides these already mentioned were by Henry the Eighth created as Marriage with any of the Kings Sisters Daughters or Aunts of the Father's side or the Daughters of his Brethren or Sisters without consent first had of the King Counterfeiting currant Money not of the Kings Coynage was likewise made Treason by Henry the Seventh who was well seen in that Mystery or Money-trade and the like also became of Counterfeitures of the Kings Privy Signet and Sign Manual And lastly that horrid trick of Poysoning was reduced to this Category rather that the Penalty might be more terrible in the Death which was by boyling than for any Tincture in the Nature of the Crime or in any Forfeiture of Estate The policy of these times thus irritated against Treason had proved very irregular if the same had not been as rigid in cases of Felony Divers new ones of that kind are also dubbed amongst which Conjuration or Witchcraft comes first an old Felony in the Saxons time but since had gotten its Clergie now well-nigh for the space of Five hundred years and they it so as it never walked abroad amongst the Laity but under the favour of the Cloistered people nor ever came before the Civil Power till now Henry the Eighth brought it forth into its own ancient and proper Regiment Other crimes being those of the season are made into the same degree Such as were taking of Women into Captivity unlawful Huntings with disguises malicious breaking of the Dikes and Banks in Marshland Servants embezzelling their Masters Goods to the value of Forty shillings or upward which besides that of Heresie whereof formerly though of a new stamp yet of so good a constitution that they remain unto this day under the same brand But let the Laws be never so severe if they have not free liberty to walk at large they are soon ghostless and therefore these two Kings especally the later gained that Honour above their Predecessors that they gave the Law a free and full scope over all persons but themselves and their Assignees and in all places First concerning places every one knows the Notion but few considered the extent of Sanctuary ground in England that could sanctifie any crime or criminal person in such manner that though the eye of Justice could see yet the hand of Justice could never reach them till Henry the Eighth plundred them of all their Sanctity and made all places common So as no Treason could hide it self but where the Act of Parliament did appoint and turned their names from Sanctuaries to priviledged places The sanctity of the person was yet more mischievous and hard to be reformed it had been often attempted before these times with little success Henry the Seventh gained some ground herein beyond his Ancestors the Delinquent might have his Clergie once but not the second time though he fled to the horns of the Altar and was ever after known by a brand in the hand Thus far did Henry the Seventh go and would have done more even as far as unto those in Holy Orders But Henry the Eighth coming on in point of Treason made all persons common without respect of their Orders or Profession Death makes an equal end of all In cases of Murther Robbery Burning of Houses Felonies done in holy Ground High-way or Dwelling-house refusal of Trial peremptory challenge of above twenty of the Pannel Servants embezzelling their Masters Goods in value Forty shillings or upwards in all these Cases no Clergie could be allowed but to persons in Holy Orders and those also to be perpetually imprisoned in the Ordinaries Prison And yet this exception held not long in force but these men also were equally wrapped up in the same course to have their Clergie and indure the brand even as other men Two difficulties yet remain which hindred the execution of the Laws against Treason One concerning the Place the other the Person The Place many times of the plotting and beginning of the Treason befalleth to be without the walk of the Kings Writ in which Case by the Common Law it cannot be inquired or tried or it may be that the men of the place be generally disaffected and then no hope of finding out the matter In such Cases therefore it is provided that be the crime wheresoever the Delinquent will it shall nevertheless be inquired and tried where the King will. The Person of the Delinquent also many times changed its condition it might be sober at the time of the Delinquency and afterwards upon discovery prove Lunatick and thereby avoid the Trial this whether in jest or earnest by a Statute is made all one and it is ordained That in case the Fact be confessed by the Delinquent before the Lords of the Council at such time as the party accused was of sound mind and the same be attested under the hands of four of those Lords the same shall be a good ground to proceed to inquisition before Commissioners and the same being found to try the Delinquent without answer or appearance saving unto Barons their Trial by their Peers And thus however in their Fits the Will of the Persons of these Kings was too hardy for the Kings to manage according to rule yet the Law still in Title kept the Saddle held the Reins and remaineth the chief Arbitrator unto every man. CHAP. XXXIV Of the general Government
Bishop of London and the Embassadors from the West-Saxons could sit amongst them and attest the Conclusions therein made as well as the proper Members of that Nation He cometh in the next place to a Council holden in the year 855 which is more likely to be a Parliament than most of them formerly mentioned if the Tithes of all England were therein given to the Church but hereof I have set down my opinion in the former part of the Discourse And though it be true that no Knights and Burgesses are therein mentioned as the Opponent observeth out of the Title yet if the body of the Laws be duly considered towards the Conclusion thereof it will appear that there was present Fidelium infinita multitudo qui omnes regium Chirographum laudaverunt Dignitates verò sua nomina subscripserunt And yet the Wittagenmotes in these times began to be rare being continually interrupted by the invasions of the Danes The three next Councils alleadged to be in the years 930 944 948. were doubtless of inferiour value as the matters therein concluded were of inferiour regard being such as concern the passing of the Kings Grants Infeodations and Confirmations The Council mentioned to be in the year 965 is supposed to be one and the same with the next foregoing by Sir Henry Spelman which calls it self a General Council not by reason of the general confluence of the Lords and Laity but because all the Bishops of England did then meet The Primi and Primates were there who these were is not mentioned but it is evident that the King of Scots was there and that both he and divers that are called Ministri Regis attested the Conclusions It will be difficult to make out how these should be Members of the House of Lords and more difficult to shew a reason why in the attesting of the Acts of these Councils which the Opponent calls Parliaments we find so few of the Laity that scarce Twelve are mentioned in any one of them and those to descend so low as the Ministri Regis to make up the number Five more of these instances remain before the coming of the Normans The first of which was in the year 975 and in a time when no Parliament according to the Opponents principles could sit for it was an Inter-Regnum The two next were onely Synods to determine the difference between the Regulars and the Seculars in the King's absence by reason that he was under age and they are said to be in the year 977 and 1009. But it is not within the compass of my matter to debate their dates The last two were Meetings or Courts for Judicature to determine the Crime of Treason which every one knows is determinable by inferiour Courts before the high Steward of Judges and therefore not so peculiar to a Parliament as to be made an Argument of its existence And thus are we at an end of all the instances brought by the Opponent to prove that Parliaments before the Norman times consisted of those whom we now call the House of Lords All which I shall shut up with two other Notes taken out of the Book of Councils published by Sir Henry Spelman The first of which concerneth a Grant made by Canutus of an exemption to the Abbey of Bury Saint Edmunds in a Council wherein were present Archbishops Bishops Abbots Dukes Earls Cum quamplurimis gregariis militibus cum populi multitudine copiosa votis regi●s unanimiter consentientes The other taken out of the Confessor's Laws which tell us that Tythes were granted to the Church A Rege Baronibus Populo And thus I shall leave these Testimonies to debate with one another whilst the Reader may judge as seemeth most equal to himself Being thus come to the Norman times and those ensuing I shall more summarily proceed with the particulars concerning them because they were times of Force and can give little or no evidence against the Customs rightly setled in the Saxon times which I have more particularly insisted upon that the Original Constitution of this Government may the better appear Now for the more speedy manifesting of the truth in the particulars following I shall pre-advise the Reader in three particulars First that the Church-motes grew more in Power and Honour by the aid of the Normans Law refusing the concurrence and personal presence of Kings whom at length they excluded from their Councils with all his Nobles and therefore it is the less wonder if we hear but little of the Commons joyning with them Secondly That the Norman way of Government grew more Aristocratical than the Saxon making the Lords the chief Instruments of keeping Kings above and People underneath and thus we meet with much noise of meetings between the King and Lords and little concerning the grand meetings of the Kings and the Representative of the People although some foot-steps we find even of them also For the Kings were mistaken in the Lords who meaned nothing less than to serve them with the Peoples Liberties together with their own which they saw wrapped up in the gross Thirdly By this means the Councils of the King and Lords grew potent not onely for advice in particular occasions but in matters of Judicature and declaring of Law ordering of Process in Courts of Pleas which in the first framing were the works of the Wise and Learned men but being once setled become part of the Liberties of every Freeman And it is not to be doubted but these Councils of Lords did outreach into things too great for them to manage and kept the Commons out of possession of their right during the present heat of their ruffling condition yet all this while could not take absolute possession of their Legislative power I now come to the remainder of the particular instances produced by the Opponent which I shall reduce into several Categories for the more clear satisfaction to the Reader with less tediousness First It cannot be denied but the Council of Lords gave advice to Kings in cases of particular emergency nor is it incongruous to the course of Government even to this day nor is it meet that the Parliament should be troubled with every such occasion and therefore the giving of advice to William the Conquerour what course he should take to settle the Laws of England according to the instances in Councils holden An. 1060 and 1007. and to gain favour of the great men according to that in Anno 1106. and in the manner of endowment of the Abbey of Battel as in pag. 25 of the Opponents Discourse and what to do upon the reading of the Pope's Letter according to that in Anno 1114. And whether the Pope's Legate should be admitted as in pag. 18. And how King Stephen and Henry shall come to an Agreement as Anno 1153. And how to execute Laws by Judges and Justices Itinerant as Anno 1176. And touching the manner of ingaging for a Voyage
the Ecclesiastical or Canonical way before this Lastly in their meeting as well at the Hundred as County-Court they retained their ancient way of coming Armed CHAP. XXVI Of the Division of the Hundreds into Decennaries THis was the last subdivision of the County and that rested upon the persons and it was either not at all or not so observable as to be worthy of the Roman story and therefore may rather be thought an extract from Moses Law introduced by Alfred or his direction I say this rested on the persons and not upon the place for though the Centeners were comprehended within certain bounds yet the Decenners were not limited but only within the limits of the Hundred And of these also it appeareth to me there were divers sorts for such matters of controversie that did arise amongst the Decenners if of greater moment were referred to the chiefer Justices which were appointed super decem decanes which I conceive were ten chief pledges and these might bear the names of the Centeners although they be not the Centgraven and the rather I incline thereto because in all probability there must needs be above one hundred Free-holders in Hundredo and all Free-men were Decenners that is ranked into several tens each one being pledge for others good abearing and in case of default to answer it before the Judge and in case of default of appearance his nine pledges should have one and thirty days to bring the Delinquent forth to justice If this failed then the chief of those Decenners by the votes of that and the Neighbour Decenners was to purge himself and his fellow-pledges both of the guilt of the fact and of being parties to the flight of the Delinquent And if they could not this do then were they by their own Oaths to acquit themselves and to bind themselves to bring the Delinquent to justice as soon as they could and in the mean time to pay the damage out of the Estate of the Delinquent and if that were not sufficient then out of their own Estate but if the Delinquents Estate was sufficient the surplussage thereof remained with the pledges And lastly the Master of the Family was a pledge for his whole Family This was the Law of Decenners and may seem to be somewhat a rigorous Law not only in case of Delinquency but also for their abode for none of them might depart from their dwelling without consent of his fellow-pledges nor out of the County without allowance of the Sheriff or other Governour of the same And if any controversie arose between the pledges the chief pledge by them chosen called also the Dean or Headburrough may determine the same but this held only in matters of lighter consequence CHAP. XXVII Of Francheses and first of the Church-Francheses WE have hitherto trod in the road-way of the Government of the Common-wealth but private regards have made by-paths which we must trace or else the footsteps in many particulars will remain unknown These are called Exemptions but more ordinarily Francheses from which scarce any part of the Kingdom remained free and are to be considered either in regard of the place or person In the latter I intend that of the Church-men whose Persons and Estates in many particulars were exempted from the civil power of this Kingdom Their persons devoted to a peculiar work they would have to be under a peculiar Law called the Canon-Law which at the first extended only to their own persons and that only pro reformatione morum for so an Archbishop tells us that it did teach quomodo Canonici id est regulares Clerici vivere debent but when it grew to its full charge it gave a louder report Quicunque aliquid tenuerit vel in fundo Ecclesiae mansionem habuerit extra curiam Ecclesiasticam non placitabit quamvis foris fecerit And thus as Church-ground increased by the blind charity of those times so long Church-men multiplied and the Canon inlarged from the persons of regulars to all Clergy-men and from them to their Tenants and Neighbours from thence to certain Spiritual or Ecclesiastical crimes or scandals wherever they were found and wherever it touched it took and bound by Excommunication and upon significavit being first delivered to Satan they delivered him over to the Sentence of the Law to be imprisoned If the offender be out of reach by the space of thirty and one days he is Outlawed so as there is no way left to escape the Church-fury CHAP. XXVIII Of the second Franchises called the Marches FRanchises of the place were such as were limited within precincts of place and annexed thereto and of this sort first were those of the borders of which those are the most ancient that bordered the Britons now called the Marches of Wales in which was a peculiar Government so far as concerned administration of justice for otherwise the subjects each of them submitted themselves to the service of their own Prince This was therefore a third different and mixt Government agreed upon joyntly between the Britons and Saxons who after a long and burdensome War wherein both peoples were well wearied by degrees became Friends entered Traffick and into the strictest Societies by Marriage Thus finding the sweetness of peace they provide against future occasions of strife that might arise in commerce by the justling of two Laws together and agree in one Law and upon a certain number of Judges elected by common consent who were to see to the execution of these Laws as joynt Assessors From these as I conceive arose those which are now called the Lords Marchers and were at the first twelve in number viz. six Saxons and six Britons It seemeth this form of Government was first instituted by Aetheldred and by way of prescription or custom continueth till this day and as it was the birth of truce so for the future became both Mother and Nurse of peace between those two peoples like the twi-light between the day and night until both were brought under one head and by divine providence setled in a lasting day CHAP. XXIX Of County-Palatines OF the same sort of Franchises were these which are called County-Palatines which were certain parcels of the Kingdom assigned to some particular person and their Successors with Royal power therein to execute all Laws established in nature of Province holden of the Imperial Crown and therefore the Kings Writ passed not within the precinct no more than in the Marches These were occasioned from the courage of the Inhabitants that stoutly defended their Liberties against the usurping power of those greater Kings that endeavoured to have the Dominion over the whole Heptarchy and not being easily overcome were admitted into composition of Tributaries and therefore are found very ancient for Alfred put one of his Judges to death for passing Sentence upon a Malefactor for an offence done in a place where the Kings Writ passed not and the same