Selected quad for the lemma: kingdom_n
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A90858
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Popish treachery, or, A short and new account of the horrid cruelties exercised on the Protestants in France being a true prospect of what is to be expected from the most solemn promises of Roman Catholick princes : in a letter from a gentleman of that nation, to one in England, and by him made English.
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1689
(1689)
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Wing P2959; ESTC R181962
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10,232
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16
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faithful service to him ãâã somuch that in a short time there was not a Souldier in his whole âuards but what was of his own Religion Merit was no longer conââder'd in their persons he no more advanc'd any of them to the ââaces of Trust in the Kingdom he put out those he had formerly âââeferred thereto and he set forth divers Declarations prohibiting ââem all kind of Offices Arts and Trades so that none but Papists âould exercise or profess any by which means vast numbers of Proâestants were reduc'd to inevitable misery He took their Colledges and Schools away from them so that they âad no Master of their Religion to teach their Children either to Read or Write When he had done that he then sent Troops of Missionaries into all the Towns to gain as many as they could by cunning Tricks or price of Money and 't was a strange thing to see the shameful Commerce this people made of buying those whom extream poverty oblig'd to sell themselves The misery was so great in some places that they were forc'd to turn Papists sometimes for ten Crowns sometimes for five sometimes for two sometimes for a great deal less These Missionaries walk'd about every where with Baggs of Money in their Hands and for the space of two years together one saw hardly any other Traders stirring up and down the Kingdom but these Dealers for the Souls of men who bought them according to their Profession and the number of their Families At the same time Pensions or Imployments were given to those of any consideration who would turn Papists The King by a Declaration gave liberty to Children at seven years of Age to choose a Religion and the Fathers of such Children as became Papists were forced to give them yearly Pensions and always more than what they were well able by which means they seduced abundance of the youger sort bringing mourning and desolation into many Families which for the most part of the time they utterly ruin'd After this they forbad their Minister to speak any thing of Controversie or of what pass'd against them upon which prohibition and divers others of the like nature they daily made them say things that had never entered into their thoughts They hired false Wiânesses to depose against them who were often reduc'd to avow theâ lying Testimonies and 't was frequently prov'd too the Priestââ and others and suborn'd them But as their ruine was absolutelâ sworn so nothing satisfy'd them their Estates were confiscateâ their persons cast into prison banish'd or condemn'd to some otheâ shameful disgrace There was no safety for any they found way to bring the most moderate into trouble and especially to destroy those who were capable of giving some good Example to others These are the degrees of the Desolations of this People and of thâ tears they have been made to shed for about twenty five years laââ past during which time no body possess'd in peace what they had and every one were in perpetual unquietudes for themselves and foâ their Children But these were only the beginnings of their Misery and the Essays of Popish fury and perfidiousness Whilst on one hand they persecuted some they assured others that the King had no design against their Liberty In almost all the Edicts which His Majesty set forth he inserted some Article to lull them asleep He said that not one Title of the Edict of Nantes should be violated And he insinuated that his intention was only to interdict the Religion and to stop there The Elector of Brandenburgh having had the bounty to intercede for them the King of France gave him an Answer that is to be seen in many of the Protestants writings by which he assur'd His Highness That so long as he liv'd no wrong should be done to his Subjects of the Reform'd Religion that he acknowledged them for good ones and would maintain them in all their Priviledges In the mean time he had taken from them many of these Priviledges and what is remarkable at the same time that he wrote this Letter to his Highness of Brandenburgh he in the very self same instant caused many of their Temples to be Demolish'd and others to be shut up put the Ministers into Prison oppressed private persons with heavy Injustices and made those to mourn bitterly whom he said he would protect He began a thing too which had never been heard of in any Age not even in the Savagest Nations or the most mote from Christianity that is He made Children to be taken from âeir Fathers and Mothers and to be put into Convents with a strict âarge not to let their Parents see them not excepting even persons ãâã the highest Birth and of Families to which he had obligations that ââght never to have been forgotten by him He took away seven âom the Duke de la Force an Ancient Duke and Peer of the Kingâom the eldest not being then Twelve Years old He did the like ãâã all those of the Count de Roy whom he had some time before perâtted to go and serve the King of Denmark in Quality of General ãâã his Armies In a word at the same time that he promised to âotect the Hugonots he even then did all he could to ruine them ââd there was nothing but Sighs and Tears amongst them One saw âery where Souls afflicted to the very Grave some bewailing the ââs of their Pastors and Temples others the dispersion and ruine ãâã their Families others the carrying away of their Children and ââers trembled for fear of the same or of greater Misfortunes In âe do but mark now how far their Fraud and Cruelty went that âict of Nantes was Revocked which they had so often promiâd ââd so often sworn should be inviolably observ'd and this Fence âing quite broke down all that great people was abandon'd to the âge and Fury of the Souldiers But what is yet more notorious ãâã push on the Cheat as far as the fraudulent Wit of Man could carâ it in the very Act for Cessation of the fore-mentioned Edict this ââng declared that he was desirous that all people should live quiây in their Families and that the Exercise of the Protestant Reliââon being interdicted every one might live in his own House as he âeas'd But at the same time that His Majesty solemnly Swore this âomise he sent his Armies to surprize the Protestants in their Towns ââd Houses with orders to Plunder Burn Demolish Beat and in âort to make them suffer all manner of Evils could be devis'd âath only excepted which in this circumstance would have been âok'd on as a great Happiness The King Usurp'd the Throne of ââd and took upon him the Empire over the Conscience and in ãâã Name whole Towns were Summon'd by puissant Armies to turn âists and upon refusal they were abandon'd to pillage and ruine and to the same Fury as Enemy Towns are wont to be when takââ by Storm They seiz'd on all
the Avenues and brought back thââ to the persecutors who had escaped out of their hands They beââ ransack'd violated and made this people suffer a thousand Eviââ without distinction either of Age Sex or Quality from the old ãâã to the youngest Male and Female Noble or Ignoble all weââ equally at the discretion of the Souldiers Blasphemies Impietâ and Blows were the Arguments of this Infernal Mission and oââ may say without exaggeration that Hell seem'd to be let loose aââ that the Devils were come to Preach up Popery on the Earth Alâ Who can reckon the Tears were shed in this sad occasion Gââ alone knows their number who doubtless has counted and gatheâ them all into his Bosom The Air ecchoed every where with grieââ ous Lamentations and I think nothing more pittiful could be heaâ than the Crys and Groans of this people whilst they were in ãâã hands of their tormentors They dragg'd many of these poor Creatures into the Poââ Churches by the Feet by the Hair of the Head or by Ropes tiââ about their Necks they hang'd them up at the tops of Rooms ãâã out of the Windows by their Heels or by their Hands thâ plung'd them into deep Wells and stinking Mires with Toads aââ and Serpents where they left them according to the time of thââ Constancy they lighted great Fires and Roasted some till thââ had changed their Religion if their patience was longer than ãâã Cruelty of their Persecutors then they basted their Naked Legs wââ scalding Grease or boyling Oyl Others they made to hold ãâã hot Coals in their Hands burnt the soals of their Feet tore ãâã Hair from their Beards and the Nails from their Fingers and Tâ by the very Roots larded their flesh all over with Pins and thrash them with Sticks till they left them for Dead If they were Siââ they beat Drums and sounded Trumpets Night and Day in thâ Ears for 't was a general Rule to hinder them from sleeping and set them in different Postures sometimes standing upon one Lââ holding up a Hand in the Air sometimes down on their Knees âing the like c. If they changed Postures through wearinâ ââen they pinch'd and cudgell'd them till they were Black and Blue ââmetimes they tied all the people of a Family in a Room together ââd in sight of one another they beat and bruis'd the Men and ââde the Women suffer a thousand indignities They would often âârry them separately into Chambers to torment them but so as ââey might hear each others crys and every one in suffering suffeââd for themselves and for the rest of their Family which they eiâer saw in torments or heard the crys thereof In short let any âan but fancy to himself what vast numbers of Souldiers brutal ââd let loose are capable to invent and act in all manner of mischief ââd cruelty and he will have an Idea of the method whereby the ââotestants of France have been taught to become Papists O Temââa O Mores This great Fury made those that could save themselves fly into ââe Woods Mountains and Caves they wandred in the Fields exââsed to all the injuries of the Air not having wherewith to live ãâã to cover themselves and not daring to stir but in the Night for âar of falling into the hands of their Enemies Old and Young Men ââd Women all wandred in the Desarts and all these were but ââme Members of sad Families Fathers without Children and Chilââen without Fathers Wives without their Husbands and Husânds without their Wives a doleful spectacle no doubt to the ââes of Men. But this is not all the fury was so excessive that the ââa-Ports were every where shut for to hinder their flight and aââve 100000 Souldiers imployed to stop their passage on the Fronâârs besides all the Peasants whom they had made and the Priests ãâã joyn'd to take up Arms against them so that it was by great ââovidence if any could save themselves amidst so many Obstacles âând I don't believe there was one in fourty but what was taken after âving gone sometimes two or three hundred Leagues with all sort ãâã misery and difficulty The Prisons were all full of those poor ââgitives and if any of them had ever changed their Religion beââre they were sent to the Galleys a punishment in France more âgnominious and Cruel than any Death One law every where in ââe Provinces the Chains of these Confessors which they dragg'd along from one end of the Kingdom to the other Tantaene Animâ caelestibus irae The Women were Shav'd and carry'd away tââ Convents nor were they put in there many times till they had firââ been at the mercy of certain people worse than the very Dragoons who made them suffer things that modesty and civility permit mââ not to name I shall only say that they shut several of them up foâ many months together with Murderers and Highway Men anâ such like Cattle Some were cast into deep Dungeons where theâ never saw day-light and they cloath'd them with filthy Raggâ taken from the noisom Carkases of dead persons which they stripp'â before their Faces But the height of all Evils and that which haâ never entred into the heart of the wickedest of all the men Historâ tells us of was the sending whole Vessels full of them to the Newâ world to be sold to the Savages there Men and Women Younâ and Old Noble or others all were treated equally alike In some places they made Assemblies to pray to God and theâ the Dragoons Massacred all they could light on burnt the Housâ to which the Fugitives retir'd and those poor creatures with theââ Some they hang'd up on Trees and others they precipitated froâ the tops of high Rocks and they broke those on the wheel limâ after limb whom they called the heads of these Assemblies But ãâã would be endless to particularize all the various Tortures and uââ heard of Cruelties which the Papists practic'd upon the Protestanâ in France for to force them to abjure their Religion I will onâ say that they carry'd them to all the excess of Fury and Inhumaniâ that the Devils themselves were capable to inspire So that consideâing this Persecution in all its circumstances it may well be reckoâed the greatest and blackest that ever was amongst Christians ãâã any Age. After they had in this manner dispersed so many Families ruinâ so many Houses made so many Tears to be shed and caus'd a gâneral Desolation they at length made a publick Spectacle and Dâvertisement thereof The Kings Players Acted for many montâ together in Paris a Comedy call'd Merlin Dragoon in whiââ the Persecutors and the Persecuted were the Persons Representeâ ând inâââârt and People went in Crowds to laugh and divert themselves at the Oppressions and Torments which the Protestants had âuffer'd and by this as well as the rest you may judge what share Piety had in that Work. Now though all these Frauds Violencies and Cruelties and infinite numbers