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A00142 A historie contayning the vvarres, treaties, marriages, and other occurrents betweene England and Scotland from King William the Conqueror, vntill the happy vnion of them both in our gratious King Iames. With a briefe declaration of the first inhabitants of this island: and what seuerall nations haue sithence settled them-selues therein one after an other Ayscu, Edward. 1607 (1607) STC 1014; ESTC S100373 186,325 406

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habere debent de domino rege hominibus suis Pro ista verò conuentione fine firmiter obseruando domino regi Henrico filio suo haeredibus suis à rege Scotiae haeredibus suis liberauit rex Scotiae domino Regi castellum de Rockesburgh castellum Puellarum castellum de Striuelinge in manu domini Regis ad custodienda castella assignabit rex Scotiae de redditu suo mensurabiliter ad voluntatem domini Regis Praeteria pro praedicta conuentione fine exequendo liberabit rex Scotiae domino Regi Dauid fratrem suum in obsidem comitem Duncanum comitem Waldenum similiter alios comites Barones cum alijs viris potentibus quorum numerus octo-decem Et quando Castella reddita fuerint illis Rex Scotiae Dauid frater eius liberabuntur Comites quidem Barones praenominati vnusquisque postquam liberauerit obsidem suum scilicet filium legitimum qui habuerit alij nepotes suos vel propinquiores sibi haeredes castellis vt dictum est redditis liberabuntur Praetereà Rex Scotiae Barones sui praenominati assecurauerint quod ipsi bona fide sine malo ingenio sine occasione facient vt Episcopi Barones caeteri homines terrae suae qui non affuerunt quando rex Scotiae cum domino Rege finiuit eandem ligiantiam fidelitatem domino Regi Henrico filio suo quum ipsi fecerunt et vt Barones homines qui affuerunt obsides liberabunt domino Regi de quibus habere voluerit Praetereà Episcopi Comites Barones conuentionauerunt domino Regi et Henrico filio suo Quod si Rex Scotiae aliquo casu a fidelitate domini regis filij a conuentione praedicta recederit ipsicum Domino Rege tenebunt sicut cum ligio domino suo contrà regem Scotiae contrà omnes homines ei inimicantes Et episcopi sub interdicto ponent terram regis Scotiae donec ipse ad fidelitatem Domini Regis redeat Praedictā itaque conuentionem firmitèr obseruandum bone fide sine malo ingenio Domino Regi Henrico filio suo haeredibus suis à Wilhelmo Rege Scotiae Dauid fratre suo Baronibus suis praedictis haeredibus eorum assecurauit ipse Rex Scotiae Dauid frater eius omnes Barones sui praenominati sicut ligij homines domini Regis contrà omnem hominem Henrici filij Regis salua fidelitate patris sui hijs testibus Richardo episcopo Abrincensi Iohanne Salisburiae Decano Roberto Abbate Malmesburiae Radulpho Abbate Mundesburg nec non alijs abbatibus comittibus baronibus duobus filijs suis scilicet Richardo Galfrido ex Rog. Houeden Besides the deliuery of the three Castles expressed in the former Charter the Scotish King did absolutely depart with all and surrender vnto King Henry and to his Heire for euer the Towne and Castell of Berwicke which forthwith was committed to the custody of Sir Geffrey Neuille The Castles of Edenbrough and Rockesbrugh were likewise kept by the kings apointment by Sir Roger and Sir William de Stutuille This meeting at Yorke was in the yeare 1175. where this businesse beeing dispatched the two Kings departed in kindnesse the one into Scotland the other towardes London Not long after king William vpon his summons repayred to North-Hampton where King Henrie had called a Parliament Diuerse Bishops and Abbotes of Scotland attended their king thither to acknowledge their subiection to the Church of England according to the Articles comprised in the former Charter and their ancient custome in former times but by no meanes they would yeeld thereunto notwithstanding that the Archbishop of Yorke shewed sufficient proues and priuileges granted by sundrie Bishops of Rome iustifiyng the right he pretended to the primacie ouer all the Scotish Clergie But because the Archbishop of Canterburie hoped to bring them vnder his iurisdiction or else enuying that his inferior should be axalted so farre aboue him hee so wrought with the king his Maister as that for the present there was no subiection acknowledged eyther to the one or other These two kings liued together in all loue and kindnesse in so much as the king of England imployed king William in his absence in his more weighty affayres in Normandie Also hee gaue vnto him to wife his cousin the Ladie Ermengard Daughter to Richard Vicount Beaumonte that was sonne to a Daughter of king William the Conquerour The mariage was solemnized at Woodstocke at the charge of the King who withall resigned to the Bridegroome his whole interest in the Castell of Edenbrough which King William forth-with bestowed vpon his new Wife as a portion of her dowrie augmenting the same with an hundred pounds land by the yeare and fortie knights fees Not long before this marriage Dauid king Williams Brother had marryed also an English woman named Mawde one of the Daughters of Hugh Bohun Earle of Chester otherwise called Keuelocke by which marriage hee was strongly allyed with the Nobilitie of England for his wiues three Sisters Mabell Agnes and Hauise were married to Daubigne Earle of Arundell Ferrers Earle of Darbye and to Quincie Earle of Lincolne These mariages were meanes of good agreement betweene these two nations for a long time after Within two or three yeares after the marriage of king William king Henry deceased in the fiue and thirtith yeare of his raigne whome his two Sonnes Richard and Iohn succeeded one after the other During the raigne of the former no occasion of quarrell was offered on either side but the two kings liued together in all familiaritie and perfect friendshippe for immediatly after the coronation of king Richard the Scotish king beeing honourablie attended with the Archbishop of Yorke the kings base Brother and with diuerse Barons and others of England passed thorough the realme to Canterburie where king Richard had assembled in counsell his Lords spirituall and temporall At this meeting king William and Dauid his Brother together with the English Lords tooke an oathe to continue true to the king of England and to abide in due obedience vnder him and his lawes beeing now to leaue them for a season for hee was so farre passed on his iourney towards the Holy-land as it was then called And the more firmely to binde the Scotish king by his liberalitie to the obseruance of this othe hee there restored vnto him all the other three Castles at Berwicke Rockesbrough and Sterlinge and withall that parte of Northumberland which king Henrie his Father had taken from him when hee was his prisoner Further king Richard resigned vnto him the counties of Cumberland and Huntington but with this condition that all the Castels should still abide in the custodie of such as king Richard should place in them Lastly he released him of all further paiments and summes of money due for his ransome excepting tenne thousand
further charged to warne thee not to vse the acquaintance companie or counsell of women for if thou doe otherwise it will turne to thy losse and dishonour This being said hee with-drew him-selfe backe againe into the prease When seruice was ended the king inquired earnestly for him but hee could no where bee found neither could any of the standers by of whom diuerse did narowlie obserue him meaning afterwards to haue questioned further with him feele or perceiue how or when hee passed from them Queene Margaret after the death of her husband challenged the protection of the realme as the king by his last Will and Testament disposed the same so long as shee continued a widow Being therein established first of all she wrote to king Henry her brother intreating him not onely to cease from pursuing warre further vpon Scotland beeing euen then at warre with it selfe but also to bee a defence vnto her and the infant her sonne not much aboue a yeare old against all such as happily would oppose thēselues against her Here-vnto King Henry answered that with the peaceable hee would haue peace but to the froward seditious he would be an enemy Not long after Queene Margaret hauing maried Archibald Dowglas the prime and choise man amongst all the Scotish nobility the realme began to be deuided into two mighty factions They of the Dowglassian party would haue the gouernmēt continued in the Queene because thereby the realme should still haue peace with England which at that season was a point very necessarily to be respected The aduerse party of whom the Lord Hume was the principall man pretending an ancient custome in that case importuned the election of Iohn Duke of Albanie sonne to the former Duke Alexander This gentleman for the most part had liued before in France and was wholy deuoted to the seruice of King Francis who to bind him the faster vnto him had dealt very honorably with him at his departure into Scotland Immediatly vpon his arriuall great dissention arose betwixt him and others of the Scottish Nobility but especially the Lord Hume who as before I haue touched was the chiefe meane of his preferment to that place Queene Margaret much fearing the issue hereof together with her husband and some other of that faction for her more safely repaired into England During her abode there she was deliuered at Herbottle of a Daughter the Lady Margaret Dowglas grand-mother to King Iames the sixt now king by his father as her brother King Iames the fift was his grand-father by his mother So as his Father and Mother were the children of brother and sister namely of Iames the fift and this Lady Margret his halfe sister But the new Regent the Duke of Albanie so excused himselfe by Ambassage to the king of England in that point that within a yeare after the Queene returned into Scotland honorably attended and richly appointed of all things fit for her estate The Earle Dowglas her husband who in the meane season had obtained the Regents fauour receiued her at Berwicke and from thence did accompanie her home All quarrels in the meane time being well appeased in Scotland the Regent passed ouer into France committing the yong Prince together with the gouernment of the realme in his absence to certaine of the Nobilitie but aboue all the rest hee reposed most trust in a Frenchman named Anthonie Darcie Captaine of the Castell of Dunbarre whom he ioyned in commission with the Scottish Lords to the end he might giue him intelligence of all their proceedings in his absence It was this mans hap soone after to be slaine by the Scots for more despite to haue his head stroken off and set vpon Hume Castell to the view of all that passed by This outrage was cōmitted the twelfe of September in the yeare 1517. which gaue beginning to some new broiles amongst them During the absence of the Duke the Dowglassian faction bare greatest sway for the continuance whereof king Henry laboured the French King to keepe the Duke still with him neuer-the-lesse by reason of some trouble likely to arise betweene France England the Regent returned into Scotland about fiue yeares after his departure thence with a purpose to abate the ouer-great powre of the Dowglas Immediatly herevpō Gawen Dowglas Bishop of Dunkell a very reuerend man came into England informed the king how great an aduersary the Regent was to his whole family and that he alone had taken on him the custody of the yong king the sequell whereof hee much feared This Bishop died shortly after at London was buried in the Sauoy church King Henry vpon this complaint sent Clarentius king at Armes into Scotland to admonish the Duke to auoide the country according to the Articles agreed vpon the summer before in the last truce takē with the French king for the king held it very vnreasonable and inconuenient to admit him sole Gardian ouer the yong Prince that was next heire after him to the Crowne least happily by such opportunity he might be tempted to cōmit the like vnnatural cruelty which some haue done in the like case both in England Scotlād That therfore the king his maister said Clarentius had great reason to prouide for the safty of his nephew wherof hee could no way bee better assured then by keeping him from that place and authority in Scotland But of all these threats the Regent seemed to make light account Now began the French king to quarrell againe with king Henry before the truce was fully expired where-vpon all the Frenchmen and Scots that then inhabited in London and other places of the realme were put to their fines and a strong Nauie was forth-with sent to the Sea vnder the conduct of Sir William Fitz-Williams Vice-admirall and seauen other were at the same time sent also against Scotland the which entring into the Furth set fire on diuerse Scottish ships and so returned with their prisoners into England The same yeare the Lord Rosse and the Lord Dacres of the North who were appointed to keepe the borders entred also with their forces into Scotland and burnt the towne of Kelsoe besides many other villages ouer-threw sundry holdes and piles of stone and then returned home with their booties The Regent being here-with prouoked to reuenge raised a great powre where-with approaching the Marches he fully purposed to inuade England But whether it were that hee thought himselfe ouer-weake to incounter the English armie that was comming on apace vnder the conduct of the Earle of Shrewsburie or that hee stood not well assured of some of his owne company which was more likely he was well contented to harken vnto peace so that a truce was taken for some few monthes and then with no little staine to his reputation he turned back-againe In October following the Duke passed ouer againe into France promising his fauorites that if a peace were not in the meane time concluded with England hee would
kingdome Neither did King Henry forget by kind letters and messages to diuerse of that nation to second therein his Sisters designements signifying vnto them that he desired nothing more then perpetuall loue and concord betweene the two Neighbor Nations which thing as he had euer before wished yet much more at this time to the end all men might see how much hee tendred the state of their Reamle for the young kings sake his Nephew That if they would be perswaded to break of friendship with France he could finde in his heart to bestow the Lady Mary his only Child in marriage vpon their King whereby the two kingdomes should bee in great possibility to be made one Monarchy and that by the accesse of England vnto Scotland which would be the more honor to their nation That the like emulatiō malice hath bin heretofore known betweene the like neighbor countries which neuerthelesse by mariage entercourse trafique mutual kindnes hath bin vtterly suppressed buried in obliuion These exceeding kind offers of King Henry moued much debate argument at an assembly of the Scottish Lords amongst thēselues On the one side it was obiected that as France was farre remooued by scituation from them so the people differed much from the Scottes in the whole course and manner of life But the Englishmen and they were bred and brought vp vnder one and the same climate and were so like in there language lawes manners customes complexion constitution of bodie and disposition of minde wherein societie especially consisteth that it seemed God and Nature had from the beginning purposed to make them one peculier people as they hade made there seate one soile by it selfe seuered from the maine continent Further by reason of the distance and dangerous passage betweene France them the one cannot receiue frō the other either much good being friends or much h●rme beeing enemies whereas out of England either the one or other wil be alwaies ready at hand accordingly as the Englishmen ar friends or foes vnto them For there is no other waie to walke in betweene France and them but thorow a dangerous part of the Ocean which either by furie of tempests may be hindered or by the enemy fore-stawled and clogged VVhereof was made good proofe not much aboue a yeare ago when as the Duke of Albanie was so pend vp in France with the English nauie that of al one whole Sommer they could receiue no succors from thence to their exceeding losse and discontentment Thus much was then alledged in fauour of the league with England whervnto not a few amongst them were well inclined though many other that either liued vpon rapine and spoile which alwaies followeth war or that were fed afore-hand by the French king which course hath euer much preuailed with that Nation obstinatly opposed themselues against this profitable and sound aduise But being not able by any show of reason to maintaine their friuolous allegations against the truth they subtilly brake of this conference with this caution that this weighty point could not be resolued without the general consent and approbation of the Estates assembled to that end For they were well assured that the Duke to whom especially the deciding of this question pertained would neuer giue consent to shake hands with England notwithstanding Queene Margaret so labored this point for the benefit she knew would therof come to her Sonne and his kingdom that in December following shee sent the Lord Gilbert Earle of Cassels Robert Cockburne Bishop of Dunkeld and the Abbot of Combuskeneth Ambassadours into England who comming to the Court on Christmasse eue the King gaue them audience to whom the Bishop made an eloquent Oration in Latine declaring the benefits of peace and the manifold discommodities of warre How happy a thing it were if by the marriage of their young King with the Lady Mary his Maiesties Daughter a perpetuall league and alliance might bee established betweene them The King liked well of this motion so as hee might obtaine his desire in two points First and especially that the Scottish Nobility would renounce the league with France Secondly that the young king his Nephew would come and remaine with him in England till he were of perfect age to marry his Daughter But because the Ambassadors had not commission to proceede so farre the Earle returned into Scotland to acquaint the Queene and Councell there-with The two other remained at London till his returne thither againe Here-vpon a Parliament was presently holden at Edenbrough from whence the Earle of Cassels was presentlie sent againe to the King of England with a fauourable answer to his two former demands But because that in the meane season Charles the Emperour renewed his former sute for the obtaining of the sayd Lady to his wife the King tooke a pawse therein for the present time prolonging the truce with Scotland for three yeares and a halfe and then the Ambassadours were all with much courtesie dismissed about the beginning of the yeare 1525. From hence-forward for the terme of about seauenteene yeares the league was still renued from time to time betweene the two Nations though now and then the borderers on both sides thorow the instigation of the Earle Dowglasse forsaken then of the Queene his wife and banished the realme againe made some out-roades one into the others Marches But all was quietly put vp and the two kings continued good neighbours one to the other In the beginning of the yeare 1534. amongst other proffers of marriage propounded by Charles the Emperour vnto king Iames who was desirous to match in his bloud a motion was made of his cousine Germaine the Ladye Mary king Henryes Daughter and Heire who as before you haue heard had beene in question but now for the space well neere of ten yeares had lien dead and no further dealt in King Iames answered in such sort as there-by it seemed that hee had a good will to hearken vnto it This Lady that was afterward Queene of England was once in speach as is before declared to haue beene marryed to the Emperour himselfe after that to Francis the French king But these motions were rather made I take it in policie then proceeding of any such meaning in eyther of those Princes neyther happilye had the King her Father any such purpose thinking her a fitter matche for his Nephew of Scotland then for eyther of them For in the latter end of this yeare the King sent thither the Bishop of Saint Dauies and the Lord William Howard brother to the Duke of Norffolke to intreate king Iames to appoint some time when the King their Maister and hee might meete together to conferre of matters of great importance tending much to the benefit of both the Realmes Further to tell him that it might come to passe if all things else sorted to his liking hee should espouse the Lady Mary his eldest Daughter for his other Daughter the Lady Elizabeth after her
from their first arriuall it pleased the Lord to enlighten their vnderstanding by the reading of his word with some knowledge of him amongst whom Ethelbert of Kent was the first King that together with his subiects receiued Baptisme the badge of our profession at the hands of Augustin whō Gregory Bishop of Rome sent hither to preach the Gospell But the Religion of Rome was euen thē so blemished with humaine traditions superstitious ceremonies the inuention of mans braine that the same consisted more in outward appearance and show then in substance of sound Doctrine out off the pure word of God the writings of the Prophets and Apostles Egbert hauing resumed the title of absolute King ouer the whole Land and promising vnto himselfe and his posteritie the sole Soueraigntie ouer the same the height of his conceiued happinesse was sodainly shaken by a mighty tempest out off the East againe For the Danes arriuing here in his time did afterwardes so much preuaile against the Englishmen as that within the space of two hundred yeares Swane King of Denmarke hauing attained the possession of the whole Realme left the same vnto Canutus his sonne who together with his two sonnes did successiuely raigne one after another about twenty yeares After the death of the two brothers the gouernement of the Land returned to the English bloud in the person of King Edward surnamed the Confessor in whom also it ended for a season This seruitude vnder the Danes was more grieuous then any other before or after it as Hollinshead well obserueth For the Romaines vsed all kind of curtesie to those Brittaines which continued in dutifull obedience alwayes defending thē from their enemies malice admitting them kings and rulers of their owne nation The Saxons and the Normans hauing in short time attained the Soueraignty gaue speedy end to the miseries and mischieues incident to a conquest But the Danes a long time molesting the land by their seuerall inuasions did not so much desire to become conquerors as to make a continuall spoile and prey of the inhabitants whereby the Land was most extremely vexed and impouerished These Danes were a people that long after the ariual of the Saxons here succeeded them in their former habitations beeing transported thither out of the easterne Countries from some part of Scandia of whome these peninsule or Ile-like prouinces first tooke the name of Dane-marshe because they lie low subiect to the ouer flowing of the sea according to the nature of marish ground Now the Country by corruption of speech is called Denmarke The fourth and last conquest ouer this land was made by the Normans The manner whereof Maister Camden now Clarentiaulx king at armes hath very compendiously deliuered in the Latin tongue wherefore it shal be sufficient for mee in this place to followe him word by word in as good English as I can make him speake as as for the most part I haue done hitherto Edward the confessor being dead without issue the nobles and commons were at there witts end how to resolue about the admittance of a new King Edgar surnamed Atheling grandchild to Edmond Ironside by his Father was the onely issue male of the Saxon bloud to whome the crowne by right of inheritance pertayned But he beeing thought vnfit to gouerne by reason of his minority and hauing beene also bred and brought vp in Pannonia by his Mother Agathe Daughter to the Emperour Henrie the third was not so gratious in the eyes of the Englishmen who regarded nothing more then to haue one to raigne ouer them of their owne nation Therefore both the eies and heartes well neere of all men were wholie fixed and setled in affection vpon Harold the Sonne of Godwine highlie honored and renowned for his singuler dexterity in managing the affaires of estate as well in time of warre as of peace For although hee had no cause to boast of Nobility receauing that onelie of his Mothers side and that his Father had stayned himselfe with a perpetuall note of infamie Neuerthelesse by his curtious carriage towards all men his liberality and manlie corrage hee was generally exceedingly fauored Neither was their any other in whome was found more boldnesse to incounter an intended mischiefe or of better foresight how to auoide it His late victory ouer the Welchmen was so glorious in the iudgement of the people that he seemed to want no good accomplement requisite in a great Commander as though he had purposely beene borne to restore and vphold the English Empire As for the Danes who were then the greatest terror to this nation It was hoped hee should finde them fauorable enough because Edithe his mother was sister to Swane then King of Denmarke If any other resistance should arise either at home or else-where hee seemed to be sufficiently garded not onely by the hands and heartes of the communalty but also by his affinity in bloud alliance with the nobility for his wife was sister to the two brothers Morkar and Edwine the greatest men in the Land and Edrick surnamed the forester a man of an aspiring minde and in high authority was also neerelie allied vnto him Withall it fell out fortunatly for him that the Danish King was then set on worke at home by his enimy the Sweaden And Philip of France was nothing gracious to the Normaine Duke because hee much misliked that Edward the confessour had in the time of his banishment and aboade in Normandie couenanted to make the Duke his heire to the Crowne of England after him if hee should decease without issue of his bodie For the performance whereof Harold had offered to become his suretie and assurance and further had thereunto bound himsselfe vnto the Duke by oath while hee also remained Captiue with him promising withall to marie his daughter For this cause many thought it the best course to make the Duke their king the rather by keeping promise with him not only for that they war otherwise threatned the miseries cōmonly in flicted for the punishment of periury might thereby be auoyded but also for that by the addition of Normandie vnto the crowne of England vnder so mighty a Prince the realme should bee much strengthned and the common-wealth inriched But Harold preuenting further consultation euen vpon the same daie on which the deceassed King was put into his graue hee forthwith put the Crowne on his head without further solemnity This act did not a little offend the Cleargie as beeing a breach of the Church her holie ordinance Wherefore to salue that sore being not ignorant how hard a thing it is for a Prince newlie aduanced to hold his authoritie without the opinion at least of vertue and piety the better to confirme the same hee left nothing vndone that might aduāce pleasure the ecclesiastical estate either for matter of profit or ornament Further he entertained the noble men with al kinde of curtisies especially Edgar Atheling whō hee created Earle of
country where it pa●●● most hostile manner For the suppressing 〈◊〉 these insolencies certaine of the kings friends assembled thēselues to the number of 400. horsemen vnder the leading of Robert de Stouteuille Ralph Glanuille William Vescie Barnard Balliol and Odonette de Humfreuille who cōming to Anwick from the siege wherof king William was departed the same day tooke consultation what was best to be done Very early the next morning they followed the Scots who little looking for any resistance then in readines left their king but slenderly attended and dispersed themselues abroad to wast and forrage the country This beeing made known to the Englishmen they pursued the aduātage with so good successe that with the losse of very little bloud on eyther side they tooke king William prisoner in the midest of his strength but yet not so neere as thereby hee could be rescued This happened on the seuenth of Iuly in the yeare 1174. king Henry at the same time was newely returned out off Normandie to whom the Scotish king was shortly after presented at North-Hampton and Dauid his Brother was licensed forth-with to repaire into Scotland to containe the same in their due obedience whilst the Kings pleasure should bee further knowne concerning the deliuery of the King his prisoner In the meane season the French king beeing wearied with the charge of this Warre in the behalfe of his sonne in lawe King Henrie the younger for hee had nowe married the Lady Margeret his Daughter offered himselfe to become a meane to make an accord betweene the two Henries where-vpon the warre ceassed and after a meeting or two for that purpose in the end this vnnaturall dissention betweene king Henry and his Sonnes which had continued well neere two yeares to the great discomfort of the Father and vexation of the whole Realme was well appeased Here-vpon the Scotish king who remained prisoner at Faleise in Normandie amongst other of the same faction to the number well neere of a thousand persons of especiall qualitie that at one time or other during these warres were also taken prisoners were by king Henrie according to the Articles of agreement set at libertie in manner as were all they that by the aduerse part had beene likewise taken prisoners in the King of Englands seruice Now againe was amitie and concorde imbraced and cherished on all sides For the Scotish King hauing left behinde him sufficient pledge for the performance of couenants was permitted to returne into Scotland where hauing spent some sixe or seauen months he together with Dauid his Brother and a great number of the Nobility and Clergie of that Realme repayred to Yorke about the twenteth of August where they did homage to the King of England in S. Peters Church and in token thereof King William offered vp his Saddle and hat on the Alter of S. Peter which remained there along time after Finally it was concluded that the Scotish king should become and acknowledge himselfe to be the king of Englands Liegman against all men for the Realme of Scotland and his other Lands within England and for them should doe fealtie to the King of England as to his soueraign Lord in manner as other his liedge people accustomed to doe And further that hee should also do fealty to the Lord Henry the King of Englands son sauing alwayes the faith which hee ought to the King his Father Also that all the Prelates of Scotland and their successors should acknowledg their accustomed subiection to the Church of England and do fealty to the king of England so many of them as he should appoint And likewise that the Earles and Barons of Scotland and their heires for their part should do homage and fealtie vnto the King of England and to the Lord Henry his Sonne so many of them as thereto should bee called as in the Charter following then openly read in Saint Peters Church more at large appeareth Wilhelmus Rex Scotiae deuenit homo ligius Domini regis Angliae contra omnes homines de Scotia de alijs terris suis fidelitatem ei fecit vt ligio domino suo sicut alij homines sui ipsi facere solent Similiter fecit homagium Henrico filio regis salua fide Domini regis Patris sui omnes vero Episcopi Abbates Clerus terrae Scotiae successores sui facient Domino regi sicut ligio Domino fidelitatem de quibus habere voluerit sicut alij Episcopi sui ipsi facere solent Henrico filio suo heredibus eorum Concessit autem rex Scotiae Dauid frater eius Barones alij homines sui Domino Regi Quod Ecclesia Scotiae talem subiectionem amodò faciet Ecclesiae Angliae qualem facere debet solebat tempore regum Angliae praedecessorum suorum Similiter Richardus Episcopus Sancti Andreae Richardus Episcopus Dunkelden Gaufridus Abbas de Dunfermlyn Herbertus Prior de Coldingham concesseriunt vt ecclesia Anglicana illud habeat ius in ecclesia Scotiae quod de iure debet habere quod ipsi non erint contra ius Anglicanae ecclesiae Et de hac concessione sicut quando ligiam fidelitatē domino regi domino Henrico filio suo fecerint ita eos indè assecurauerint Hoc idem facient alij episcopi clerus Scotiae per conuentionem inter Dominum regem Scotiae Dauid fratrem suum barones suos factam Comites Barones alij homines de terra regis Scotiae de quibus dominus rex habere voluerit facient ei homagium contra omnem hominem fidelitatem vt ligio domino suo sicut alij homines sui facere ei solent Et Henrico filio suo haeredibus suis salua fide domini regis patris sui Similiter Heredes regis Scotiae Baronum hominum suorum homagium ligiantiam facient haeredibus Domini regis contra omnē hominem Praeteria rex Scotiae homines sui nullum amodò fugitiuum de terra domini regis pro felonia receptabunt vel in alia terra sua nisi voluerit venire ad rectum in curia domini regis stare iuditio Curiae Sed rex Scotiae et homines sui quam citius poterunt eum capient domino regi reddent vel Iusticiarijs suis aut balliuis suis in Anglia Si autem de terra regis Scotiae aliquis fugitiuus fuerit pro felonia in Anglia nisi voluerit venire ad rectum in curià domini regis Scotiae stare iudicio curiae non receptabitur in terra regis sed liberabitur hominibus regis Scotiae per balliuos domini regis vbi inuentus fuerit Praetereà homines domini regis habebunt terras suas quas habebant habere debent de domino rege hominibus suis de rege Scotiae hominibus suis Et homines regis Scotiae habebunt terras suas quas habebant
sister Queene of England also was borne aboue a yeare before and with-all to make him thereby the Monarch ouer the whole Island if hee dyed with-out issue male And to the end hee should giue the more trust and credit to these his promises hee said more-ouer that hee would forth-with intitle him Duke of Yorke and his Vicar Generall ouer the whole realme of England King Iames as he had great reason so to do intertained these offers with great thankfulnesse appointing a time when he would meete the King his Vncle and so with many courtisies dismissed the Ambassadors All this notwithstanding he was so exceedingly laboured by his Prelates that they drew him quite from that resolution vpon this occasion A little before this Ambassage King Henry had sent the foresaid Bishop into Scotland with certaine English pamphlets concerning reformation of religion which being presented vnto his nephew with request that he would aduisedly read them ouer hee gaue them presently to some about him to keepe that were especiall fauorers of the Clergie and the religion of those times who had scantly turned ouer the first leafe but with open mouth they condemned those bookes for most impious hereticall libels telling the king they were glad from their hearts that he had not stained his eies with the very view of such pestiferous and damnable doctrine And for an infallible proofe of this their censure vpon those bookes it fell out about the same time that the Pope had sent a messenger into Scotland requiring king Iames to ioyne with him against the king of England whom hee had already adiudged an Heretike a Scismaticke and a wedlock-breaker for hee and Queene Katherine some-times his Brothers wife for the vnlawfulnesse thereof were then lawfully parted And further this Nuncio declared that for these heynous offences the Pope had depriued him of his kingdome which he bestowed for in such cases hee hath beene alwaies very liberall vnto Iames and other popish Princes his obedient sonnes Thus by the subtile practise of the Priests who to vphold their reputation in the world still buzzed in their kings eares that his Vncle sought nothing more by this his desired conference with him but to withdraw him from the profession of that ancient and Catholique religion wherein their Fathers and fore-elders had liued so many hundred yeares together in great happinesse and felicitie and withall being of him-selfe religiously giuen according to the knowledge of those ignorant times hee was the more easilie disswaded from this promised meeting Though King Henry had cause to take this part vnkindly at the others hands neuer-the-lesse hee was contented to put it vp imputing the fault to them especially that eyther of ignorance or vpon respect of their perticuler good neglected the benefit that might haue followed heereof vnto the weale publique of the whole Iland King Henry to shew how little hee was mooued with this manner of dealing bestowed on his Nephew the yeare following the Garter and according to the ceremonies thereto belonging he was installed at Windsor by his procurator the Lord Erskin Within the compasse of the other seauen yeares remaining of my former account king Iames had marryed two wiues out of France The former was the Lady Magdaline eldest Daughter to king Francis with whom hauing beene maried halfe a yeare shee deceased within little more then a moneth after her arriuall in Scotland The second was Daughter to the Duke of Guise and widdow to the Duke of Longeuille lately deceased Within a yeare after this latter mariage Queene Margaret his mother departed this life hauing first seene a young Prince her grand-child borne into the world but neither hee nor a second sonne liued to succeed their father in the kingdome King Henry knowing how much his Nephew was continually wrought to breake off friendship with him or at the least to vse the same for his owne aduantage onely was much affraide that happily hee might at length bee seduced and therefore was very desirous to haue conference with him and to establish the league that hitherto had continued betweene them To this end he once againe sent into Scotland to entreate him to meete him at Yorke where hee would communicate such matter with him as tended greatly to the good of both realmes This message thus deliuered by the Lord Thomas Howard King Iames and diuerse of his Nobilitie seemed willing enough to yeeld their consents to this iourney But contrariwise the Prelates mightily opposed them-selues against it Amongst other things they alleadged that King Henry went about which touched their free hold to perswade their King to take that course in Scotland which hee had done at home in his owne kingdome namely to expell the Pope to vsurpe his authoritie ouer the Church to dissolue religious houses and to seize vpon their lands and reuenues But rather then hee should bee drawne to vse any such vnlawfull meanes where-with to supplye his present wants they freely offered to giue him yearely out of their owne reuenues thirtie thousand Crownes and if that would not serue his turne they would vnder-take to aduantage him an hundred thousand more yearely out of the lands and possessions of them that were already falne from their due obedience to the sea of Rome These faire promises preuailed so much with King Iames that this meeting was also auoyded But with-all an Ambassadour was immediatly sent into England as well to excuse the King as to require that Commissioners might bee appointed of either partie to meete for the ordering of some controuersies then depending betweene the two Nations which was granted and performed accordingly on King Henries part Neuer-the-lesse when after sundry iniuries still offered by the Scottes the King of England had once or twice yeelded to all reasonable conditions and yet not-with-standing perceiued how little from time to time they were regarded at the length being not able to indure so many indignities he resolued to end all controuersies by open warre But first to the end it might appeare to the world how vnwillingly he was prouoked vnto it before hee would take armes against his neere kinsman hee caused a pamphlet to bee published in Print declaring what mooued or rather compelled him therevnto wherein hee charged King Iames especially with deepe dissimulation his words tasting of Honey but his deeds of Worme-wood After a serious complaint whereof he descendeth or rather ascendeth to a supposed title of Superioritie continued in a lineall succession of the Kings of England ouer that nation from Edward the first sonne to Alured king of England for aboue sixe hundred yeares together but hereof I haue spoken enough before This done a Nauie was sent to the Sea to take all such Scottish ships as fell into their walke of which they brought into the Portes of England eight and twentie fraught with many good commodities The Scottish King here-vpon sent into England to demand restitution seeing no warre was as yet proclaimed But king Henry answered
A HISTORIE CONtayning the VVarres Treaties Marriages and other occurrents betweene England and Scotland from King William the Conqueror vntill the happy Vnion of them both in our gratious King IAMES With a briefe declaration of the first Inhabitants of this Island And what seuerall Nations haue sithence setled them-selues therein one after an other INNOCENTER SAPERE Imprinted at London by G. Eld. 1607. TO THE PRINCE MOST sweete Prince giue mee leaue to salute you Plinie in his Preface to his naturall historie reseruing the title of Great to your royall Father as Plinie the worlds Historifier saluted ●itus whome the Senate and People called Orbis amorem and Delicias humani generis This Booke at first intended to do you honour cōmeth now to beg some honour of you Intended to do you honour by reuiuing and bringing to fresh memorie the many leagues and happy mariages betweene the two kingdomes of this Iland to worke a better conceit of either to other then I found in most men for the more easie harty receiuing in the fulnesse of time of your excellent house the common bloud of both nations to raigne ouer vs but that we might readily and ioyfully imbrace that which many ages had sought none found Shame and confusion to the ingratis and now was gratis offered vnto vs. But while I vvas framing this vvorke to this end the vnexpected time preuented my designes and let me see hovv farre Gods vvisdome and goodnesse exceeds poore mens mistie cogitations and deuises filling our soules vvith comfort by the generall applause of all men for the most happy issue of so dangerous an alteration in our state Since which time my Booke hath lien neglected as needlesse to the world his end attained and date expired Yet for as much as some of my friends doe censure mee for suppressing that which may do some good seruice though not the great principally intended when it is now entring the view of men it commeth first to beg this honour of you to grace the frontispice with your most Gratious name and sheild it with your patronage And since by your Princely and powrefull aspect without deminution of his super-eminent Maiestie whence you deriue it you resemble the Sunne in the firmanent which receaueth light from none the Creator excepted but giueth light and life to all inferiour bodies vouchsafe the beames of your fauour vpon it to illustrate the obscuritie of the Author and the meanesse of the worke So shall my heart be more inflamed if yet that be possible with your loue and my booke more welcome to all mens reading I rest euer to be commanded by your Highnesse EDWARD AYSOV To the Reader I Haue here curteous reader vndertaken to set downe in a continued discourse whatsoeuer hath passed betweene England Scotland from the last Conquest vntill the decease of our late Soueraigne neuer to be forgotten the renowned Elizabeth My trauel consisteth wholy in this that I haue reduced into an entire History a true report of things passed which al other writers before me as farre as I know haue deliuered onely by partes and peece-meales whereby you may with more delight and facility conceiue and digest the coherence of the whole and withall carrie the matter the better in memory The chiefe principal reason which mooued mee to take this taske vpon me I shall not neede to speake of in this place hauing touched it before in my Epistle to the Prince and made it so apparent throughout my whole Booke as that the reader may decerne it running For though the right and title of King Iames was pregnant enough and euen palpable to euery valgar capacitie Neuerthelesse what reason the best affected to the same had to forecast some perill in his Maiesties accesse and passage vnto it the sequell hath declared But it pleased the Lord our good God the disposer of mens wills and affections so to worke in the heartes of our graue and most prudent Senate as by them he brought that to passe within the tearme of very few howers which if the aduersaries vnto our happinesse had had their wils would not in so many monthes nay happily yeares haue bin attained vnto For did they not by proclaiming his Maiesty in tempore oportuno without delay preuent the malice of those two raging Buls not of Bashan but of Typical Babilō Reuel 18. that is to say Rome whose pestiferous breath might otherwise haue poisoned and infected we know not how many male-contents and seditious Romanistes Against the former King Dauid alone complained Psal 22. but of the latter how many Kings Emperors shal we read of that haue bin fronted and foyled many brought downe to their knees others laid groueling on their faces some thrust out of their Kingdōes some gored euen vnto death Psal 28. But O Lord saue thy people giue thy blessing vnto thine inheritance c. An other reason ayming at the same end was this That wheras the Chronicles of both Nations containe matter of reproach and disgrace one against the other I haue had an especiall care to carry my selfe so indifferently betweene them as I hope neither of both shall haue iust cause to take offence therat So as in that respect if any at all may be admitted which none J thinke will oppugne then shall this of mine haue priueledge before all other that J know Since wee al now happily become Subiects vnto one most gratious Soueraigne let vs value one the others vertues at one and the same price and setting apart all partialitie detraction and vaine glory let vs deuide the true honour and glorie attayned on both sides indifferētly betweene vs. Are we not all for the most part the broode and off-spring of the same parents the auntient English Saxons what preheminence then shall wee giue to the one Nation aboue the other Admit the Englishmen haue beene victorious in more battailes haue entred more often and passed further in Hostile manner into the others Countries and dominions and haue gotten greater booties both by Land and Sea what then is not this our Nation farre more populous and plentifull of all store of prouision and complements pertayning to warre Whereof then shall wee boast These vauntes are therefore full of vanitie Let vs now contende who shall giue more sincere and acceptable praise and thankes to the Almighty who in loue to both hath now at length made vs of two discording Nations one peaceable people vnder one Prince not by conquest the mother of confusion but by an happy seede and off-spring proceeding from the successe of marriage his holy ordinance Whereby the memory of all fore-passed displeasures and vnkindnesse is buried in perpetual obliuion Many haue longed laboured to worke this blessed Vnion How many lost their liues in the ouer vehement pursute of the intended marriage betweene King Edward the sixt and Mary the late Queene of Scottes the successe whereof if it had beene
effected was much to be doubted But the Eternall God in his wisedome reserued this notable worke to a more fit season for the good especially of his Church hauing now not onely vnited vs vnder the externall and ciuill gouernment of a terrestriall Monarchy but also in a sincere obedience and right seruice of himselfe vnder the spirituall raigne of his eternall Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ the Almighty Monarch ouer Heauen and Earth What Nation now in the whole world hath generally intertayned and submitted it selfe to the obedience of the written word deliuered of more auncient time by the Prophets of God and lasty by the Sonne of God him-selfe and his Apostles but this our happy Island These holy bookes we receiue for the only infallible Oracles of God what is more concerning our Saluation we reiect as Superstitious and Derogatory to the euerlasting word of God What is lesse wee hold ouer weake and Imperfect let Pope and Potentate the whole power of Antichrist doe their worst the Lord by this Vnion hath now established that peace to his Church within this Island that it shal be a sanctuary to all the true professors of his name euen I doubt not to the ende of the world To whom therefore bee giuen all honour and praise for euer and euer And let all true subiects to King Iames our dread Soueraigne say there-to Amen Cotham in Lincolnshiere 24. Martii 1606. Thy louing friend Edward Ayscu A BRIEFE DECLARAtion who were first Inhabitants of this Island and what seuerall Nations haue sithence setled themselues therein one after another TO let passe the Fables of Dioclesian his Daughters and of their successors the Troyans vnder the conduct of I know not what Brute coyned in some Munkish mint about foure hundred yeares agone and generally receaued for currant paiment during the time wherein ignorance preuailed ouer the face of the earth like vnto the palpable darknesse of Egipt I will begin this my History of our famous Island of Britaine with a short declaration of the first inhabitance of the same grounded vpon such proofes as by probable coniectures out of the best and most ancient Authors shall seeme to come neerest to the truth Moyses expreslie testifieth that the pos●●●●ty of ●apheth the first sonne of Noah inhabited the furthest parts of Europe Ab his seperate sunt postea regiones Gentium c. Genes 10. These men speaking of the Sonnes of Iapheth deuided amongst them the countries of the Gentils which were seperated from the Iewes by the Mediterranian Sea towards the North as the Prophet Ezechiel expoundeth these words Chap. 38. Gomerum cum omnibus agminibus suis domum Togarmi ad latera Aquilonis c Gomere and all his bands and the house of Togarmah of the North parts c. And againe in the same Chapter Postquam veniens è loco suo à lateribus Aquilonis tu populi tui tecum that is comming afterwards speaking of Gomer from his abiding place out of the North coasts thou and thy people with thee Thus then wee may assure our selues that all the nations of Europe tooke their beginning from the posterity of Iapheph But now if it be demanded what people of his progeny first setled themselues in this Island I answer brieflie euen they which inhabited that part of the continent that bordereth neerest vpon our coast where the distance is no greater then that it may be discouered by the eye For as water being slowly powred vpon an euen and round table will naturally from the center spred it selfe equally on euery way not leauing any part vntouched vntill by little and little the whole be couered therewith euen so it was in the propagation of man-kind For as people increased they dispersed them-selues towards all the quarters of heauen on euery side where they might haue free passage wherein the prouidence of the Almightie Creator is worthy due obseruation hauing in such sort disposed and fashioned the Globe being deuided and seperated into land and sea as that no part of the earth is further distanced from some other but may bee discouered by interview But now it may be demanded how the people were called that first transported themselues hither Here-vnto Iosephus and Zonoras make answer Qui nunc sunt Galli Gomari Gomeraei Gomeritae a Gomero vocabantur The people now called Gaules say they were before that named Gomiries or Gomerites of Gomer These were afterwards by the Latines called Cimbri For Cicero called those Barbarians whom Marius repulsed Gaules whom all Historiographers haue since called Cimbri In like manner Appian witnesseth that they who vnder the leading of Brennus attempted the spoile of the Temple at Delphos in Greece whom all writers with one consent hold to be the Gaules were called Cimbri Also it appeareth by the Prophet Ezechiell in the place of Scripture before cited that the Cimbrians were the off-spring of Gomer and so consequently Gaules for their habitation agreeth with the words of the Prophet being scituated beyond Thrace about the Lake Meotides as appeareth by the Cimbrian straite and the Citie adioyning both which tooke their names of their inhabitance the Cimbrians whence being driuen by the Scithians towards the West as Herodotus witnesseth passing thorow the countries of Russia Lituania Liuonia and Borussia they attained at length vnto the Germaine Ocean wherevpon that part of Denmarke tooke likewise the name of Cimbrica Chersonesus And afterwards inlarging their dominion on both sides of the Rheene they setled themselues alongst the coast ouer-against vs from whence they passed by a short cut ouer into this Island And here vnto also Caesar and Tacitus agree both affirming that the Britaine 's tooke beginning from their next neighbours the Gaules Beda an ancient writer affirmeth as much in these words In primis haec insula Britones solum a quibus nomen accepit incolas habuit qui de tractu Armor●●ano vt fertur Britanniam aduecti australes sibi partes illius vendicarunt This Island saith Bede was first inhabited by the Britaines of whome it tooke the name of Britaine who being transported hither from the coast Armorick whereby hee meaneth the coast of France did chalenge vnto themselues the South-parts thereof Thus we see in what manner the posteritie of Gomer the Gaules our next neighbours first entred and possessed this Island being the vttermost confines of Europe And herein the prouidence of God is also to be obserued who by the signification of the name of our first parent in this part of the world foreshewed his purpose therein For Gomer in the holy tongue is by translation into Latin Finiens that is termining and ending as Melancton noteth It may be further demanded what affinitie in pronunciation and sound haue these words Gomerites or Gomeries with the Brittish language I answer not a little For the Welch-men at this day who are the remnant of the Brittish bloud call them-selues Kumerie or Kumeroe the women Kumerues which differ very little