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A62991 Historical collections, out of several grave Protestant historians concerning the changes of religion, and the strange confusions following in the reigns of King Henry the Eighth, Edward the Sixth, Queen Mary and Elizabeth : with an addition of several remarkable passages taken out of Sir Will. Dugdale's Antiquities of Warwickshire, relating to the abbies and their institution. Touchet, Anselm, d. 1689?; Hickes, George, 1642-1715.; Dugdale, William, Sir, 1605-1686. 1686 (1686) Wing T1955; ESTC R4226 184,408 440

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and the French another and on the Lord's Day so to divide the hours between them that the one might be no hindrance unto the other It hath been also said That there was another condition imposed upon them of being conform to the French in Doctrine and Ceremonies Which condition if it were imposed and not sought by themselves must needs be very agreeable to the temper and complexion of their principal Leaders who being for the most part of the Zuinglian Gospellers at their going hence became the great promoters of the Puritan Faction at their coming home The Names of Whittingham Williams Goodman Wood and Sutton who appeared in the head of this Congregation declare sufficiently of what Principles they were and how willing they would be to lay aside the face of an English Church and frame themselves to any Liturgy but their own The noise of this new Church at Frankfort occasioned Knox who after proved the great Incendiary of the Realm and Church of Scotland to leave his Sanctuary in Geneva in hope to make a better market for himself in that Congregation These Frankfort-Schismaticks desire That all Divine Offices might be executed according to the Order of the Church of Geneva which Knox would by no means yield to thinking himself as able to make a Rule for his own Congregation as any Calvin of them all Infinite were the Confusions which they had amongst themselves and from hence was the beginning of the Puritan Faction against the Rites and Ceremonies of the Church that of the Presbyterians against the Bishops or Episcopal Government and finally that also of the Independents against the Super-intendency of Pastors and Elders But Sorrow seldom goes alone for their Differing from the Government Form and Worship Established in the Church of England drew on an Alteration also in point of Doctrine Such of the English as had retired to Geneva employed themselves in setting out a New Translation of the Bible in the English-Tongue which afterwards they published with certain Marginal Notes upon it very Heterodox in point of Doctrine some dangerous and seditious in reference to the Civil Magistrate and some as scandalous in respect of Episcopal Government From this time the Calvinian Doctrine of Predestination began to be dispersed in English Pamphlets as the only necessary Orthodox and saving Truth Thus Dr. Heylyn concerning these Protestants But now leaving these Confusions the Effect of Schism we will here Relate a Princely Work of Piety done by the Queen CHAP. V. Of the Queens Resolution of Restoring Church-Lands and of what She did Actually Restore before Her Death Anno Reg. Mar. 4. Dr. Heylyn pag. 56. BEfore She undertook this Work She thought it necessary to Communicate her purpose unto some of the Council and therefore calling them to Her She is said to have spoken to them in these following words We have willed you to be called to Us to the intent you might hear of Me my Conscience and the Resolution of my Mind concerning the Lands and Possessions as well of Monasteries as of other Churches whatsoever being now in my Possession First I do consider that the said Lands were taken away from the Churches aforesaid in time of Schism and that by unlawful means such as are contrary both to the Law of God and of the Church For which cause my Conscience doth not suffer me to detain them And therefore I here expresly refuse either to claim or retain those Lands for Mine But with all my heart freely and willingly without all Paction or Condition here and before God I do Surrender and Relinquish the said Lands and Possessions or Inheritances whatsoever and renounce the same with this mind and purpose that order and disposition thereof may be taken as shall seem best liking to the Pope or his Legat to the Honor of God and Wealth of this our Realm And albeit you may object to Me again That the State of my Kingdom the Dignity thereof and my Crown Imperial cannot be Honorably Maintained and Furnished without the Possessions aforesaid Yet notwithstanding and so She had affirmed before when She was bent upon the Restitution of the Tenths and First Fruits I set more by the Salvation of my Soul than by Ten such Kingdoms And therefore the said Possessions I utterly refuse here to hold after that sort and Title And give most hearty Thanks to God who hath given me a Husband of the same mind who hath no less good Affection in this behalf than I my self Wherefore I Charge and Command That my Chancellor with whom I have conferred my Mind in this matter and you Four do ●…esort to morrow together to the Legat signifying to him the Premises in my Name And give your Attendance upon me for the more full declaration of the State of my Kingdom and of the aforesaid Possessions according as you your selves do understand the matter and can inform him in the same Upon this opening of Her Mind the Lords thought it req●…isite to direct some course wherein She might satisfie Her desires to Her own great Honor and yet not Alienate too much at once of the publick Patrimony The Abbey of Westminster had been Founded for a Convent of Benedictin Monks by King Edward the Confessor valued at the Suppression by King Henry the Eighth at the yearly Sum of Three thousand Nine hundred Seventy seven pounds in good old Rents Anno 1539. At which time having taken to himself the best and greatest part of the Lands thereof he Founded with the rest a Collegiate Church consisting of a Dean and Secular Canons But now the Queen put into it a Convent of Benedictins consisting of an Abbot and Fourteen Monks which with their Officers were as many as the Lands then left upon it would well maintain A Convent of Observants being a reformed Order of Franciscan Friers had been Founded by King Henry the Seventh near the Mannor of Greenwich and was the first which felt the fury of King Henry the Eighth by reason of some open opposition made by some of the Friars in favour of Queen Catherine the Mother of the Queen now Reigning Which moved Her in a pious gratitude to re-edifie that ruined House and to restore as many as could be found of that Order to their old Habitations making up their Corporation with some new Observants to a competent number She gathered together also a New Convent of Dominican or Black-Friars for whom She provided a House in Smithfield in the City of London fitting the same with all conveniences both for the Divine Office as likewise for other necessary Uses At Syon near Brentford there had been anciently a House of Religious Women Nunns of the Order of St. Bridget dissolved as were all the rest by King Henry the Eighth Such of these as remained alive with the addition of some others who were willing to embrace that course of Life made up a competent number for a New Plantation These She restored likewise to their
justified by the Practice of this English Synod in their requiring Assent and Obedience then is the Reformation rendred unlawful as likewise their Appeal to future Councils which can afford us no more just satisfaction than the fore-pass'd Here you have seen that for the Deciding this Controversie a General Council that is the most General that the Times would permit was Assembled in the West nay of These more than One as has been shewed A Substantial Conversion of the Elements and Real Presence declared to be the Sense of those Scriptures and a reverence suitable required in this great Mystery Not one Bishop in these Councils for any thing we know Dissenting and Those of the Eastern Churches Absent consenting in the same judgment What more can be done Ought not Sense Reason and Philosophy here be silenced And ought not such a Decree rather be Assented to than the contrary Decree of the fore-mentioned Synod called at London Now for a further Confirmation of This Doctrin I will here deliver Evident Testimonies of the most Eminent Fathers and Doctors of the Church concerning it A further COLLECTION Of Matters Relating to Monasteries And their DISSOLUTION Under King Henry the Eighth Of the Abbey of Combe and its Dissolution thus 't is related by Sir William Dugdale in his History of Warwickshire pag. 157. col 2. THus in great Glory plentifully Endowed stood this Monastery little less than Four hundred years till that King Henry the Eighth a Person whose sensual disposition suiting so right with that corrupt Age wherein he lived finding instruments fit for his Sacrilegious purposes contrived the Destruction of it and all the rest of those pious Foundations that his Ancestors and other Devout Persons had made of whose subtile practices for effecting that work I shall in a short corollary before I finish this Tract make some discovery Amongst which that general Survey and valuation by Commissioners from him in 26 th 〈◊〉 his Reign at Robin-hoods penniworths did not a little conduce thereto At which time this Monastery with all its Revenues over and above Reprises was certified to be worth 302 l. 15 s. 3 d. per Ann. Of their Hospitality to Strangers and great Charity in daily relief of poor people I need not descend to particulars our common Historians and the Tradition of such who were eyes witnesses thereof before that fatal subversion of those Houses may sufficiently inform the World I shall therefore only add what the Certificate upon the before mentioned Survey takes notice of touching this Abbey viz. That by their Foundation and a decree by a general Chapter of their Order they bestowed in Alms on Maunday Thursday every year 4 s. 8 d. in Money Ten Quarters of Rye made in Bread at 5 s. the Quarter Three Quarters of Malt made in Beer at 4 s. the Quarter and Three hundred Herrings at 20 d. the Hundred distributed to poor people at the Gate of the Monastery Their principal Officers being at that time these viz. Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolk High Steward whose fee therefore was 5 Marks per Ann. which shews what respect the great Nobility had to those Religious persons William Wilcock Receiver general whose Fee was 6 l. per Ann. And Baldwin Porter Auditor his Fee being 40 s per Ann. And pag. 148. col 1. t is thus said As for the Curses which were usually pronounced by the Founders of these Religious houses whither they have attended those Violators of what they so Zealously and with Devout minds had Dedicated to Gods Service I will not take upon me to say But sure I am that after King Henry the Eighth had accomplished this work he thrived but a little as I shall elsewhere in particular observe And how long such Possessions have been enjoyed by those that had them they that have looked into the course of this World may easily see For this whereof I am now speaking it was by King Edward the Sixth first granted to John Earl of Warwick and to his Heirs 22 Junii 1 E. 6. and after his attainder whereof in Warwick I have spoke in 3 and 4. Ph. and M. Rob. Kelway had a Lease of the Site and divers Lands thereunto belonging for 40 years at the Rent of 196 l. 8 s. 1 d. And afterwards another for 60 years which Robert Kelway in 23 Eliz. died seized in fee of certain Lands belonging to this Monastery Anne the Wife of John Harrington Esq being his sole Daughter and Heir and then 30 years of Age. Of the Grey Friers in Coventry he gives this Relation concerning their Dissolution pag. 116. Col. 1. The next thing whereof I am to take notice in Relation to this Friery is King Henry the Eighth's Survey in 26 of his Reign At which time it did appear that they had no Lands or Tenements nor other Possessions Spiritual or Temporal but only a liberty in the Country to receive the Charity of good people This being so I expect that some may demand why it was not Dissolved in 27 H. 8. when the lesser Houses went to wrack Whereunto I answer that the Act for that purpose extendeth only unto Monks Chanons and Nuns But if it be asked why these were then so sheltred from the first storm the reason I think is apparent viz. There was nothing to be got by their ruin for as much as they had no endowment of Lands c. tho God was as much dishonored by the lewd lives of the Friers for want of good Government as the Preamble of that Act imports in case it say true as by any other whose Houses were certified to be of less value than 200 l. per Ann. which favor we see gave those poor Friers liberty to breath here a while longer in expectation of their Ruine viz. till 30 H. 8. that all the great Houses were dissolved In relation to Coventry Cross and the stately Monastery there demolished he writes thus pag. 96. Col. 1. But it was neither the Luster of their Beautiful Cross nor all those large and easie acquisitions that did any whit ballance the loss this City sustained by the Ruine of that great and famous Monastery and other the Religious Houses c. which had so lately preceded For to so low an Ebb did their trading soon after grow for want of such concourse of people that numerously resorted thither before that fatal dissolution that many Thousands of the Inhabitants to seek better lively-hoods were constrained to forsake the City insomuch as in 3 E. 6 it was represented to the Duke of Somerset then Protector by John Hales a person of great note in those days and whose memory is still famous here that there were not at that time above 3000 Inhabitants whereas within memory there had been 15000. Of the Dissolution of the aforesaid Monastery he thus continues pag. 105. Col. 1. But behold the Instability of these terrestrial things what the Pious Founder and all other its worthy Benefactors had with
Historical COLLECTIONS Out of several Grave Protestant Historians Concerning the CHANGES OF RELIGION AND The strange Confusions following In the Reigns of KING HENRY the Eighth EDWARD the Sixth QUEEN MARY and ELIZABETH With an Addition of several Remarkable Passages taken out of Sir Will. Dugdale's Antiquities of Warwickshire relating to the Abbies and their Institution Published with Allowance LONDON Printed by Henry Hills Printer to the Kings Most Excellent Majesty for His Houshold and Chappel And for him and Mat●… Tur●…er at the Lamb in High holbourn 1686. THE PREFACE HAving perused several of our Histories of England and standing amazed to find in them That the Alteration of Religion here hath been totally carried on by worldly Interest I thought it would not be ungrateful to the Reader to have those various Passages concerning the Changes of Religion collected together out of those Histories for the informing him exactly how those Changes have been made And withal of the Beginning and Progress of Presbytery in this Nation and the Ground of Multiplying other Sects which hath been the cause of all our late Confusions I have laboured to connect these Passages together in as good an order as I think could be expected in matters ●…ulled out of such large volumns Much more might have been Collected concerning these matters out of diverse other Histories But I think the chief matters are here sufficiently handled which may satisfie the curiosity of any indifferent Reader To add more Authority to what shall be here taken out of Dr. Heylyns History of Reformation from whence the chiefest matters of these Collections are gathered I will here Insert a Passage out of the Preface of it by which it will appear what diligence he hath used in composing this History The words of the Preface are these IN this following History you will find more to satisfie your curiosity and inform your judgment then can be possibly drawn up in this general view As for my performance in this work In the first place I am to tell you that towards the raising of this Fabrick I have not borrowed my materials only out of vulgar Authors but searched into the Records of the Convocation consulted all such Acts of Parliament as concerned my purpose advised with many Forein Writers of great name and credit exemplified some Records and Charters of no common quality many rare pieces in the Cottonian Library and not a few Debates and Orders of the Council-Table which I have laid together in as good a form and beautified it with a trimming as agreeable as my hands could give it Thus Dr. Heylyn A Preamble to the following Collections concerning the great Kindness and good Correspondence between King Henry the Eighth and some Popes FIrst King Henry the Eighth for writing a Book against Luther received a Bull from the Pope whereby he had the Title given him to be Defender of the Faith for him and his Successors for ever The Relation concerning which Book and the Reception of it by the Pope is thus set down in the History of the Lord Herbert of Cherbury pag. 104. OUr King being at leisure now from Wars and delighting much in learning thought he could not give better proof either of his Zeal or Education then to write against Luther To this also he was exasperated That Luther had oftentimes spoken contemptuously of the learned Thomas of A●…uin who yet was in so much requst with the King that he was therefore called Thomistious Hereupon the King compiles a Book wherein he strenuously opposed Luther in the point of Indulgences Number of Sacraments the Papal Authority and other particulars to be seen in that his work Entitled de Septem Sacramentis c. a principal Copy whereof richly bound being sent to Leo I remember my self to have seen in the Vatican Library The manner of the delivery whereof as I find it in our Records was thus Doctor John Clark Dean of Windsor our Kings Embassador appearing in full Consistory the Pope knowing the glorious Present he brought first gave him his cheek to kiss and then receiving the Book promised to do so much for the Approbation thereof as ever was done for St. Augustine or St. Hierome's Works Assuring him withal that the next Consistory he would bestow a publick Title on our King which having been heretofore privately debated among the Cardinals those of Protector Defensor Romanae Ecclesiae or Sedis Apostolicae or Rex Apostolicus or Orthodoxus produced they at last agreed on Defensor Fidei a Transcript of which Bull out of an Original sub plumbo in our Records I have here inserted Leo Bishop Servant of the Servants of God to his most dear Son Henry King of England Defender of the Faith All health and happiness God having called Us although infinitely unworthy of it to the Government of the whole Church We bend all Our thoughts to promote the Catholick Faith without which none can be saved and labour by all means as belongs to Our duty to make use of and promote all such helps as have been wisely ordained for the preserving the integrity of Christian Faith amongst all but most especially amongst Princes and to suppress the endeavours of those who labour to corrupt it by lies and false Doctrines And as other Bishops of Rome our Predecessors have been accustomed to confer special favours upon Catholick Princes according to the exigency of Times and Affairs Especially upon such as have not only remained unmovable in their Obedience to the Holy Roman Catholick Church with an entire Faith and servent Devotion in the tempestuous times and raging perfidious fury of Schismaticks and Hereticks But likewise as legitimate Children and stout Champions of the same Church have opposed themselves both temporally and spiritually against the mad fury of such Schismaticks and Hereticks as have opposed it So we also desire to extol your Majesty with condign and immortal Praises for your excellent and immortal works and actions in favour of Us and this Holy See where by Gods permission we are established and to grant you those things which may enable and engage you to have a care to preserve our Lords Flock from Wolves and to cut off with the material Sword rotten members that seek to infect the mystical Body of Christ confirming in the solidity of Faith the Hearts of such as waver or are in danger of falling When our beloved Son John Clark your Majesties Orator or Embassador deliver'd unto Us in Our Consistory before Our Venerable Brethren Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church and many other Prelates of the Roman Court a Book which your Majesty hath composed out of your great Charity and Zeal of Catholick Faith enflamed with a fervour of Devotion towards Us and this Holy See as a Noble and proper Antidote against the errors of divers Hereticks often condemned by this Holy See and lately raised up again by Martin Luther he then likewise further declared unto Us your Majesties desire that this
And with thanks to God we know the way to Heaven to be as ready by Water as by Land and therefore we care not which way we go These Friars and all the rest of their Order were banish'd shortly after And after that none durst openly oppose themselves against the Kings affections Thus far Stow. Now more perfectly to Establish this Change It was Ordered That there should be Sermons Preached at Paul's-Cross against the Popes Supremacy Thus related by Howes upon Stow Pag. 571. Every Sunday at Paul's-Cross Preached a Bishop declaring the Pope not to be Supream Head of the Church Also in other Places of this Realm great Troubles were raised about Preaching namely at Bristow where Mr. Latimer preach'd and there preach'd against him one Mr. Hobberton and Dr. Powel So that there was great partakings on both sides insomuch that divers Priests and others set up Bills against the Mayor and against Mr. Latimer But the Mayor permitting Laymen to Preach caused divers Priests to be apprehended and put in Newgate with Bolts upon them and divers others ran away and lost their Livings rather than come into the Mayor's handling Thus Howes The King being thus Establish'd Head of the Church of England makes one Thomas Cromwel his Vicar General which is thus set down by Sir Rich. Baker Pag. 408. Thomas Cromwell Son to a Black smith in Putney being raised to High Dignities was lastly made Vicar General under the King in all Ecclefiastical Affairs who sate divers times in the Convocation-House amongst the Bishops as Head over them Thus Sir Richard Baker And thus far of the first beginning of this prodigious Change of Religion CHAP. II. Of the Dissolution of Abbeys being the first Effect of this Change of Religion Stow Pag. 572. THE King sent the said Cromwel and others to visit the Abbeys and Nunneries in England the said Cromwel being ordained Principal Visitor He put forth all Religious Persons that would go and all under the Age of Four and Twenty And after closed up the residue that would remain so that they should not come out of their places All Religious Men that departed the Abbot or Prior gave them for their Habit a Priests Gown and Forty Shillings in Money The Nuns had such Apparel given them as Secular Women wear and had liberty to go whither they would They took out of the Monasteries and Abbeys their Reliques and chiefest Jewels to the Kings use they said Thus Stow. Here follows a more particular Account of the Dissolution of these Abbeys The first Religious House that the King took into his hands was the Hospital of St. James near Charing-cross with all the Means to the same belonging compounding with the Sisters of the House who were to have Pensions during their lives And built in place of the said Hospital a Goodly Mansion retaining still the Name of St. James Stow p. 560. In a Parliament were granted to the King and his Heirs All Religious Houses in the Realm of England of the value of Two hundred pounds and under with all Lands and Goods to them belonging The Number of these Houses then suppressed were about Three Hundred Seventy Six and the value of their Lands then Thirty two thousand pounds and more by the Year The Moveable Goods as they were then sold at Robin-Hood's peny-worths amounted to more than Ten thousand pounds The Religious Persons that were in the said Houses were clearly put out whereof some went to other Greater Houses and some went abroad to the World It was saith my Author a pitiful thing to hear the lamentation that People in the Countrey made for them for there was great Hospitality kept amongst them and as it was thought more than Ten thousand Persons Masters and Servants lost their Living by the putting down of these Houses Thus Sto●…v Not long after by the means of the said Cromwel All the Orders of Friars and Nunns with their Cloysters and Houses were suppressed and put down First the Black-Friars in London the next day the White-Friars the Grey-Friars and the Monks of Charter-House and so all the others Thus Baker page 415. Here follows a particular Relation concerning the Shrine at Canterbury Thus deliver'd by Sir Rich Baker pag. 411. SAint Augustines Abbey at Canterbury was suppress'd and the Shrine and Goods taken to the Kings Treasury as also the Shrine of Thomas Becket in the Priory of Christs-Church was likewise taken to the Kings use This Shrine was built about a man's height all of Stone and then upwards of Timber plain within the which was a Chest of Iron containing the Bones of Thomas Becket Scull and all with the wound on his Head and the piece cut out of his Scull in the same wound These Bones by the Command of the Lord Cromwel were burnt The Timber-work of This Shrine on the out-side was covered with Plates of Gold Damasked with Gold-wyre which Ground of Gold was again cover'd with Jewels of Gold as Ten or Twelve Rings ●…ramped with Gold-wyre into the said Ground of Gold many of these Rings having Stones in them There were likewise Images of Angels Precious Stones and Great Pearls The Spoyl of which Shrine in Gold and Precious Stones fill'd two great Chests such as six or seven strong men could do no more than remove one of them at once out of the Church The Monks of that Church were commanded to change their Habits into the Apparel of Secular Priests Thus Baker The Knights of the Rhodes and Knights of St. John of Jerusalem in England and Ireland were utterly Dissolv'd and made void The King his Heirs and Successors to have and enjoy all the Mansion-House Church and all other Buildings and Gardens to the same belonging near to the City of London call'd the House of St. John of Jerusalem in England and also the Hospital-Church an House of Kilwarin in Ireland with all Castles Honours Mannors Measees Lands Tenements Rents Revenues Services Woods Downs Pastures Parks Warrens c. in England and Ireland with all the Goods Cattels c. Thus Stow pag. 579. Besides these Religious Houses there were likewise by Act of Parliament given the King All Colleges Chanteries Hospitals Free Chappels Fraternities Brother-hoods and Gilds The Number of Monasteries suppress'd were 645 besides 90 Colleges 110 Hospitals and of Chanteries and Free Chappels 2374. Thus Baker in the former page Now to give a more exact Account of the Grounds and Progress of the Dissolution of these Monasteries We will here insert a Discourse taken out of Mr. Dugdales Antiquities of Warwick-shire Pag. 801. where he treats of the Dissolution of a particular Monastery of Nunnes called Poles-worth and upon that occasion of the Dissolution of all other Monasteries in the Kingdom The Discourse is thus delivered I Find it left Recorded by the Commissioners that were imploy'd to take Surrender of the Monasteries in this Shire Anno 29. Hen. 8. viz. That after strict scrutiny not only by the fame of the Countrey but
come to the Nunns of Syon with their Confessor to solicite them thereto who after many perswasions took it upon their Consciences that they ought to submit to the King's pleasure therein by God's Law But what could not be effected by such Arguments and fair Promises was by terror and streight dealing brought to pass For under pretence of suffering Delapidations in the Buildings or negligent administration of their Offices as also for breaking the Kings Injunctions they depriv'd some Abbots and then put others that were more plyant in their rooms From others they took their Convent-Seals to the end they might not by making Leases or Sale of their Jewels raise Money either for supply of their present Wants or payment of their Debts and so be necessitated to Surrender Nay to some as in particular to the Canons of Leicester the Commissioners threatned That they would charge them with Adultery and Buggery unless they would submit And Dr. London told the Nunns of Godstow That because he found them obstinate he would dissolve the House by vertue of the King's Commission in spite of their Teeth And yet all was so manag'd that the King was solicited to accept of them not being willing to have it thought that they were by Terror moved thereto and special notice was taken of those who did give out that their Surrenders were by Compulsion Which courses after so many through under-hand corruption had led the way brought on others apace as appears by their Dates which I have observ'd from the very Instruments themselves insomuch as the rest stood amaz'd not knowing which way to turn them Some therefore thought fit to try whether Money might save their Houses from this dismal fate so near at hand Others with great constancy refus'd to be thus accessory in violating the Donations of their Pious Founders But these tasted of no little severity For touching the Abbot of Fountains in York-shire I find that being charg'd by the Commissioners for taking into his hands some Jewels belonging to the Monastery which they call'd Theft and Sacrilege they pronounced him Perjur'd and so deposing him extorted a private Resignation And it appears that the Monks of Charter-House in the Suburbs of London were committed to Newgate where with hard and barbarous usage Five of them died and Five more lay at the point of death as the Commissioners signified But withal alledg'd That the Suppression of that House being of so strict a Rule would occasion great Scandal to their doings for as much as it stood in the face of the World infinite concourse from all parts coming to that Populous City and therefore desired that it might be altered to some other use And lastly that under the like pretence of robbing the Church wherewith the before specified Abbot of Fountains was charg'd the Abbot of Glastenbury with Two of his Monks being condemn'd to death was drawn from Wells upon a Hurdle and then hang'd upon the Hill call'd the Tore near Glastenbury his Head set upon the Abbey-gate and his Quarters dispos'd of to Wells Bath Ilchester and Bridgewater Nor did the Abbots of Colchester and Reading speed much better as they that shall consult our story of that time may see And for further terror to the rest some Priors and other Ecclesiastical Persons who had spoken against the Kings Supremacy a thing then somewhat uncouth being so newly set up were condemn'd as Traytors and Executed And now that all this was effected to the end it might not be thought that these things were done by a high Hand a Parliament was called ●…0 Hen. 8. to confirm these Surrenders Now there wanted not plausible insinuations to Both Houses for drawing on their Consent with all smoothness thereto The Nobility being promised large shares in the spoils either by Free-gift from the King easie-Purchases or most advantageous Exchanges and many of the Active Gentry advancements to Honour with encrease of their Estates All which we see happened to them accordingly And the better to satisfie the vulgar it was represented to them that by this Deluge of Wealth the Kingdom should be strengthened with an Army of Forty Thousand men●… and that for the future they should never be charg'd with Subsidies Fifteens Loans or Common Aides By which means the Parliament Ratifying these Surrenders the Work became compleated For the more firm Settling whereof a sudden course was taken to pull down and destroy the Buildings as had been done before upon the Dissolution of the smaller Houses Next to disperse a great portion of the Lands amongst the Nobility and Gentry which was accordingly done The Visitor General having told the King That the more had interest in them the more they would be irrevocable And lest any Domestick stir should arise by reason of this great and strange Alteration rumors were spread of great dangers from Forein Invasions against which great Preparations were made every where which seemed so to excuse this Suppression of the Abbyes as that the People willing to spare their own Purses began to suffer it easily But let us look upon the Success Wherein I find that the said Visitor General the grand Actor of this Tragical business having contracted upon himself an Odium from the Nobility by reason of his low Birth and being raised to so high Dignities as likewise from the Catholicks for having thus Acted in the Dissolution of the Abbeys was before the End of the said Parliament wherein that was ratified which he had with so much Industry brought to pass deserted by the King who not having any more use of him gave way to his Enemies Accusations Whereupon being Arrested by the Duke of Norfolk at the Council-Table when he least dream't of it he was Committed to the Tower and Condemned by the same Parliament for Heresie and Treason unheard and little pitied and had his Head cut off on Tower-Hill Nor did many of the Reformers speed much better For Fire and Fagot happened to be their Portion And as for the fruit the People reap'd from all their hopes built upon these specious Pretences it was very little For Subsidies from the Clergy and Fifteens of all Laymens Goods were soon after exacted And in Edward the Sixth's time the Commons were constrained to Supply the King's wants by a new Invention to wit Sheep Cloaths Goods Debts c. for Three years which Tax grew so heavy that the year following they prayed the King for mitigation of it Nor is it a little observable that whilst the Monasteries stood there was no Act for Relief of the Poor so amply did those Houses give succor to them Whereas in the next Age to wit the 39 of Elizabeth no less then Eleven Bills were brought into the House of Commons for that purpose Thus far out of Mr. Dugdale concerning this Prodigious and Diabolical Action A word out of the same History Page 109 and 119. concerning Chantryes Gilds or Fraternities I shall only mention one of each of them to
make it known what they were Prestons Chantery THis was Founded by John Preston for two Priests to Sing Mass daily for the good Estate of Him the said John during this mortal Life and afterwards for the health of his Soul as also for the Souls of his Parents and Benefactors and all the Faithful Deceased Thus Mr. Dugdale Of Gilds or Fraternities The word Gild Proceeds from the Saxon word Gelo or Gilo which signifies Money because that such as were either for Charity Religion or Merchandize sake associated did cast their Money Goods yea and sometimes Lands together for the publick support of their own common charge These had their Annual Feasts ●…nd Neighbourly Meetings The First and most Ancient of these Gilds here in Coventry was Founded in the Fourteenth year of Edward the Third At which time the King granted Licence to the Coventry men That they should have a Merchants Gild and a Fraternity of Brethren and Sisters of the same in this Town with a Master or Warden thereof to be chosen out of the same Fraternity And that they might make Chantries bestow Alms do other works of Piety and Constituted Ordinances touching the same with all Appurtenances thereto And in the Seventeenth year Edward the Third gave leave to several to enter into a Fraternity and make a Gild consisting of themselves and such others as would joyn with them to the Honor of St. John Baptist. As also to purchase certain Lands Tenements and Rents for the Founding of a Chantry of Six Priests to Sing Mass every day in the Church of the Holy Trinity and St. Michael in Coventry for the Souls of the King's Progenitors and for the good Estate of the King Queen Isabel his Mother Queen Philippa his Wife and their Children As also of Walter Chesthunt and William De-Belgrave during their lives here on Earth and for their Souls after their departure hence and for the good Estate of the said John John Tho. Rich. Pet. and William and the rest of the said Gild with their Benefactors and likewise for the Soul of John Eltham late Earl of Cornwal and all of the Faithful Deceased Which Gild being so Founded within Two years after the same King Edward gave Licence to Queen Isabel his Mother to Give and Assign thereunto a parcel of Land to build thereupon a Chappel to the Honor of our B●…essed Saviour and St. John Baptist for Two Priests to Sing Mass daily for the good Estate of the said King Edward Queen Isabel his Mother Queen Philippa his Wife Edward Prince of Wales and of the Brethren and Benefactors of the same Gild whilst they lived in this World and for their Souls after their Departure hence As also for the Soul of John of Eltham Earl of Cornwal and the Souls of the said Brethren and Benefactors with all the Faithful Deceased Thus Mr. Dugdale p. 119. There were great store of these and such like Pious Foundations throughout all England as appears by the same History All destroyed by King Henry the Eighth and his Son This Change being made something must necessarily be established in order to Religion CHAP. III. A Book of Religion Published THE Clergy held a Convocation in St. Paul's Church where after much disputing and debating of matters they Published a Book of Religion Entituled Articles Devised by the King's Highness c. In which Book is mentioned but Three Sacraments Baptism Eucharist and Penance The Articles contained in this Book were Six And by an Act of Parliament all were condemned for Hereticks and to be Burnt that should hold the contrary to them Asserting 1. That the Body of Christ was not really present in the Sacrament of the Eucharist after Consecration 2. That Priests entred into Holy Orders might Marry 3. That the Sacrament might not truly be Administred in one kind 4. That Vows of Chastity made upon mature deliberation were not to be kept That Private Masses were not to be used That Auricular Confession was not necessary in the Church Thus Sir Rich. Baker pag. 408. Here followeth the Act it self out of the Statute Book An Act of Parliament made in King Henry the Eighth's time for abolishing diversity of Opinions in certain Articles concerning Religion THe King 's Most Royal Majesty most prudently considering that by occasion of various Opinions and Judgments concerning some Articles in Religion great discord and variance hath arisen as well amongst the Clergy of this Realm as amongst a great number of the vulgar People And being in a full hope and trust that a full and perfect Resolution of the said Articles would make a perfect Concord and Unity generally amongst all His Loving and Obedient Subjects of His most Excellent Goodness not only Commanded that the said Articles should Deliberately and Advisedly by His Archbishops Bishops and other Learned Men of His Clergy be Debated Argued and Reasoned and their Opinions therein to be Understood Declared and Known But also most Graciously vouchsafed in his own Princely Person to come unto his High Court of Parliament and Council and there like a wise Prince of most high Prudence and no less Learning opened and declared many Things of most high Learning and great Knowledge touching the said Articles Matters and Questions for an Unity to be had in the same Whereupon after a great and long deliberate and advised Disputation and Consultation had and made concerning the said Articles as well by the consent of the King's Highness as by the Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and other Leaned Men of His Clergy in their Convocations and by the Consent of the Commons in Parliament Assembled it was and is finally resolved accorded and Agreed in manner and form following that is to say 1. First That in the most Blessed Sacrament of the Altar by the strength and efficacy of Christ's mighty Word it being spoken by the Priest is present really under the Forms of Bread and Wine the natural Body and Blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ conceived of the Virgin Mary and that after the Consecration there remains no substance of the Bread or Wine nor any other Substance but the Substance of Christ God and Man 2. That the Communion in both kinds is not necessary to Salvation by the Law of God to all Persons and that it is to be Believed and not Doubted but that in the Flesh under the Form of Bread is the very Blood and with Blood under the Form of Wine is the very Flesh as well apart as if they were both together 3. That Priests after the Order of Priesthood received may not Marry by the Law of God 4. That Vows of Chastity Widowhood c. are to be kept 5. That it is meet and necessary that Private Masses be continued and admitted in the King 's English Church and Congregation as whereby good Christian People orcering themselves accordingly do receive both Godly and Goodly Consolations and Benefits and it is agreeable also to God's Law 6. That
in the Truth so the Devil is ready to seduce us And I have been seduced But bear me witness That I die in the Catholick Faith of the holy Church And I desire you to pray for me that so long as life remains in this Flesh I waver nothing in my Faith Having said this he was presently beheaded Thus Howes This following Relation although it concerns not the shedding of Blood yet is very remarkable as manifesting how the King's Marriage with the Lady Anne of Cleve was in Parliament declared not lawful Which is thus related by Howes upon Stow Page 578. AFter the Death of the Lady Jane Seymour the King 's Third Wife He Married the Lady Anne of Cleve in the Two and thirtieth year of his Reign From which time the King not only continued his first Misliking of her but his hatred encreased more and more against her not only for want of beauty whereof at first he took exceptions but also for sundry other qualities whereof he secretly accused her As also he said that her body was unpleasant making great doubt that she was no Virgin when she came into England with divers other defects which he said he knew by her outward appearance to be in her And being thus so sore perplexed and desperate of redress he grew wondrous apt and willing to call in question any thing that might tend to the dissolving of this Marriage Within Eight dayes the King told his Physicians his further cause of grief That she was loathsome to him in Bed and that her Body was foul and out of order The King being thus tormented in Body and Mind knew not how to ease himself until he had procured a speedy Divorce Which was thus effected Certain Lords came down into the Lower-House of Parliament expresly declaring the causes why this Marriage was not Lawful And in conclusion the matter was by the Convocation clearly determined that the King might lawfully marry where he would and so might she It appears clearly in the Record what moved the King to this Marriage For these are his words I declare that when the first Communication was had with me about this Marriage I was glad to hearken to it trusting to have some assured Friend by it I much doubting at that time both the Emperor France and the Bishop of Rome Thus Stow. The King 's Fifth Wife Catherine Howard put to death for Adultery As appears by this Relation Baker page 514. THe King was informed of the Queens dissolute life first before her Marriage with one Francis Dereham and since her Marriage with one Thomas Culpepper of the King's Bed-Chamber Whereupon Sir Tho. Wrioths●…ey was sent to the Queen at Hampton-Court to charge her with these Crimes and discharging her Houshold to cause her to be conveighed to Syon The Delinquents being examined Dereham confessed that before the King's Marriage with the Lady Catherine there had been a pre-contract between him and her But when once he understood of the King 's good liking to her he then waved it and concealed it for her preferment These Gentlemen were arraigned and had Judgment to die as in cases of Treason They were drawn from the Tower to Tyburn Where Culpepper was beheaded and Dereham hanged and dismember'd The Lord William Howard and the Lady Margaret his Wife Catherine Tilney and Alice Bestwold Gentlewomen Joan Bulmer Anne Howard Wife to Henry Noward the Queens Brother with divers others were all condemned for Misprision of Treason in concealing the Queens misdemeanour and adjudged to forfeit all their Lands and Goods during life and to remain in perpetual Prison The Lords and Commons in Parliament Petitioned the King That he would not vex himself with the Queens Offences and that both she and the Lady Rochford might be Attainted by Parliament And that to avoid protracting of time he would give his Royal Assent to it under the Great Seal without staying for the end of the Parliament Also that Dereham and Culpepper having been Attainted before by the Common-Law might be Attainted likewise by Parliament All which was Assented unto by the King After this the Queen and the Lady Rochford were beheaded on the Green within the Tower It is certainly said that after her Condemnation She protested to Dr. White Bishop of Winchester her last Confessor That as for the Act for which She was condemn'd She took God and his holy Angels to witness upon her Souls Salvation that She died guiltless Thus of the putting to death of his Wives Here follows an unheard of Cruelty of Bloodshed for Religion in these times of Confusion and Change of Religion ONe Lambert was accused for denying the real presence in the Sacrament who Appeal'd to the King and the King was content to hear him Whereupon a Throne was set up in the Hall of the King's Palace at Westminster for the King to sit And when the Bishops had urged their Arguments and could not prevail then the King took him in hand hoping perhaps to have the Honor of converting an Heretick when the Bishops could not do it and withal promised him pardon if he would recant But all would not do for he remained obstinate the King miss'd his Honor and the Delinquent his Pardon Being shortly after drawn to Smithfield and burnt Baker page 412. Two more were for the same cause burnt Baker in the same page Dr. John Fisher Bishop of Rochester and Sir Thomas Moor expresly denyed at Lambeth before the Archbishop of Canterbury to take the Oath of Supremacy and thereupon were both beheaded Bishop Fisher was much lamented as being reputed a man both learned and wise and of good life Sir Thomas Moor was both learned and very wise His Devotion was such that he used to wear a Shirt of Hair-cloth next his skin for a perpetual Penance And oftentimes in the Church he would put on a Surplice and help the Priest at Mass Which he did not forbear to do when he was Lord Chancellor of England as one time the Duke of Norfolk coming to the Church found him doing it Baker page 406. Sir William Peterson Priest late Commissary of Calais and Sir William Richardson Priest of St. Maries in Calais were both there drawn hang'd and quarter'd in the Market-place for the Supremacy Stow page 579. Dr. Wilson and Dr. Samson Bishop of Chichester were sent to the Tower for relieving certain Prisoners who had denyed to Subscribe to the King's Supremacy And for the same offence Richard Farmer Grocer of London a rich and wealthy Citizen was committed to the Marshalsea and after arraigned and attainted in a Praemunire and lost all his Goods his Wife and Children thrust out of doors Stow page 580. Robert Barns Dr. of Divinity Thomas Gerrard Parson of Honey-lane and William Jerom Vicar of Stepney-Heath Bachelors in Divinity Also Edward Powel Thomas Able and Richard Fetherston all Three Doctors were drawn from the Tower of London to West Smithfield The Three First were drawn to a Stake and there
burnt The other three were drawn to a Gallows and there hanged headed and quartered The Three First as appears in their Attainders were executed for divers Heresies The last Three for Treason to wit for denying the King's Supremacy and affirming his Marriage with Queen Catherine to be good Stow page 581. Thomas Empson sometimes a Monk of Westminster who had been Prisoner in Newgate more than Three years was brought before the Justices in Newgate and for that he would not ask the King Pardon for denying his Supremacy nor be Sworn thereto his Monks-Cowl was plucked off his back and his Body reprieved till the King was informed of his Obstinacy Stow page 591. Three Men and one Woman were burned in Smithfield for the Sacrament Dr. Shaxton sometimes Bishop of Salisbury Preaching at the same fire and there recanting perswaded them to do the like But they would not Stow page 592. Some Anabaptists Three Men and one Woman all Dutch bore Faggots to Pauls Cross and a Man and a Woman Dutch Anabaptists were burnt in Smithfield Stow page 576. Dr. Forest a Friar Observant was apprehended for that in Secret he had declared to many that the King was not Supreme Head of the Church Whereupon he was condemned and afterwards upon a pair of new Gallows set up for that purpose in Smithfield he was hanged by the Middle and Arm-pits quick and under the Gallows was made a Fire wherewith he was burnt and consumed Stow page 577. Hugh Faringdon Abbot of Reading and Two Priests named Rugg and Owen were hang'd and quartered at Reading The same day was Richard Whiting Abbot of Glastenbury hang'd and quartered on Tore-Hill adjoyning to his Monastery John Thorn and Roger James Monks the one Treasurer the other under-Treasurer of Glastenbury-Church were at the same time executed Also shortly after John Beck Abbot of Colchester was executed at Colchester All for denying the King's Supremacy Stow pag. 577. Six Persons and one led between Two were drawn to Tyburn to wit Laurence Cook Prior of Doncaster William Horn a Lay-Brother of the Charter-House at London Giles Horn Gentleman Clement Philipp Gentleman of Calais Edmond Bolhelm Priest Darcy Jennings Robert Bird And all there hang'd and quartered as having been Attainted by Parliament for denying of the King's Supremacy Stow pag. 581. Sir David Jenison Knight of Rhodes was drawn through Southwark to St. Thomas of Watterings and there executed for the Supremacy Stow page 581. German Gardiner and Lark Parson of Chelsey were executed at Tyburn for denying the King's Supremacy As likewise one Ashby Stow page 585. Three Anabaptists were burnt in the High-way beyond Southwark towards Newington Stow page 579. Thus far of these Cruelties CHAP. V. Of a Third Effect of this Change to wit a General Confusion in Religion THese horred Cruelties made the state of Religion in England in a strange Confusion as appears by this Relation of Sir Rich. Baker page 408. And now was the state of Religion in England come to a strange pass because always in Passing and had no Consistence For at first the Authority of the Pope was excluded in some cases only a while after in all But yet his Doctrine was wholly receiv'd Afterwards his Doctrine came to be impugn'd but yet in some few points only a while after in many That the Fable of Proteus might be no longer a Fable when the Religion of England might be its true Moral The Confusion was so great in these times that in Parliament one called the other Heretick and Anabaptist and he again called him Papist and Hypocrite And this not only amongst the Temporality but even the Clergy-men themselves preach'd and enveigh'd one against another So that the Frame of Religion was extremely disjoynted the Clergie that should set it in Frame being out of frame themselves The Minds of the People extremely distracted and the Nobility that should cement them together scarce holding themselves together Thus Baker The Truth of this Relation appears more fully confirm'd from this Speech of King Henry made in Parliament Thus related by How 's upon Stow pag. 590. A part of King Henry the Eighth's Speech made in Parliament in the Thirty seventh Year of his Reign WHat Love or Charity is there amongst you when one calls another Heretick and Anabaptist and he calls him again Papist Hypocrite and Pharisee I must needs judge the fault and occasion of this Discord to be partly by negligence of you the Fathers and Preachers of the Spirituality For I hear daily that you of the Clergie Preach one against another Teach one contrary to another railing one against another Some are so stiff in their old Mumpsimus others are so busie and furious in their new Sumpsimus that all men almost be in Variety and Discord and few or none preach truly and sincerely the Word of God Now how can poor Souls live in concord when you Preachers sow amongst them in your Sermons Debate and Discord Of you they look for light and you lead them into darkness Now although I say that Spiritual-men be in some fault that Charity is not kept amongst you yet you of the Temporality be not clear and unspotted from malice and envy For you rail at Bishops speak slanderously of Priests and rebuke and taunt Preachers You must understand that although you be permitted to read Holy Scriptures and to have the Word of God in your Mother-tongue yet this Licence is given you only to inform your Conscience and to instruct your Children and not to dispute and make Scripture a railing and a taunting-stock against Priests and Preachers as many light persons do I am very sorry to hear how irreverently that most precious Jewel the Word of God is Disputed Rimed Sung and Jangled in every Ale-house and Tavern contrary to the true meaning and Doctrine of the same And I am as much sorry that the Readers of it follow it in doing so faintly and coldly For of this I am sure that Charity and Virtue was never less exercised nor God amongst Christians was never less reverenc'd honor'd or serv'd Thus Stow. These Confusions and others are thus related by Dr. Heylyn in his History of Reformation Page 17. THE People were generally divided into Factions and Schisms The Treasures of the Crown were exhausted by prodigal Gifts and the Money of the Realm so mix'd that it could not pass for currant amongst Forein Nations to the great dishonor of the Kingdom and loss of the Merchant For although an infinite Mass of Jewels Treasure of Plate and ready Money and an incredible improvement of Revenue had accrued to him by such an universal Spoil and Dissolution of Religious Houses yet was he little or nothing the richer for it insomuch that in the year 1543. being within less than Seven years after the general Suppression of Religious Houses he was forc'd to have recourse for Moneys to his Houses of Parliament by which he was supply'd after an extraordinary manner the Clergy at
by Persons not responsible in which case the King as well as the Commissioners was to lose his Right But more was concealed by Persons not to be discovered who had so cunningly carried on the stealth that there was no tracing of their Foot-steps And some there were who being known to have such Goods in their Possession conceived themselves to be too great to be called in question and were connived at willingly by those that were but their equals and either were or meant to be Offenders in the same kind So that although some profit was hereby raised to the King's Exchequer yet the far greatest part of the Prey came to other hands Insomuch that many private Mens Parlors were hung with Altar-cloths their Tables and Beds covered with Copes instead of Carpets and Coverlets and many made Carowsing Cups of the Sacred Chalice as once Belshazzar Celebrated his drunken Feasts in the Sanctified Vessels of the Temple It was a sorry House not worth the naming which had not something of this Furniture in it though it were only a fair large Cushion made of a Cope or Altar-cloth to adorn their Windows or to make their Chairs appear to have somewhat in them of a Chair of State Yet how contemptible were these Trappings in comparrison of those vast Sums of Money which were made of Jewels Plate and Cloth of Tissue either conveighed beyond the Seas or sold at home and good Lands purchased with the Money nothing the more blessed to the Posterity of them that bought them for being purchased with the Consecrated Treasures of so many Churches Thus Dr. Heylyn CHAP. XII Of his last designed Sacriliege to wit The Suppression of Bishopricks and Collegiate Churches and particularly of his Suppressing the Bishoprick of Durham Dr. Heylyn pag. 132. BUt as the King was plunged in Debt without being put to any extraordinary Charges so was he decayed in his Revenue without selling any part of his Crown Lands toward the payment of it By the Suppressing of some and the Surrendring of other Religious Houses the Royal Intrado was so much encreased in the late King's time that for the better managing of it the King Erected first the Court of Augmentation and afterwards the Court of Surveyors But in short time by his own profuseness and the avariciousness of this King's Ministers it was so retrenched that it was scarce able to find work enough for the Court of Exchequer Whereupon followed the Dissolving of the said Two Courts in the last Parliament of this King Which as it made a loud noise in the ears of the People so did it put this jealousie into their minds That if the King's Lands should be thus daily wasted without any recruit he must at last prove burthensome to the common Subject Some course is therefore to be thought on which might pretend to an encrease of the King's Revenue And none more easie to be compassed than to begin with the Suppression of such Bishopricks and Collegiate Churches as either lay farthest off or might be best spared In reference whereunto it was concluded in a Chapter held at Westminster by the Knights of the Garter That from thenceforth the said most Noble Order of the Garter should be no longer entituled by the Name of St. George but that it should be called The Order of the Garter only and the Feast of the said Order should be Celebrated upon Whitsun-Eve Whitsun-Day and Whitsun-Munday and not on St. George's-day as before it was And to what end was this concluded and what else was to follow upon this Conclusion but the Dissolving of the Free-Chappel of St. George in the Castle of Windsor and the transferring of the Order to the Chappel of King Henry the Seventh in the Abbey of Westminster Which had undoubtedly been done and all the Lands thereof converted to some powerful Courtiers under pretence of laying them to the Crown if the King's death which happened within Four months after had not prevented the design and thereby respited that ruine which was then intended The like preservation hapned at the same time to the Church of Durham as liberally endowed as the most and more amply privil●…eged than the best in the King's Dominions The Bishops thereof by Charter and long Prescription enjoying and exercising all the Rights of a County Palatine in that large Tract of Ground which lies between the Tees and the Tyne the Diocess also containing all Northumberland of which the Bishops and the Priests had the greatest shares No sooner was Bishop Tonstal committed to the Tower but presently an eye was cast upon his Possessions Which questionless had followed the same fortune with the rest of the Bishopricks if one more powerful than the rest had not preserved it from being parcelled out as the others were on a strong confidence of getting it all unto himself After this the Earl of Northumberland to preserve himself gave unto the King the greatest part of his Inheritance and dying without Children not long after left his Titles also to the King 's disposing The Lands and Titles being thus fallen unto the Crown continued undisposed of till the Fall of the Duke of Sommerset when Dudley Earl of Warwick being created Duke of Northumberland doubted not but he should be able to possess himself in short time also of all the Lands of that Family To which Estate the Bishoprick of Durham and all the Lands belonging to it would make a fair Addition upon which grounds the Bishoprick of Durham being Dissolved by Act of Parliament under pretence of patching up the King's Revenue the greatest part of the Lands thereof were kept together that they might serve for a Revenue to the future Palatine But all these Projects failed in the Death of the King and the subsequent Death of this great Duke in the following Reign of Queen Mary Thus far out of Dr. Heylyn ' s History of Reformation concerning the strange Proceedings in this Change of Religion and the sad Effects of it An Appendix I will here end this King's Reign with a short Relation of this great Dukes Ambition and the King's Death Sir Rich. Baker pag. 445. THe Duke of Northumberland having procured the cutting off the Proctor's Head and being placed next the King had now gone a great way in his Design It only remaining to perswade King Edward to exclude his two Sisters from Succession in the Crown For that done his Daughter-in-law the Lady Jane would come to have Right for as to Pretenders out of Scotland or any other he made no great matter And now to work the King to this perswasion being in a languishing Condition not far from Death he inculcates to him how much it concerned him to have a care of Religion that it might be preserved in Purity not only in his own Life but also after his Death which would not be if his Sister the Lady Mary should Succeed and She could not be put by unless the other Sister the Lady Elizabeth
were put by also seeing their Rights depended one upon another But if he pleased to Appoint the Lady Jane the Duke of Suffolk's eldest Daughter and his own next Kinswoman to his Sisters to be his Successor he might then be sure that the True Religion should be maintained to God's great Glory and be a worthy Act of his Religious Prudence This was to strike upon the right string of the young King's Affections with whom nothing was so dear as Preservation of Religion And thereupon his Last Will was appointed to be drawn contrived chiefly by the Lord Chief Justice Mountague and Secretary Cecil By which Will as far as in him lay he excluded his Two Sisters from the Succession and all others but the Duke of Suffolk's Daughters And then causing it to be read before his Council he required them all to Assent unto it and to Subscribe their Hands which they All both Nobility Bishops and Judges did only the Archbishop Cranmer refused at first Sir James Hales a Judge of the Common-Pleas to the last and with them also Sir John Baker Chancellor of the Exchequer His Will being thus made he shortly after dies conceived to have been Poysoned It is noted by some saith Sir Richard Baker That he died the same Month and the day of the Month that his Father King Henry the Eighth had put Sir Thomas Moor to death Thus of this Duke and the Kings Death We will now give an Account of the Years when these changes were made IN the First year a Reformation was resolved on and to prepare the way for it Injunctions were set out and Commissioners sent into all parts of the Kingdom to enquire into all Ecclesiastical Concernments With them also were sent Preachers to disswade the People from their former practices in Religion And this to prepare the way for the total Alteration in Religion which was intended There was likewise a Parliament called to promote and confirm the same Designs In the Second year Images were taken down and many Ancient Customs abolished and a Book of Common-Prayer composed All Colleges Hospitals c. were given to the King In the Third year a part of Pauls and many Churches were pulled down to build Sommerset House in the Strand There were great Troubles and Commotions both in Church and State The Book of Common-Prayer composed in the former year was now set out Peter Martyr and Bucer came over In the Fourth year one John a Lasco a Polonian with his Sectaries settled themselves here The great business of this year was the taking down of Altars Until this following Fifth year nothing had been Positively and Dogmatically concluded in Points of Doctrine Wherefore to set a stop to the great Confusions that were at this time there was a Book of Articles composed And to satisfie the Calvinists ther was a New Book of Common-Prayer set forth In the Sixth year Hopkins Psalms began to be sung in Churches And the use of the New Common-Prayer-Book made strange Alterations but all in order to Calvin's designs who had a chief hand in composing it In the Seventh year the King is found to be extremely engaged in Debt and under Colour of satisfying such Debts great spoyl is made of the Treasures of the Church Thus you have had a short Relation of the strange Confusions and Alterations of Religion which happened in the few years Reign of this King A CONTINUATION Of these HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS Concerning the Restauration of Catholick Religion And the Occurrences concerning it In the Reign of Queen MARY A Preamble WE shall here follow Dr. Heylyns order in relating First some Passages concerning her before She came to the Crown With a brief Narration of her Mother's Death whereof Dr. Heylyn gives this following account in his History of Reformation page 9. The Execution of Bishop Fisher and Sir Thomas Moor with many others who wished well unto her added so much affliction to the desolate Queen that not being able longer to bear the burthen of so many miseries she fell into a languishing Sickness which more and more encreasing on Her And finding the near approach of Death the only Remedy now left for all Her miseries She dictated this ensuing Letter which She caused to be delivered to the King by one of Her Women Wherein She laid before him these Her Last Requests Viz. My most Dear Lord King and Husband for so She called Him THe Hour of my Death now approaching I cannot chuse out of the Love I bear you but advise you of your Soul's health which you ought to prefer before all Considerations of the World or Flesh whatsoever For which yet you have cast me into many Calamities and your Self into many Troubles But I forgive you all and pray God to do so likewise For the rest I commend unto you Mary our Daughter beseeching you to be a good Father unto her as I have heretofore desired I must entreat you also to consider my Maids and give them in Marriage which is not much they being but Three And to grant unto all my other Servants a years pay besides their due lest otherwise they should be unprovided for Lastly I make this Vow That my Eyes have desired you above All Things Farewel Within few days after the writing of which Letter She yielded her pious Soul unto God at the Kings Manner-House of Kimbolton and was Solemnly buried in the Abbey of Peterborough The rending of her Letter drew some tears from the King which could not but be much encreased by the news of her Death Moved by them both to such a measure of Commiseration of Her sad condition That he caused the greatest part of Her Goods amounting to Five Thousand Marks to be expended or her Funeral and in the recompensing of such of Her Servants as had best deserved it Never so kind to Her in the time of her Life as when he had rendred Her incapable of receiving any kindness Thus Dr. Heylyn concerning her Mothers death Now concerning her Self he writes thus Pag. 11. THe Princess Mary is now left wholly to her Self declared Illegitimate by her Father deprived of the comfort of her Mother and in a Manner forsaken by all her Friends whom the severe proceedings against Moor and Fisher had so deterred that few durst pay her any offices of Love or Duty In which condition the poor Princes had no greater comfort than what She could gather from Her Books In which She had been carefully instructed by Dr. John Harman appointed her Tutor by the King and for his good Performance in that place of Trust advanced by him to the See of Exon and afterwards made Lord President of Wales By satisfying the King her Father in a Message sent unto her She gained so far upon him that from that time forwards he held her in the same rank with the rest of his Children gave Her her Turn in the Succession of the Kingdom assigned Her a Portion of Ten thousand pounds to
thereof Some of the Lutherans had given out on the former ground That the English had deservedly suffered the greatest Hardships both at home and abroad because they Writ and Spake so irreverently of the Blessed Sacrament Thus Dr. Heylyn concerning the Lutherans detesting an English Protestant Nothing occurring more in this Queens Reign as to these matters of Religion we will now give an Account of the years when these Changes were made with an Addition of some works of Piety done by Her and in Her time IN the First year of this Queens Reign All Bishops that had been deprived in the time of King Edward the Sixth were restored to their Bishopricks and the new removed Also this year on the Twenty seventh of August the Service was sung in Latin in St. Paul's Church The Pope's Authority being likewise by Act of Parliament restored in England and the M●…ss Commanded in all Churches to be used In her Second year the Realm is Absolved and Reconciled to the Church of Rome and First Fruits and Tenths restored to the Clergy In her Third year Eight hundred English Protestants sorsook the Kingdom who fell into great Confusions amongst themselves being in other Countries In her Fourth year Monasteries were be gun to be re-edified In her Fifth year great endeavors were used by Sectaries to raise Sedition by Seditious Books and unlawful Meetings or Conventicles In her Sixth year She built Publick Schools in the University of Oxford Which being decayed in tract of time and of no beautiful Structure when they were at the best were taken down In place whereof but upon a larger extent of Ground was raised that Goodly and Magnificent Fabrick which we now behold Works of Piety The Queen restored a great part of the Abbey-Lands that were in her Possession In her First year Sir Thomas white then Mayor Erected a College in Oxford called S. John's College He also Erected Schools at Bristow and Reading and gave Two thousand pounds to the City of Bristow to purchase Lands the profits whereof to be employed for the benefit of young Clothiers In her Third year died Sir John Gresham late Mayor of London who Founded a Free-School at Holt in Norfolk and gave to every Ward in London Ten pounds to be distributed to the Poor Also to Maids-Marriages Two hundred pounds Cuthbert Tunstal Bishop of Durham Erected a goodly Library in Cambridge storing it with many Excellent both Printed and Written Books He also bestowed much upon Building at Durham at Alnewick and at Tunbridge Thus Sir Richard Baker Here you have had a short View of the great Zeal and Piety that was in this Nation during the Reign of this Queen And this delivered from the mouths of her Enemies the most zealous Protestants This Account being here ended we will now proceed to relate what Changes were made as to Religion in Queen Elizabeths time Wherein the Scene was totally Altered She following the Example of her Father and Brother in going on with the Destructions and Confusions begun by them The Last Part Of these HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS Concerning A Fourth Change of Religion Made for POLITICK ENDS And of the Occurrences concerning it In the Reign of Queen Elizabeth A Preamble BEfore we begin this Queens Reign we will following Dr. Heylyn's order first make a Relation out of him of the various Fortunes of her Mother Anne Boleign of whom thus he writes in his History of Reformation pag. 86. Anne Boleign from her tender years was brought up in the Court of France Who returning into England was preferred to be Maid of Honor to Queen Catherine In whose Service the King falls in Love with her But so long concealed his Affections that there was a great League contracted betwixt her and the young Lord Peircy Son to the Earl of Northumberland But that being broken off by the endeavors of Cardinal Wolsey and the King laboring for a Divorce from Queen Catherine that he might Marry her that also was sought to be obstructed by the Cardinal Which being understood by Mrs. Anne Boleign she seeks all ways for his destruction and prevailed so far with the King that he was presently Indicted and Attainted of a Praemunire and not long after by the Counsel of Thomas Cromwel who had sormerly been the Cardinals Solicitor in his Legatine Court envolves the whole Clergy in the same Crime with him And by perswasion of this man he requires of the said Clergy to acknowledge him for Supreme Head on Earth of the Church of England and to make no new Canons and Constitutions not to Execute any such when made by his consent And having thus brought his own Clergy under his Command he was the less solicitous how his matters went in the Court of Rome concerning his Divorce Whereupon he privately Marries Mistris Anne Boleign And a long time after to wit Three or Four Months after the Birth of the Princess Elizabeth began a Parliament in which the Kings first Marriage was declared Unlawful and the Succession of the Crown settled upon His Issue by this Second Marriage An Oath being devised in maintenance of the said Succession and not long after Moor and Fisher were Executed for refusing to take that Oath The New Queen being thus settled and considering that the Pope and She had such different Interests that they could not subsist together She resolved to suppress his Power what she could But finding that the Pope was too well entrenched to be dislodged upon a sudden it was advised by Cromwel to begin with taking in the Outworks first which being gained it would be no hard matter to beat him out of his Trenches In order whereunto a Visitation is begun in which a diligent Enquiry was to be made into all Abbey's Priories and Nunneries within the Kingdom an Account of which Visitation and the D●…ssolution of Abbeys hath been formerly given in the Reign of King Henry the Eighth But the New Queen for whose sake Cromwel had contrived that Plot did not live to see this Dissolution For such is the uncertainty of Humane Affairs that when she thought her Self most Secure and free from Danger She became most obnoxious to the ruine prepared for Her It had pleased God upon the Eighth of January to put an end unto the Calamities of the Virtuous but unfortunate Queen unto whose Bed she had succeeded The News whereof she entertained with such contentment that she caused her self to be apparelled in lighter Colours than was agreeable to the season or the sad occasion Whereas if she had rightly understood her own Condition She could not but have known that the long Life of Queen Catherine was to be her best preservation against all changes which the King 's loose Affections or any other Alteration in the Affairs of State were otherwise like to draw upon her But this Contentment held not long For within Three Weeks after She fell in Travail in which she miscarried of a Son to the extreme discontent of the
Father Who looked upon it as an Argument of God's displeasure as being much offended at this Second Marriage He then began to think of His ill Fortune with both His Wives both Marriages subject to cispute and the Legitimation of both His Daughters likely to be called in question in the time succeeding He must therefore cast about for another Wife of whose Marriage and his Issue by Her there could rise no controversie His eye had carried him to a Gentlewoman in the Queens Attendance on the enjoying of whom he so fixed his Thoughts that he had quite obliterated all remembrance of his former Loves Whereupon He began to be as weary of Queen Annes Gayeties and Secular humor as formerly of the Gravity and Reservedness of Queen Katharine And causing many eyes to observe her Actions they brought him a Return of some particulars which he conceived might give him a sufficient ground to proceed upon The Lord Rochfort her own Brother having some Suit to obtain by her means of the King was found whispering to her on her Bed when she was in it which was interpreted for an act of some dishonor done or intended to be done to the King in the aggravating whereof with all odious circumstances none was more forward than the Lady Rochfort her self It was observed also That Sir Henry Norris Groom of the Stool to the King had entertained a very dear affection for her not without giving himself hopes of succeeding in the King's Bed if she chanced to survive Him And it appeared that she had given him opportunity to make his Affection known and to acquaint her with his hopes which she expressed by twitting him in a frolick humor with looking after dead mens shoes Weston and Breerton both Gentlemen of the Privy Chamber were observed also to be very diligent in their Services and Addresses to her which were construed more to proceed from Love than Duty Out of all these Premises the King resolved to come to a conclusion of His aims and wishes A Solemn Tilting was maintained at Greenwich at which both the King and Queen were present the Lord Rochfort and Sir Henry Norris being principal Challengers Here the Queen by chance let fall her Handkerchief which was taken up by one of her supposed Favourites who stood under the Window whom the King perceived to wipe his face with it This taken by the King to have been done of purpose he thereupon leaves the Queen and all the rest and goes immediatly to Westminster Rochfort and Norris are the next day committed to the Tower and the Queen likewise After which Breerton and Weston with Mark Smeton one of the King's Musicians were commited on the same occasion These persons being thus committed and the cause made known the next care was to find sufficient evidence for their condemnation It was objected That the Queen growing out of hope of having any issue Male by the King had used the company of the Lord Rochfort Norris Breerton Weston and Smeton involving her at once in no smaller crimes than Adultery and Incest It appears by a Letter of Sir William Kingston Lieutenant of the Tower that he had much communication with her when she was his Prisoner in which her language seemed to be broken and distressed betwixt tears and laughter She exclaimed against Norris as if he had accused her It was further signified in that Letter that she named some others who had obsequiously applyed themselves to her Love and Service acknowledging such passages as shewed she had made use of very great liberties The conclusion of this Business was That both the Queen and the rest of the Prisoners were all put to death So died this great Lady one of the most remarkable Mockeries and Disports of Fortune which these last ages have produced raised from the quality of a private Lady to the Bed of a King Crowned on the Throne and Executed on the Scaffold the Fabrick of her Power and Glory being Six years in Building but cast down in an instant The splendor and magnificence of her Coronation seeming to have no other end but to make her the more glorious Sacrifice at the next Alteration But her death was not the chief mark the King aim'd at If she had only lost her Head though with the loss of her Honor it would have been no Bar to her Daughter Elizabeth from Succeeding her Father in the Throne Now he must have his Bed free from all such pretensions the better to draw on the following Marriage It was therefore thought necessary that she should be separated from his Bed by some other means than the Ax or Sword and that He should be legally separated from her in a Court of Judicature when the Sentence of Death had deprived Her of all means as well as of all manner of desire to dispute the point It doth not appear in Record upon what ground this Marriage was dissolved All which occurs in reference to it is a Solemn Instrument under the Seal of the Archbishop Cranmer by which that Marriage is declared on good and valid Reasons to be null and void Which Sentence was pronounced at Lambeth in the Presence of most of the great Men of that time and approved by the Prelates and Clergy assembled in their Convocation and lastly confirmed by Act of Parliament In which Act there also passed a Clause which declared the Lady Elizabeth to be Illegitimate Thus far Dr. Heylyn concerning her Mother Now because the Relation here made concerning this Queen belongs to the Reign of King Henry the Eighth I think it will not be altogether improper to insert a Speech made in that Kings Reign which did not come to my hands time enough to be put into its proper place A Speech made in the Upper House of Parliment by Dr. John Fisher Bishop of Rochester in the Reign of King Henry the Eighth in opposition to the Suppressing of the lesser Monasteries My Honored Lords THis is the place where your glorious and noble Progenitors have paternized the Kingdom from oppression Here is the Sanctuary where in all Ages but this of ours our Mother Church found still a sound Protection I should be infinitely sorrowful that from you that are so lovely Branches of antiquity and Catholick Honor the Catholick Faith should be so deeply wounded For God's and your own Goodness sake leave not to Posterity so great a blemish that you were the First and only those that give it up to ruine Where there is Cause you nobly punish and with Justice but beware of infringing so long continued Priviledges or denying the Members of the Church the parts of their Advantage that is enjoyed by every private Subject The Commons shoot their Arrows at our Livings which are the Motives that conceit us or make us to be conceived guilty Is all the Kingdom innocent and we only faulty that there is no room left for other Considerations far more weighty The Diligence Devotion and Liberality of
began to build new Altars and set up the Mass So fared it now with the Zealots among the Protestants who measuring the Queens Affections by their own or else presuming that their Errors would be taken for an honest Zeal employed themselves as busily in the demolishing of Altars and defacing of Images as if they had been Licensed and commanded to it by some Legal Warrant It happened also that some of the Ministers who remained at home and others which returned in great numbers from beyond the Seas had put themselves into the Pulpits and bitterly enveighed against the Superstitions and corruptions of the Church of Rome The Papists accused the others of Heresies Schisms Innovation in the Worship of God For the Suppressing of which Disorders the Queen Commanded there should be no Disputes concerning Religion and that no Man of what Perswasion soever he was should be suffered to Preach in publick but only such as should be Licensed Which Command and Proclamation was so strictly observed that no Sermon was Preached at St. Paul's Cross or any Publick place in London till the Easter following At which time when the Preacher was to go into the Pulpit the Door was locked and the Key thereof not to be found So that a Smith was sent for to break open the Door and that being done the like necessity was found of cleansing and making sweet the place which by a long disuse had contracted so much filth and nastiness as rendred it unfit for a present Sermon By another Proclamation it was enjoyned That no Man of what quality or degree soever should presume to alter any thing in the State of Religion or innovate in any of the Rites and Ceremonies thereunto belonging But that all such Rites and Ceremonies should be observed in all Parish Churches of the Kingdom as were then used and retained in her Majesties Chappel until some further order should be taken in it Only it was permitted That the Litany should be said in the English Tongue as likewise the Epistle and Gospel at the time of High Mass which was accordingly done in all the Churches of London on the next Sunday after and by degrees in all the other Churches of the Kingdom Further than this She thought it not convenient to proceed at the present Only She Commanded the Priest or Bishop for some say it was the one and some the other who Officiated at the Altar in the Chappel Royal not to make any Elevation of the Sacrament the better to prevent the Adoration which was given to it which she could not suffer to be done in her sight without a most apparent wrong to her Judgment and Conscience Which being made known in other places and all other Churches being commanded to conform themselves to the Example of her Chappel the Elevation was forborn also in most other places And though there were no further progress made towards a Reformation by any publick Act or Edict yet secretly a Reformation in the Form of Worship and consequently in point of Doctrine was both intended and projected Thus far Dr. Heylyn ' Concerning ' the Policy used in making this Change This Relation is thus otherwise delivered by Sir Rich. Baker pag. 474. QUeen Elizabeth intending an Alteration of Religion would not do it all at once and upon the sudden but by little and little As at first she permitted only the Epistles and Gospels of the Day to be read at Mass in English But in all other matters they were to follow the Roman Rite and Custom until order could be taken for Establishing Religion by Authority of Parliament And a severe Proclamation was set out prohibiting all Disputations of Religion By which means She both put the Protestants in hope and put not Papists out of hope Yet privately She committed the Correcting of the Book of Common-Prayer set forth in the English Tongue under King Edward the Sixth to the care and diligence of Dr. Parker and others But the matter was carried on so closely that it was not communicated to any but the Marquess of Northampton the Earl of Bedford and Sir William Cecil Soon after this the use of the Lord's Supper in both kinds was by Parliament allowed And within Two or Three Months the Sacrifice of the Mass was abolished and the Liturgy in the English Tongue Established though as some say but with the difference of Six Voices in the House of Commons The next Month the Oath of Supremacy was offered to the Catholick Bishops and others and the Month following Images were removed out of the Churches broken and burnt By these degrees Religion in England was changed The Supremacy confirmed to the Queen As many of the Bishops as refused to take the Oath were presently deprived of their Bishopricks and Protestant Bishops put in the possession of them Thus Sir Rich. Baker relates this strange manner of changing Religion by degrees A necessary consequence of these Proceedings was a general Confusion in matters of Religion Which is thus set down by Howes upon Stow pag. 635. At this time the English Nation was wonderfully divided in Opinions as well in matters of Ecclesiastical Government as in divers Points of Religion by reason of Three Changes within the compass of Twelve years Every one of these varying from that which was Authorized by Henry the Eighth For King Henry assuming the Ecclesiastical Supremacy with the First Fruits and Tenths maintained Seven Sacraments with Obits and Mass for the Quick and Dead King Edward abolished the Mass Authorized a Book of Common-Prayer in English with Hallowing the Bread and Wine c. and Established only Two Sacraments Queen Mary restored all Things according to the Church of Rome reduced all Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction to the Papal Obedience with restitution of First Fruits and Tenths permitting nothing within her Realm and Dominions repugnant to the Roman Catholick Church Queen Elizabeth in Her First Parliament expelled the Papal Supremacy resumed the First Fruits and Tenths Suppressed the Mass and for the general Uniformity of her Dominions Established the Book of Common-Prayer in the English Tongue forbidding all others Thus Stow ' concerning these Prodigious Changes in Religion made by Publick Authority CHAP. III. Of the order of the Establishment of this last Change of Religion by Parliament And of a Speech made in Parliament in Opposition to the Queens Supremacy Dr. Heylyn pag. 107. NOw a Parliament draws on Summoned chiefly in reference to the Reformation which was therein to be established The Queens design in order to it could not be so closely carried but that such Lords and Gentlemen as had the managing of Elections in their several Counties retained such Men for Members of the House of Commons as they conceived most likely to comply with their intentions for a Reformation Amongst whom none appeared more active than the Duke of Norfolk the Earl of Arundel and Sir William Cecil In this Parliament there passed an Act for Restoring to the Crown the Tenths and