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A10743 Of the state of Europe XIIII. bookes. Containing the historie, and relation of the many prouinces hereof. Continued out of approved authours. By Gabriel Richardson Batchelour in Divinitie, and fellow of Brasen-Nose College in Oxford. Richardson, Gabriel, d. 1642. 1627 (1627) STC 21020; ESTC S116159 533,401 518

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and the preceeding kings Ethelbert son to Ethelred He was treacherously murthered by Offa the great king of the Mercians invited to his Court vpon pretence of marriage with his daughter Elfrid After Echelbert the East-Angles for a long time became a prey to the Mercians West-Saxons Kentish Saxons without kings or mentioned in Authours By great Egbert with the rest of the Heptarchie they became subject to the English name and Monarchy vnder a substituted king of their owne not named by Huntingdoniensis my Author as neither are any other of their princes vntill Edmund descended from Anna succeeding about the yeare 780. Saint Edmund the last Saxon king of the East-Angles substituted or governing vnder the West-Saxons invaded by Hungar and Hubba two Pagan Danish Captaines and after sundry torments with great constancy sustayned for his faith profession tyed to a stake and shot to death with their arrowes canonized for a Saint and Martyr whose rich and much honoured shrine gaue occasion of the name of Saint Edmundsbury in Suffolke Saint Edmund thus martyred after 9 yeares vacancy and spoile by the Danes Guthrum or Godrun a Danish Captaine succeedeth in the kingdome hereof of the East-Saxons to whome Eohric of the same nation succeedeth By Edward the first Monarch of the English Saxons the Danes are lastly driven out and the countrie is immediatly vnited to the rest of the English Empire THE KINGDOME OF MERCIA IT was so named after our best antiquaries from the word Mearc signifying with the Dutch or English a bounder called thus since confining in a manner withall the rest of the Saxon kingdomes lying in the heart and middle part of the Iland Better Etymologies we know not It contayned in its greatest extent the Countries of the Dobuni Catyc●chlani Coritani and Cornavij of Ptolemy with part of the Iceni and Silures or after Malmes buriensis the moderne countries of Lincolne Nottingham Rutland Leicester Huntingdon Bedford Northampton Buckingham Oxford Glocester Warwijck Stafford Darby Worcester Hereford Chester and Shropshire with part of Hartfordshire the largest of all the seaven kingdomes bounded vpon the East with the East-Saxons and East-Angles with part of the German Ocean betwixt the Metaris or the Washes of Lincolneshire and the mouth of Humber vpon the South with the riuer Thames from the West-Saxons vpon the West with Offa's-Ditch from the Welsh with part of the Irish Ocean betwixt the Dee and Mersey and vpon the North with the riuer Mersey and Humber from the kingdome of Northumberland It comprehended the North South Mercia the riuer of Trent parting these two devisions after Mat. of VVestminster It was begun by Crida or Creodda a Saxon Captaine in the yeare 585 after my authour descended from prince VVoden enlarged by the victories of Wibba Penda and Offa. By great Egbert it was subjected to the vassalage of the West-Saxon Monarchs about the yeare 886 ending in Burdred a substitute of the West-Saxons tyred with long warres and molestations of the Danes departing vnto Rome after whom the Danes who had now vsurped it being expulsed it was vnited to the West-Saxon kingdome The Kings were Crida or Creodda aforesaid about the yeare 585 the first king of the Mercians Wibba son to Crida Ceorl son to Kinemund brother to VVibba Penda son to VVibba succeeding in the yeare 626. He slew in battaill Edwin and Oswald kings of Northumberland and Sigebert Egfrid and Anna kings of the East-Angles and droue out of his kingdome Kenwald of the VVest-Saxons noted for his bloudy fierce and violent raigne many victories and much cruelty against the neighbouring Christian English Himselfe was lastly slaine at a great memorable overthrow given by Oswy king of the Northumbrians After this the country for a time was made subject to Oswy and the Northumbrian Saxons Peada son to Penda by Oswy king of Northumberland vpon the marriage of Alkfled his naturall daughter set ouer the part of Mercia lying South of the riuer Trent with condition that hee should become Christian the first Christian king of the Mercians The part of Mercia vpon the North of Trent Oswy joyned to the immediate government of the Northumbrians He was slaine after Beda by the treason of his wife Alkfled after others by his mother Kinswith wife to Penda After Peada the Mercians shook off the yoke of the Northumbrians and Wulfhere is advanced to the kingdome Wulfhere son to Penda and brother to Peada Oswy the Northumbrians thrust out king of the Mercians By his great valour happie exploites after Oswy he obtayned the Soveraignety or chiefe rule of the Saxons continued in his successours vntill Kenelme and the Monarchy of Egbert and the VVest Saxons the eleventh Monarch of the English He founded the Church Monastery of Medesham or Peter borough begun by his brother Peada converted to Christianity by holy Chad the Apostle or first Bishop of Lichfield and the Mercians He deceased in the yeare 674. Amongst other issue he had Wereburg a professed Nun in the Monastery of Elye appointed afterwards by king Ethelred visitour of all the Monasteries in the kingdome of Mercia which charge she vnderwent with great zeale and opinion of sanctity whose dead corps or reliques remoued afterwards to the City of Chester occasioned there the Church of Saint VVereburg since the Cathedrall of that Diocese founded by Leofrike Earle of Chester in her honour Ethelred brother to Peada and VVulshere and son to Penda king of Mercia and the twelft Monarke of the English He founded the Monasterie of Bardney in Lincolneshire where relinquishing the kingdome himselfe became Monke and afterwards Abbat Kenred son to Wulfhere Ethelred resigneing king of Mercia and Monarch of the English Having raigned foure yeares he likewise gaue ouer the kingdome and with Offa king of the East-Saxons went to Rome where Constantine the first being Pope they together put on the Coule habit of religion Chelred son to Ethelred king of Mercia and Monarch of the English He had warres with Ina king of VVest-Saxons growne great through his late victories ouer the Kentish and South-Saxons and aspiring to the Monarchy managed with aequall fortunes Ethelbald of the blood royall of the kings of Mercia descended from Crida king of the Mercians Monarch of the English in the time of S t Winifrid or Boniface the Apostle of the Germans and Archbishop of Mentz reprehended by him for his vnmarried yet most lascivious and vnchast life He was slaine by his mutinous subjects stirred vp by Bernred ayming hereby at the kingdome Offa descended from Wibba after some vacancy the death of the Tyrant Bernred whom he slew in battaill king of Mercia and Monarch of the English renowned for his great victories archieved against the bordering Welsh Saxons He drew Offaes Ditch before described the bounder betwixt him the Welsh and subjected his English to atribute of the sea of Rome called Romscot and Peter-pence He likewise founded the great
second time He was againe deposed by Ioseph Aben-Almao Ioseph Aben-Almao Mahomet Aben-Azar restored and deposed the third time by Mahomet Aben-Ozmen Mahomet Aben-Ozmen deposed by Ismael Ismael Muley Albohacen son to Ismael driven out by his son Mahomet Boabdelin During the raigne hereof begun the warres of the Christians vnder Ferdinand the fift Isabel kings of Castille Aragon thorough the civill warres dissention hereof continuing for the space of ten yeares with happy successe and ending with the vtter expulsion of the Infidels Mahomet Boabdelin son to Muley Albohacen opposed during the Christian warres by his father afterwards he growing old and forsaken by his faction by his vncle Muley Boabdelin son to Ismael each one being acknowledged kings by their parties in the yere 1492 Granado surrendred Malaga Guadix Baça Almcria with other places belonging to his vncle being before recouered after ten yeares warre with the whole Mahumetane superstition driven over into Afrique by Ferdinand the fift and Elizabeth kings of Castille and Aragon During the vsurpation of the Moores out of the ruines for the most part of the vanquished Gothes arose as before certaine honourable Christian kingdomes estates of Leon Castille Navarra Aragon Portugal Barcelona in continuance of time the Infidels beaten home over-spreading this whole continent whose originall increase vnion and whole fortunes wee are now to relate THE BEGINNING PROGRESSE AND FORTVNES OF THE KINGDOME OF LEON THis Kingdome was begun in Asturia in the person of Pelagius descended from the auncient Gothish Monarches in the yeare 716 by the distressed remnants of the vanquished and flying Christians sheltering themselues in the mountaines hereof about two yeres after their great overthrow given by the Moores at the battaill neere Xeres de la Frontera It was first called the kingdome of Asturia After that the city of Leon was taken by Pelagius it tooke the name thereof Some would haue after that the towne of Oviedo was builded by king Froila that for certaine descents it did beare the name of that citie wherein I striue not much the name of Leon at length prevayling The parts of Spaine which at the beginning it contayned were the mountainous parts of Asturia now onely retayning the name hereof together with part of Galitia By the raigne of Ordonius the second the kingdome became enlarged over all Galitia Asturia Leon with the greatest part of Castillia la Veia being devided from Navarra by Monte D'oca and from the Moores by the Mountaines of Segovia Avila Castille revolting in the raigne of king Froila the second it became stinted Southwards with the riuer Pisuerga the common bounds hereof and of that countrie comprehending onely Galitia Asturia and Leon the ancient extent of the kingdome of Leon vntill its revnion with Castille Vpon the decease of Veremundus the third without issue slaine in battaill by Ferdinand the first king of Castille it became seazed vpon by that prince in right of his wife Sanctia sister to Veremundus added to his dominions family In the house of this Ferdinand it became twise againe severed from Castille in Alfonsus son hereof and in Ferdinand the second for some descents In Ferdinand the third son to Alfonsus the ninth Berengaria sister to Henry the first king of Castille the two kingdomes were lastly vnited incorporated into one entire state knowne by the name of the kingdome of Castille Leon. The kingdome was hereditary and where women for defect of heires male might succeed The princes vntill their last revnion with Castille were Pelagius descended of the Gothish Monarches the first founder as before we haue related of the kingdome created king in Asturia in the yeare 716. Favila son to Pelagius He died without issue Alfonsus the first surnamed the Catholique sonne in lawe to Pelagius Froila the first son to Alfonsus the first slaine by the treason of his brother Aurelius Aurelius brother to Froila the first He deceased without heires Silo his wife Adosinda sister to Aurelius Alfonsus the second surnamed the Chast son to Froila the first deposed by Mauregate thorough the power aide of Abderahmen the first king of the Spanish Moores Veremundus the first surnamed Deacon son to Bimaranus son or brother to Froila the first He admitted for companion in the kingdome Alfonsus the second depriued by Mauregate liuing then exiled in Biscaia Alfonsus the second sole king of Leon Veremundus deceasing Ramir the first son to Veremundus the first He overthrew the Moores in a great battaill at Clavigio vnder their king Abderahmen the second in the yeare 846. Ordonius the first son to Ramir the first Alfonsus the third son to Ordonius the first Garsias the first son to Alfonsus the third His yonger brother Ordonius was prince of Galitia the kingdome then being for a time devided Hee dyed without issue Ordonius prince of Galitia brother to Garcias the first after the decease hereof the second of the name king of Leon. In this princes time the kingdome of Leon contayned all Asturia Leon Galitia the greatest part of Castillia la Veia bounded vpon the East South by Monte D'oca the Mountaines of Segovia Avila from Navarra and the Moores and vpon the North and West extending vnto the Ocean He cruelly murthered all the Earles of Castille the occasion of the revolt not long after of that countrey Froila the second brother to Ordonius the second Formerly exasperated with the murther of their Earles by Ordonius the second and now encouraged by the slough many vices of this prince in the yeare 898 and raigne hereof the Castillians first revolted from vnder the gouernment of the kings of Leon became a free estate Alfonsus the fourth surnamed the Monke son to Ordonius the second injuriously prevented by king Froila the second Lazy vnfit to governe hee voluntarily resigned the kingdome to Ramir his yonger brother and turned Religious Ramir the second son to Ordonius the second and brother to Alfonsus the fourth Ordonius the third son to Ramir the second Sanctius surnamed the Grosse brother to Ordonius the second Ramir the third son to Sanctius the Grosse Veremundus the second son to Ordonius the third Alfonsus the fift son to Veremundus the second Veremundus the third son to Alfonsus the fift slaine in battaill by Ferdinand the first king of Castille Ferdinand the first king of Castille yonger son to Sanctius surnamed the Great king of Navarra after the decease of Veremundus the third without issue succeeding in the kingdome of Leon in right of his wife Sanctia sister to Veremundus He deceased in the yeare 1065. Alfonsus the sixt younger son to Ferdinand the first His elder brother Sanctius inherited the kingdome of Castille the two kingdomes being now againe devided Driven out by his brother Sanctius king of Castille hee liued for a time exiled amongst the Moores of Toledo After the decease of his brother without heires hee
certaine that they stayed there not long shortly after succeeded vnto by the Longobards THE LONGOBARDS THese were a German people mentioned by Tacitus being then a part of the Suevi containing sometimes after Willichius the parts where now lie the two Dioceses of Halberstat and Meydburg in Saxonie In the generall flittings of Barbarous nations they drewe into Pannonia where after Sigonius his computation for the space of 42 yeares they continued famous for their conquest there and victory of the Gepidae Afterwardes in the yeare 568 vnder their king Alboinus they removed into Italy subduing Gaule on this side of the Alpes named since from these Lombardy made then voide by the late conquest and departure of the Ostrogothes drawne in by Narses Lieutenant of the Emperour Iustinian in his Gothish warres provoked with the contumely and iniuries of the Emperour Iustin and of his Queene Sophia In the yeare 774 quarrelling with the Popes they were vpon a religious pretence of Holy Warre invaded and subdued by the Emperour Charles the Great their king Desiderius being besieged at Pavia and taken prisoner and their kingdome abolished made a French Province after that they had continued here vnder 23 of their Princes the space of 206 yeares THE AVARES IOrnandes maketh these to haue beene a part of the Huns distinguished into this people whom with some difference he surnameth the Aviri the Aulziagri Not vnprobably otherwise they might be the Avarini mentioned by Ptolemy amongst the Sarmatae The later Greeke authors call them simply Abares or Avaeres The more ancient Dutch French the Huns Avares Becanus conjectureth these to haue beene the names of two such different nations who ioining forces in their warres and invasions became by this meanes promiscuously called by both names a cause of the after mistake of Historians accompting them one and the same people But herein al is vncertaine Their first certaine expresse mention in Greeke authors we finde to haue beene in the raigne of Tiberius the second Emperour of the East vpon occasion of certaine carpenters sent herefrom vnto them and misimployed by them in the building of a bridge over the Danow with intent to transport by this meanes their armies over the river and to invade the Romane provinces Afterwardes we read of them in the raigne of the next Emperour Mauritius vnder their Caganus the common name of all their princes by sundry excursions spoiling Illyricum and Thrace After this we againe heare of them vnder the next Emperour Phocas likewise forraging Thrace then in the raigne of the Emperour Heraclius pilling and forraging Thrace vnto the wals of Constantinople and overthrowne beaten backe by the citizens hereof vnder the leading of Bonus Patritius and the Patriarcke of that sea By the French Historians they are first mentioned in the raigne of Sigisbert king of Austrasia or otherwise but more vncertainely and confusedly of Theodoric king of the Ostrogothes in Italie Their dwelling during their affaires with the French was Pannonia and part of Noricum divided from the Boioarians with the river Ens. They contained now the Lower Hungary with part of Austria By the armes of the mighty Emperour Charles the Great after 8. yeares warre they were vtterly subdued and driven out of those parts their country being peopled with new colonies of the Dutch and added to the Province of the Boioarians The poore vanquished remainders hereof betooke themselues afterwards into Dacia beyond the rivers Danow and Tibiscus where now is Transylvania with part of the Vpper Hungary where they continued vnto the raigne of the Emperour Arnulph when being subject to Suantabogus King of the Moravians and set vpon by the fierce new-com'd people of the Hungarians they were vtterly extinguished their name being since no where heard of THE HVNGARIANS THese Beatus Rhenanus conjectureth to haue beene a remainder of the vanquished and expulsed Avares kept aliue by the Emperour Charles the Great and by a small trench severed from the dominions hereof in the waine of the French Empire returning againe recouering their lost country Aventinus would haue them to haue beene a Scythian people inhabiting sometimes towards the Frozen sea beyond the rivers Tanais Volga in the parts where now lyeth Russia subject to the Great Duke of Mosco Bonfinius maketh them a mixed nation of the Huns and Avares sometimes Lords of Pannonia All of them speake but vpon conjecture without any sure proofe Iornandes de Rebus Geticis maketh mention of the Hunugari then inhabiting part of Stythia but whether or no these were the present Hungarians we cannot determine They first became knowne vnto the Christian world in the raigne of the Emperour Arnulph at what time wandering in Sarmatia without any certaine abode and invited by this Prince against Suantabogius king of the Moravians they tooke from him Dacia with the country of the Iaziges Metanastae lying on both sides of the river Tibiscus inhabited then by the Sclaves and the remnant of the scattered Avares killing vp and driuing out these old inhabitants and planting the country with their new barbarous Colonies which since from them hath beene called the Vpper Hungary Not contented herewith in the next raigne of the Emperour Lewis the fourth passing the river Danow they subdued Pannonia belonging then to the Bavarians and the Empire kingdome of the Dutch with more then barbarous crueltie and with fury vnresistable afterwards ranging ouer all Germany Italy Greece Bulgaria Mysia Sclavonia Illyricum and Thrace during the raigne hereof and of Conrade and Henry the first conquerours in sundry battles THE KINGDOME OF HVNGARY THeir fiercenesse and heat abating through religion and civilitie and the armes of the Dutch Emperours they setled into a peaceable gouerment first vnder Dukes then vnder Kings giuing the name to the country since called the kingdome of Hungary extending on both sides of rhe riuer Danow and containing the ancient Dacia the greatest part of the Lower Pannonia with some part of Pannonia Superior famous a long time for religion and armes the fortresse and bulwarke of Christendome against the Infidells The greatest part of the Higher Pannonia sometimes likewise possessed by this nation was recouered from them by the Marqueses of Austria knowne since by that name The yeare 1526 and battle at Mohacz gaue a period to their kingdome and ancient glory overthrowne with great slaughter by Soliman the mighty Emperour of the Turkes Lewis their last king being slaine and the country since enthralled to stranger nations the greatest part remaining now subject to the Turkes the rest with the title of king of Hungary to the German Emperours of the familie of Austria The Princes follow Cusala vnder whom we first heare of the nation of the Hūgarians He conquered Dacia or the Vpper Hungary and first passed ouer the Danow slaine in his invasion and attempt vpon Pannonia Toxus He subdued Pannonia or the Lower Hungary Geiza the first
fruitfull more especially towards the Ocean or d ee Places of more note are S t Asaph or Llan-Elwy of the VVelsh at the confluence of the riuer Elwy and the Cluid a Bishops See named thus from S t Asaph the second Bishop Not farre off where is Bod-vary in the confines of this and Denbighshire stood Varis of Antoninus Ruthlan vpon the Cluid Basingwerk at the mouth of the Dee Here begun the Ditch of Offa before mentioned Close by is Haly-well or the famous well of S t VVinnifrid Flint vpon the Dee naming the Countye In the English Mailor a part of the Shire severed from the rest by the comming betwixt of Cheshire and Denbigh-shire are seene yet some ruines of Bonium of Antoninus turned afterwards to a Monastery and named Bancornaburg by Beda and Banchor by Malmesburiensis the first of the Britons flourishing before the English invasion containing 7 greater divisions whereof each had at the least 300 persons liuing without revenue with the labour of their hands Some fragments hereof now remaining are named Port Hoghan and Port Cleis by the Welsh lying vpon both sides of the Dee and some mile asunder The inhabitants are part of the Ordovices of Tacitus It containeth 5 Hundreds and onely 1 market towne and 28 parishes These 13 Shires with Herefordshire and the parts of Shropshire Worcestershire and Glocestershire within the Severne more aunciently seeme to haue contained the Roman Provence named Britannia secunda by Rufus Festus and the Authour of the Notitia diuided amongst three stout and renowned British people the Silures Demetae and Ordovices vnconquerable through their valour or the advantage of their mountaines and kept in awe by two Roman Legions continually attending their motions the Second Legion surnamed Augusta residing at Isca Silurum now Caer Leon in Monmouthshire and the Twentieth Legion surnamed Victrix at Deva or Chester The Romans being with-drawn into the Continent and the Monarchy of the Britons lastly extinguished in Cadwallader about the yeare 870 vnder Roderique the Great they broke into 3 greater names or divisions which the Welshmen call kingdomes 1 of Guynedh bounded with the Ocean the Dee and the Dovy and comprehending now Anglesey Merionithshire and Caernarvonshire with parts of Denbighshire and Flintshire 2 Powysland divided into Powys Vadoc and Powys Wenwynwin and containing Shropshire within the Severne Montgomery-shire and Radnor-shire with the rest of Merionithshire Flintshire and Denbighshire 3 and of Deheubarth bounded with the Ocean the sea of Severne and the riuers of Dovy and Wye from Guynedh and Powys and containing Glamorganshire Monmouthshire Caermardenshire Penbrokeshire Brecknockshire and Cardiganshire after long warres subdued by William Rufus the succeeding English Monarchs these distinctions abolished incorporated into the vnion name of England They now take vp all the Westerne part of the kingdome and make the third Quart or Division which we call Wales distinguished into South-Wales containing the 7 first Shires whereof Caermardenshire Penbrokeshire and Cardiganshire are otherwise named accompted West-Wales North-Wales containing the six last shires bounded with the Irish Ocean and with the sea of Severne the Dee Wye and Offaes-Ditch from the rest of England and extended about 100 miles in length betwixt North and South and some 60 in breadth LANCASHIRE BOunded vpon the South with the riuer of Mersee from Cheshires vpon the VVest with the Irish Ocean vpon the North with the river Duden from Cumberland and vpon the East with VVinander-meere from VVestmoreland and with Mountaines from Yorkeshire The country is large populous and well woodded the aire healthy but sharpe and moists the soile fruitfull where are not hils and mosses much helped by marle and the great industry of the inhabitants yet more commendable for pasturage a large and kindly breed of beeves oxen Townes here are VVarrington vpon the Mersee Further downe Letherpoole or Lirpole a noted passage into Ireland Ormeskirk neighbouring whereunto is Latham a large magnificent house of the Earles of Darbye VViggin Bolton Vpon the riuer Irwell Bury Manchester Mancunium of Antoninus Rochdale vnder Blackstone-edge the mountaines of Yorkeshire Blakeborne vpon the riuer Darwen Vpon the Ribble VVhaley vnder Pendle-hill the highest of the English Apennine Preston Betwixt these vpon the same river is Ribble-chester Rhigodunum or Ribodunum of Ptolemy a city of the Brigantes Lancaster vpon the river Lune the shire towne Longovicus of the Notitia the station of a foote company named from the place the Longovicarij Higher vpon the same river Ouer-Burrow a meane village thought to be Bremetonacum of Antoninus Vlverston in Fournesse a rocky and mountainous country betwixt the Sands by Lancaster and Cumberland The more auncient inhabitants were the Brigantes of Ptolemy afterwards the Deiri of Beda part of the Northumbrian Saxons or English Fournesse or the division beyond the Sands seemeth otherwise to haue beene a part of the kingdome of Cumberland inhabited by a remainder of the Britons after the English conquests and invasion The shire containeth 15 market townes and only 6 Hundreds and 36 parishes but those spacious and very populous YORKE-SHIRE BOunded vpon the West with Mountaines from Lancashire and VVest-moreland parts of the English Apennine vpon the South with Cheshire Darbyshire Nottinghamshire and Humber from Lincolneshire vpon the East with the German Ocean and vpon the North with the river Tees from the Bishoprick of Durham The country is large populous and well watered with great and faire riuers the Dun Calder Are VVharfe Nid Ouse Swale and Derwent descending from the hils by the wider channell of the Ouse emptied into Humber The soile is diverse It containeth three greater divisions in extent and number of inhabitants scarse inferiour to the best Shires 1 the VVest-Riding 2 the East-Riding 3 the North-Riding THE WEST-RIDING OF YORKE-SHIRE BOunded vpon the West with the English Apennine Lancashire vpon the South with Cheshire Darbyshire Nottinghamshire and vpon the East North with the riuers Ouse and Derwent from the East and North-Ridings The VVesterne parts are hilly and more barren but which defects are more then recompensed by the great industry of a stout and painefull inhabitant exercising cloathing and other gainefull trades manufactures The soile towards the East is abundantly fruitfull especially Marshland encompassed with the Dun Are Ouse and Trent a deepe fat country but moorish and subiect to invndations defended by bankes from the ouer-flowings of the Ouse and the waters of Dich marsh in Winter Chiefer townes are vpon the Dun Sheafield in Hallom-shire as are sundrie neighbouring villages inhabited by Cutlers Smiths Hard-ware-men Rotheram Dancaster Danum of the Notitia the station of a troupe of horse of the Crispiniani Halifax Wakefeld vpon the Calder rich townes of cloathing Betwixt these vpon the top of a steepe hill neere vnto the towne of Almondburie and the Calder the ruines are yet showne of
warres or more honourable and gainefull conquests Towards the waine of the Romans Empire they are named the Scots the occasion or reason hereof we finde not subduing the neighbouring Picts and Caledonians and giuing the name of Scotland to the Northern part of the Brittish Continent Leauing there this new affected name they lastly resume and returne here vnto their first and more wonted name of Irish. Their gouerment anciently was vnder many petty kings or tyrants In the raigne of king Henry the second occasioned through the quarrels hereof they are first made subiect to the English whose princes were stiled Lords of Ireland King Henry the eight by the good likeing of the natiues first assumed the title of King continued euer since in his successours More lately they were distinguished into the Irish and the English Pales or the Wild and Civill Irish whereof these obeyed the English lawes the other were let loose to their barbarous customes and liuing The happy successe of the last warres against Tir-oën and the wisdome and zeale of King Iames of happy memory put an end to this diuision the country being now every where planted with ciuill inhabitants and the whole reduced to an English Province The lawes whereby the people are governed are their Acts of Parliament and the Municipall or Common Lawes of England executed by the Lord Deputy or Vice-roy for the king Presidents Iudges Sheriffs other English names of Magistrates Their Religion which only is allowed is the Reformed or Protestant yet where the pretended Catholique or Roman doth more prevaile amongst the vulgar through their discontent or an inbred and rooted superstition Their Cleargie are Archbishops Bishops and Inferiour rankes whose Primate is Armagh and first Apostle S. Patricius or Patrick in the yeare 432 and the raigne of the Emperour Valentinian the third a Scot or Irishman after my author nephew to S. Martin Bishop of Tours and Disciple to S. German The Religious of this nation Monkes of an ancient institution haue been no lesse deseruing then their neighbours of Great Brittaine chast and holy Seminaries of pietie and religion during the Primitiue times of the English French and Dutch Churches but who passing vnder the generall name of the Scots for both then were thus called are oftentimes mistaken by their readers for the Scots of the Continent The country is divided into 5 greater names or Provinces petty kingdomes sometimes of the Irish Vlster Leinster Meth. Conaght Mounster VLSTER BOunded vpon the East North and West with the Ocean and vpon the South with Leinster Meth and Conaght The country is large the soil good deepe pasturages but otherwise vntill the English last plantation lesse fruitfull through the sloathfulnesse of the wild natiues overgrowne with vast and thicke woods bogs lakes and marishes Chiefe townes are Knocfergus in Antrim within a spacious bay Vinderius of Ptolemie a garrison towne and a commodious Port neere to Cantire and Scotland Vpon the same Easterne shore and in Louth Carlingford Dundalk Tredah at the mouth of the riuer Boine a faire and populous towne the next to Leinster Within Armagh neere to the river Kalin an Archbishops sea the Primate of the kingdome The Province containeth ten shires or counties Louth Cavon Fermanagh encompassing the great Lake Erne Monaghan Armagh Down Antrim Colran Tir-oen and Tir conell or Donegall The ancient inhabitants were the Darnij Voluntij Robognij and Erdini of Ptolemy LEINSTER EXtended along the Irish Ocean from Tredah Vlster and the river Boine vnto the Neure and Mounster vpon the South and bounded towards the West with Meth and the riuer Sha●on from Canaght The soile is fruitfull better manured and lesse encombred with woods the inhabitants more civill descended for a great part from the English and conforming to their habit and custome of living Chiefe townes are Dublin Eblana of Ptolemie vpon the Ocean at the fall of the river Liff Libnius of Ptolemy an Archbishops sea and the seat of the Lord Deputy or Viceroy of the kingdome rich strong populous and beautified with faire buildings Without standeth a College consecrated to the Muses and the name of the holy Trinitie a small Vniversitie founded by Queene Elizabeth of happy memory Weisford Menapia of Ptolemie at the mouth of the Slane the river Modona of the same author the first place in Ireland subdued by the English and peopled with their Colonies Within the land Kildare a Bishops sea Kilkenny vpon the river Neure the best towne of all the inland parts The whole containeth 7 divisions or shires Dublin Weisford Kildare Kings-Countie Queenes countie or the Lease Caterlogh and Kilkenny The ancient inhabitants were the Menapij Cauci Blanij and Brigantes of Ptolemy METH SEated in the middle of the Iland betwixt Leinster Conaught and Vlster It containeth East-Meth West-Meth and the countie of Longford Towns here are Trim in East-Meth vpon the river Boyne and Molingar in West-Meth The ancient inhabitants were part of the Blanij of Ptolemy CONAGHT BOunded vpon the West with the Irish Ocean vpon the North with Vlster and vpon the East and South with Meth Leinster and Mounster by the great river Shanon Senus of Ptolemie arising out of the mountaines of Letrim and after a long course hauing made sundry great lakes by the way falling into the Westerne Ocean some 60 miles below Limerick In the North hereof rise Curlew Mountaines fatall to the English by their slaughter and overthrow during the late Irish warres It containeth 6 shires or Counties Letrim Roscoman Slego Maio Galway and Twomund The chiefe towne and the third citty of the kingdome is Galway a Bishops sea a faire rich and well frequented Port neere vnto the fall of the great lake or river Corbes into the Westerne Ocean The ancient inhabitants were the Gangani Auteri and Nagnatae of Ptolemie MOVNSTER BOunded vpon the South-East and West with the Ocean and vpon the North with Leinster and the river Shanon from Conaght divided amongst 6 Counties Limerick Tipperarie Corck Waterford Desmond and Kerry Chiefe townes are Limerick in an Iland encompassed with the riuer Shanon a Bishops sea and a well traded Empory Waterford a rich Port and the second citty of the kingdome vpon the river Suire Corck a Bishops sea Kinsale a walled towne and a commodious Port at the mouth of the river Bany The ancient inhabitants were the Velibori Vodiae Vterni and Coriondi of Ptolemie Other more noted Ilands of Great Brittaine are 1 those of Orkney 2 those of Schetland lying in 63 degrees of Latitude 3 the Westerne Ilands belonging to the Crowne of Scotland 5 Subject to the English Crowne Man 6 Those of Silly 7 Wight and Holy Iland c. THE FIFTH BOOKE COntayning the present bounds situation and quality of Spaine The Inhabitants Their manners languages and religion The institution power and courts of their Inquisition The number and order of their Bishops The Religious del
the Saxons and extended along the shore of the Rhijn from the meeting hereof with the Meine vnto the fall of that river into the German Ocean quarting in Gaule vpon the further side of the Rhijn the province of Germania secunda They comprehended the countries where are at this day Engern Marck Bergen part of Cleve Stiff van Vtreicht Gelderlandt Hessen the Earledome of Zutphen Over-Ysel West-phalen North-Hollandt together with the East and West-Freislandts The severall Dutch people which they contayned vniting into this generall name were the Bructeri reaching along the shore of the Rhijn betwixt the river of the Meine and Colen the Sicambri extended from thence vnto the division of the Rhijn at Schenken-scans the Chamavi seated neere vnto the fall or mouth of the Rhijn the Salij lying about the river Isala now Ysel called thus from hence and occasioning the name of the pretended Salique Law the Minores Frisij now North-Hollandt the Maiores Frisij now West-Freislandt the Tencteri Ansuarii and Cherusci For thus we finde them dictinctly called placed attributed to this common name in the table published by Peutinger written in the time of the later Roman Emperours The first time of their sixt plantation in Gaule following the most credited authours hapned in the raigne of the Emperour Valentinian the third vnder Clodi● their second king from Pharamond conquering and inhabiting the countrey of Germania secunda whether that they were but onely in part expulsed from hence by Aetius or returning againe with greater confidence fury after the death hereof murthered by Valentian jealous of his vertues Vnder Merove succeeding vnto Clodio they added herevnto the first Belgica Vnder Childeric they added the second Belgica withdrawing by litle and litle out of Germany their ancient abode and leaving the Moorish wood-lands which they there possessed vnto the Saxons violently pressing vpon them from the North busied here in the conquests and plantation of better countries Vnder Clovys their fift king the Visigothes overcome and the Almans subdued they tooke in the provinces of Aquitania Germania prima cleared Belgica of the Romans vnder Siagrius then keeping possession about Soissons and added in Germany to their kingdome name whatsoever was then held by the Almans and Bavarians contayning the part hereof extended betwixt the river Meine and the Alpes Vnder Childebert and Clotaire sons to Clovys and kings of Paris and Soissons the French dominion being then divided they conquered the Burgundians Vnder Theodoric brother herevnto king of Mets or Austrasia they subdued the Thuringians Vnder Theodebert king of Austrasia grand-child vnto Clovys and son to Theodoric they tooke in Provence or the part of Gaule Narbonensis contayned betwixt the riuer of Rhosne and the Alpes surrendred by Amalasiunta and the Ostrogothes by whom it had beene gotten and detayned from the Visigothes Vnder Charles Martel regent of the kingdome for the titulary princes they vtterly expulsed the Visigothes and Moores out of Languedoc their last retreate in this province Vnder Charles the Great they tooke from the Moores in Spaine the part of Tarraconensis where was afterwards the great and famous Earledome of Barcelona and conquered the kingdomes and nations of the Britons Saxons Avares and Lombards vniting vnder the Monarchy of the French the whole Gaule Transalpine Pannony Germany vnto the riuers Eydore Elb and the Saltza the best part of Italy together with the title and honour of Roman Emperour for a certaine time afterwards remaining hereditary to the royall families of this nation in whose raigne and in that next of his son the Emperour Lewis the Godly the Empire and dominion hereof was at the height thorough their civill discords that vnprovident division made by the sons of the Godly declining shortly after and breaking into fiue lesser kingdomes of Italy Germany or East-France Lorraine Burgundy and West-France all which not long after comming into the hands of stranger princes ceased to bee French resolving into sundry petty states and governments West-France excepted wherein the name and accompt of the nation at this day resteth confined the maner whereof with their continuance successions and whole fortunes vnto our times or during French we will shew hereafter We finde at this time the accompt and name of France for thus was called the greatest part of the French dominions after their possession and plantation by this nation to haue extended over the whole Gaule as also over Pannony and the parts of Germany subject herevnto their auncient names worne out It contayneth then two divisions or kingdomes famous in the French and Dutch histories of Oosten-reich or Austrasia or of West-reich or Westrasia for thus wee read them corruptly named in the Latine Authours of that ruder age Oosten-reich signified the Easterne kingdome so called from such its situation compared with the other division It was otherwise named East-France in regard likewise of its more Easterly situation Also Dutch France from the Dutch language of the people It was likewise called the kingdome of Metz from the towne of Metz then the royall seate of the kings hereof It contained all Pannony and Germany subject to the French and within the Rhijn the parts lying betwixt that riuer and the Meuse and Scheldt comprehending now Lorraine Luick Elsats the districts of Trier Colen and Mentz the Dukedome of Gulick parts of Cleve and of the Lower Palatinate together with the many provinces of the Low Countreyes contained betwixt those rivers At this day the French name and accompt being wholly extinguished in those parts the name is onely preserued in the Dukedome of Oostenrich in High Germany sometimes parcell hereof West-reich signifyed in the Dutch language the Westerne kingdome for thus was it situated compared to the other It was also called West and Roman France from such its situation and language mixed with the Latin compounding now the moderne French It contained in a manner now moderne France The kings of the French vntill the division of the kingdome and Monarchy hereof by the sons of Lewes the Godly follow Pharamond from whom they first begin the succession hereof He raigned wholy in Germany is put to haue bin the authour of the pretended Salique-law Clodion son to Pharamond Vnder this Prince they first planted in Gaul Merove Master of the horse to Clodion left protectour of the kingdome for his yong sons ouer whom he vsurped The disinherited sons of Clodion which were Auberon Regnault and Ranchaire for so were they named retiring into the countreyes of Ardenne and about the Moselle begun there the estates so called from whom descended afterwards the Princely houses of Lorraine Brabant Namur and Hainault Childeric son to Merovy Clovys son to Childeric This Prince first established here the Christian religion and mightily enlarged the French dominions the Romans and neighbouring Barbarians ouercome and vanquished Childebert Clodomire Clotaire and Theodoric sons to Clovys the kingdome being diuided amongst them whereof the two former
surnamed the Stammerer joynt Kings created in the minority of Charles the Simple Lewis the second deceasing Carloman raigned alone who dyed not long after Lewis the third surnamed le Fay-neant sonne to Carloman His raigne was but short deposed for his slought many vices and shorne Monke of Saint Denys Charles surnamed the Fat son to Lewis the Auncient King of Germany and Emperour of the Romans called in by his faction elected King of West-France in the minority of Charles the Simple Hee was deposed not long after and deprived of all his estates dying in great misery and want nere vnto Constance in Germany in the yeare 889. Eudon guardian to Charles the Simple son to Robert Earle of Aniou son to Witichind prince of the Saxons in the raigne of the Emperour Charles the Great in the minority of his pupill after the Emperour Charles the Fat created French King After some two yeares raigne he was likewise deposed by this factious vnconstant nation succeeded vnto by Charles the Simple By meanes notwithstanding of this election there followed afterwards long quarrels and contention for the kingdome betwixt his kindred the house of Aniou and Charles the Simple and his issue during the whole Caroline line a chiefe pretence of Capets vsurpation Charles the Simple the legitimate son of the Emperour Lewis surnamed the Stammerer He had warres with Robert Earle of Aniou brother to King Eudon in regard of the election of Eudon pretending right to the kingdome and slaine by him in a battaill After a short and troublesome raigne caught imprisoned at Peronne by Hebert Earle of Vermandois and forsaken by the nobility hee resigned the kingdome to Rodulph Duke of Burgundy Transiuraine Rodulph Duke of Burgundy Transiuraine son to Conrade Earle of Burgundy Transiuraine brother to Robert the first Earle of Aniou vncle to King Eudon vpon the imprisonment and forced resignation of Charles the Simple elected French King Lewis the fourth son to Charles the Simple and Elgina daughter to Edward surnamed the Elder and sister to Athelstan Kings of England surnamed the Forreiner for that during the captivity of his father and the vsurpation of Rodulph he lived exiled with his vncle Athelstan in England after the death of the vsurper called home and restored to the kingdome Hee had wars with Hugh surnamed the Great Earle of Paris Majour of the Palace son to Robert the second jealous of the popularity greatnes and the ambition of that house Lothaire son to Lewis the fourth In the raigne hereof Hugh Capet heire of the house of Aniou son to Hugh the Great begun againe to renew the auncient quarell of his family touching the kingdome the which not long after he obtayned Lewis the fift son to Lothaire He dyed young without issue the last French King of the house of Charles the Great Hugh Capet son to Hugh the Great Earle of Paris and Majour of the Palace after much quarrell betwixt the houses of Aniou and of Charles the Great thorough a long basenes slougth and pusillanimity of the degenerate princes of that line the present dislike of Charles Duke of Lorraine the next heire the long greatnes and still growing popularity of his house his flattery and crafty insinuations with the nobility and people and religious pretences and of his right and succession to King Eudo and Rodulph in the yeare 965 elected king by this wavering nation Charles Duke of Lorraine excluded caught afterwards by him and imprisoned during life Robert son to Hugh Capet Henry the first younger son to Robert preferred by his father before Robert his elder brother succeeding in the Dukedome of Burgundy Philip the first son to Henry the first Lewis the sixt son to Philip the first Lewis the seaventh son to Lewis the sixt About the raigne of this prince dyed Iohn de Temporibus by the stiffe consent of the French and German writers reported to haue lived from the Emperour Charles the Great vnto this time for aboue the space of 300 yeares Philip the second surnamed Augustus sonne to Lewis the seaventh Lewis the eight son to Philip the second Lewis the ninth surnamed the Saint son to Lewis the eight Philip the third son to Lewis the ninth Philip the fourth surnamed the Faire son to Philip the third Lewis the tenth surnamed Hutin son to Philip the Faire Hee deceased without male issue Philip the fift surnamed the Tall brother to Lewis the tenth Hee also dyed without issue male Charles the fourth brother to Lewis Hutin and Philip the Tall. He also deceased without male issue Philip the sixt surnamed of Valois the next prince of the blood of the line masculine succeeding by the pretence of a Salique Law In the raigne hereof began those long and fierce wars betwixt the French Edward the third King of England descended of Isabel daughter to Philip the fourth pretending in this right for the kingdomes the issue whereof was the great overthrowes of the French at the battails of Crecy and Poictiers the captivity of Iohn French King and the restitution of Normandy and other parts of France taken from the English by King Philip Augustus lost notwithstanding not long after to King Charles the fift with Aquitaine Guienne vntill that time still held by the English nation Iohn French King sonne to Philip the sixt taken prisoner in the English warres by Edward Prince of Wales son to Edward the third at the battaile of Poictiers Charles the fift son to Iohn He recovered againe the countries of Normandy Aquitaine and Guienne and whatsoever else the English held in the continent of France the towne and forts about Calis onely excepted Charles the sixt son to Charles the fift In the raigne hereof fell out that fatall discord betwixt the houses of Orleans and Burgundy by the advantage whereof the weakenes of this phrenetique king and their victory at Agincourt Charles the Dolphin disinherited and Henry the fift King of England having married Catherinne his daughter made Regent of France the English again got seazed of the chiefest parts of the kingdome hereof Henry the sixt King of England being afterwards crowned king of France at Paris Charles the seaventh son to Charles the sixt After long trouble warres Philip the Good and the faction of Burgundy reconciled hee againe cleered France of the English the towne countrey of Calis excepted Lewis the eleaventh son to Charles the seaventh Charles the eight son to Lewis the eleaventh He dyed sans issue Lewis the twelth Duke of Orleans and Valois the next prince of the blood of the line masculine Hee marryed vnto Anne Dutchesse of Bretaigne and deceased without heire male Francis the first Duke of Engoulesme the next prince of the blood of the race masculine He marryed vnto Claude Dutchesse of Bretaigne daughter to Lewis the twelth Anne and incorporated Bretaigne to the crowne of France Henry the second son to Francis the first He wonne the towne countrey of
Elizabeth of most famous memory it was surprised by the English and for a time held by that nation for Calice detained by the French surrendred thorough sicknes amongst the souldiers and for want of fresh water which is altogether conveyed hither from the hils without by conduit pipes cut of by the enemie the onely weakenes of the towne Within the land not farre of is the towne of Yvetot sometimes stiled a kingdome in regard of the ancient exemptions and priviledges of the Lords thereof from al homage and subjection to the kings of France It is now a principality in the house of Bellay Diepe at the mouth of a little river so called a well frequented Port especially for the trade of the West-Indies and New-found-land S. Valerie an other haven towne lying betwixt Diepe and Havre de Grace Caux the country hereof were the Caletes of Caesar the Caleti of Strabo THE PARLIAMENT OF PARIS COmprehending Picardie Champaigne Brie France Special Beausse Poictou Engoulmois Berry Bourbonois Forest Beaujolois Lionois and Auvergne PICARDIE BOunded vpon the West with Normandy and the British Ocean vpon the North with Artois and Hainault of the Low Countries vpon the East with Luxemburg and Lorraine and vpon the South with Champaigne and France Speciall The countrie is fruitfull in corne the store-house of Paris Chiefer townes are Abbe-ville a Bishops sea and Bailliage the best towne of Ponthieu vpon the river Some Monstreul Nere herevnto is Crecie the French Cannae famous for their great overthrow and the victorie of the English in the raigne of Philip the sixt These two lie in Ponthieu which is a low fenny country named thus frō the many bridges made over the moorish flats thereof Boulogne Portus Gessoriacus of Caesar Gesoriacum Navale of Ptolemie Portus Morinorum of Plinie and civitas Bononensium of Antoninus a Bailliage and Bishops sea vpon the English chanell The towne hath beene made strong especially since the surprisall thereof by K. Henry the eight and the English divided into the Higher the Lower Boulogne distant about an hundred paces asunder and severally walled and fortified The haven serveth rather for passage into England then for traficke and negotiation The country neighbouring is named from hence le Pais Boulognois Pagus Gessoriacus of Plinie and the Bononenses of Antoninus part of the Morini of Caesar Strabo and Plinie Calais Portus Iccius of Caesar Portus Britannicus Morinorum of Pliny and Promontorium Itium of Ptolemy a strong sea-coast towne at the entrance of the English chanell and the borders of Artois After the battaill of Crecy and a whole yeares siege it was taken by Edward the third king of England held afterwards and peopled by the English with the neighbouring forts and townes of Oye Hams Ardres and Guisnes vntill the late lesse prosperous raigne of Queene Mary when it was surprised by Henrie the second French king Here the passage is shortest betwixt the continent of Europe and the Iland of Great Bretaigne accompted some thirty miles over named by the French le Pas de Calais Amiens Samarobrina of Caesar Samarobriga of Ptolemy and civitas Ambianensis of Antoninus a Bishops sea and Bailliage and the chiefe cittie in Picardie vpon the riuer Some with whose divided streames it is round encompassed the occasion as some conjecture of the name The towne is strong and well fortified the bulwarke of France on this part towards Netherland The country were the Ambiani of Caesar Pliny and Ptolemy occasioning most likely the name of the towne Corbie Peronne vpon the Some Roie Mondidier strong frontire places opposing the same enemie The three last lie in the district or territory named Santerre Noion Noviodunum of Caesar a Bishops sea the country of reverent Calvin S. Quintini Augusta Romanduorum of Ptolemie and civitas Veromannorum of Antoninus a strong towne in the same broder the chiefe of the country of Vermanduois Fere a strong towne against the same enemie the chiefe of the country of Tartenois part of the Vermanduois the Veromandui of Caesar and Pliny the Rhomandues of Ptolemy and the Veromanni of Antoninus Laon a Bishops sea The Bishop is one of the 12 Peers of France Soissons Augusta Vessonum of Ptolemie a Bishops sea vpon the river Aisne the last place the Romanes held in Gaule vnder Siagrius driven out by Clovys he fift king of the French Afterwardes in the division of the French Monarchie by the sonnes and posterity of Clovys the Great it was made the head of a particular kingdome called from hence the Kingdome of Soissons Soissonois or the country hereof were the Suessones of Caesar the Suessiones of Strabo and Pliny the Vessones of Ptolemy and the Suessiani of Antoninus with Noion and Laon now part of the more general country or name of Vermanduois Retel frontiring vpon Lorraine From hence the neighbouring country is called le Pais Retelois Guise a strong towne and castle vpon the same border and the river Oyse in the particuler country of Tirasche Hereof were entitled the late Dukes of Guise descended from the house of Lorraine CHAMPAIGNE SVrrounded with Picardy Barrois Lorraine Charolois the dukedome of Burgundy and France Speciall The country is plaine pleasant and fruitfull affording plenty of corne wines shadie woods meadowes riuers all sorts of pleasing and vsefull varieties Chiefer townes are Chaalon Civitas Catalaunorum of Antoninus a Bishops sea Pairry vpon the Marne The countrie about Chaalon were the Catalauni of Antoninus In the neighbouring plaines Campi Catalaunici of Cassiodorus was fought that great and famous battaile betwixt Aetius generall of the Romans for the Emperour Valentinian the third assisted by the Gothes and other barbarous nations and Attila king of the Huns. Rheims Durocortum of Caesar Durocottum of Ptolemy and Ciuitas Remorum of Antoninus a Metropolitan sea a Bailliage and the chiefe citty of Champaigne seated vpon the riuer Vasle The Archbishop is one of the. 12. Peeres of France Hither come the French kings to be consecrated The country were the Rhemi of Caesar Strabo Pliny Ptolemie and Antoninus Ligny vpon the riuer Sault Vitry sirnamed le Franeois vpon the rivers Sault and Marne the Bailliag● and chiefe towne of Parthois Didier Perte naming the country Parthois both seated in Parthois and vpon the Marne Ian-ville a Seneschaussee vpon the Marne in the country of Vallage In the castle hereof magnificently seated vpon the top of an inaccessable high hil is seene the the tombe of Claude Duke of Guise one of the most costly monuments in France Vassey lying also in Vallage vpon the river Bloise enioying a most pleasant situation environed with shady forrests and woods Chaumont vpon the Marne the Bailliage for the country of Bassigny The castle here is very strong mounted vpon an high and steepe scalpe or rocke Trois Augustomana of Ptolemie and civitas Tricaffium of Antoninus a Bishops
West-Freislandt The wet and moorish ground about it affordeth rich pasturages but is altogither vnfit for corne Franicker a schoole or petty Vniversity Bolswaerdt OOSTER-GOE COntaining the Sea-coast betwixt Wester-goe and the country of Groningen Townes here are Lieward or Leewarden the court presidial chancerie and chiefe towne of the proper West-Freislant rich faire and strongly fortified Doccum neere vnto Groninger-landt ZEVEN-WOLDEN COntaining the woodland part towards the South-East and Ouer-ysel It hath not any towne of note THE TERRITORY OF GRONINGEN THis is the most Easterne part of West-Freislandt contained betwixt Ooster-goe and the river Eems or Oost-Freislandt Townes here are Dam neere vnto the Eems and Oost-Frislandt Groeningen the chiefe towne giving the name to the province The towne is of great state large rich and strongly fortified There are contained in the whole West-Freislandt 12. walled townes and some 490 Villages The more auncient inhabitants were the Frisij Maiores of Ptolemy Of these 8 provinces South-Holland Vtrecht on the hither side of the Rhijn with Bommeler-Weert Maes-Wael and Betuwe in Gelderlandt appertaine vnto Gaule Belgick North-Hollandt Veluwe of Gelderlandt Zutphen Over-ysel West-Freislandt and Groningerlandt belong vnto Germany the midle chanell of the Rhijn aunciently parting those two mighty prouinces In bignes pleasure and goodnes of soile they are inferiour to those of the Princes but in trade populousnes wealth strength and number of shipping they much surpasse the other In a manner all their townes stand vpon the Ocean vpon great nauigable riuers creeks or inlets of the sea or amongst deepe vnpassable marishes waters wherby through their strength of shipping never being able sully to be besieged and victualls munition and men being hereby easily conueyed vnto them they are become invincible against the most potent enimies not easily to be mastered vnlesse by their disvnion and the dominion of the sea taken from them Their gouerment since that they shoake of the Spanish yoake hath beene vnder the particular states of each prouince a third part of Gelderlandt and Zutphen excepted where stand the townes of Ruremond Guelders Venlo Watchtendonc Strale and Grol remaining yet subiect to the Arch-dutchesse not vnited into any one entire body of common-wealth and but onely for their better defence confederate together in a more strict league whose delegates resident for the most part at the Hage in Hollandt are called the States Generall Their lawes are their severall municipall lawes customes and priuiledges together with the ciuill or Roman law Their religion which onely publikely is allowed is the reformed following or allowing the doctrine of Caluin Their language is the Dutch DENMARCK THE bounds hereof are vpon the South the river Eydore parting it from Holstein the kingdome of the Germans vpon the West the German Ocean vpon the East the Sea Balticke or the Ooster-sche and vpon the North the kingdomes of Norwey and Swethen It lyeth betwixt the 55 45 60 and 59 5 60 degrees of Northerne Latitude The length betwixt North and South is 265 Italian miles the breadth some 200 of the same miles The more ancient inhabitants were the Sigulones Subalingij Cobandi Chali Phundusij Charudes and Cimbri of Ptolemie and Tacitus inhabiting the necke of land named by Ptolemy from that more famous nation the Cimbrian Chersonese now the 2 Iutlandts the Teutoni of Mela inhabiting the Iland Codanonia now Zeland and the Sitones or Sueones of Tacitus for we cannot out of his description certainely distinguish whether inhabiting the parts hereof lying in the Continent of Scandia now Hallandt Schonen and Bleking These ancient names towards the waine of the Roman Empire worne out and extinguished we read in Beda of the Angli and Vitae inhabiting the Cimbrian Chersonese whereof these later possessed the more Northern parts the former after the same author were seated betwixt the Vitae and the Saxons From the Vitae the Cimbrian Chersonese now beareth the name of Iutlandt The name of the Angli is yet preserved here in the Dukedome of Scleswijck in the towne or name of Angelen In the raigne of the Emperour Valentinian the third these two nations remouing with the Saxons into the Iland of Great Brittaine not long after in the raignes of Theodoric French King of Austrasia and of Anastasius Emperour of the East we lastly finde here the Danes more certainely named thus as hath beene related from the bay Codanus whose Ilands and neighbouring Continent they inhabited Iornandes who liued in the raigne of the Emperour Iustinian the first placeth these in the Continent of Scanzia or Scandia Vnder their Prince Godfrey in the raigne of the Emperour Charles the Great we finde them enlarged Southwards vnto the river Eydore dividing from them the Saxons or Dutch as they remaine at this present From this nation the country hath since beene called Denmarck famous a long time for armes and their great and many victories atchieved abroad themselues never conquered by foraine power Lords sometimes of England and Swethen and at this day of the large kingdome of Norwey and of all the navigations and Ilands situated towards the Pole Arcticke and the North. The religion hereof which is publikely allowed is only the Protestant or Confession of Augspurg first converted to Christianity by S. Ansgarius Bishop of Bremen the generall Apostle of these Northerne parts in the raignes of king Eric the second and of Lewis the Godly Emperour of the West and reformed to the Orthodox tenent by the authority of king Fredericke the first The Ecclesiasticall affaires are directed by the Arch-bishop of Lunden and six other Bishops of Rotschilt Odensee Ripen Wiborch Arhusen and Sleswijck The state is monarchicall the eldest sonne most commonly succeeding vnto the father yet where the states doe chalenge a right of chusing None of the nobility exceede the dignitie of Knights conferred by the free grace of the Prince The titles of Dukes Marqueses Earles Vicounts and Barons are not heard of vnlesse amongst the issue royall The kingdome for the better distribution of iustice containeth 184 Prefectures or juridicall resorts which they call Herets It lyeth partly in the continent of Germany and partly in the maine land of Scandia and in the Ilands of the Sundt betwixt these containing fiue more generall parts or names of Iutlandt the Ilands of the Sundt Halland Schonen and Bleking IVTLANDT COntaining the neck of land in the continent of Germany called by Ptolemie the Cimbrian Chersonese It hath vpon the West and North the German Ocean vpon the East the Sundt and vpon the South the riuer Eydore parting it from Holstein and the German Empire It is diuided into the North and the South Iutlands South Iutland hath beene otherwise named the Dukedome of Iutlandt likewise the Dukedome of Sleswijck from the towne of Sleswijck about the yeare 1280 in the person of Waldemar severed from the kingdome by Eric to be
Metellanus Caratacus Corbredus Dardannus Corbredus the second Luctacus Mogaldus Conarus Ethodius Satrael Donaldus the first Ethodius the second Athirco Nathalocus Findochus Donaldus the second Donaldus the third Crathilinthus Fincormachus Romachus Angusianus Fethelmachus and Eugenius slaine with the whole strength and flowre of the Nation by the joint armes of the Picts and Romans vnder Maximus Lieftenant of the Province for the Emperour Gratian after whom the remainder of the vanquished Scots being banished their Countrey by an edict of the Romans should follow a vacancie or Interregnum of 27 yeares The vntruth and absurditie of this whole narration the consent of auncient and approued Authours doth sufficiently manifest placing here the Novantae Caledonij and other names of the Britons without mentioning the Scots vntill the raigne of the Emperour Honorius Wee adde that the Roman Historians as neither the more auncient Brittish or English relate not any such conquest of the Scots or Northerne part of Britaine vnder Gratian and Maximus of which more great and remarkeable victory they would not doubtlesse haue beene silent if any such had beene Their succession from more certaine and cleare times follow Fergusius named by the Scottish Historians Fergusius the second whom they suppose to be the son of Erthus son to Echadius or Ethodius brother to Eugenius slaine in battaile by Maximus and the Romans in the yeare 404 and raigne of the Emperour Honorius returning from exile and through the aide and confederacy of the Picts and the absence of the Roman Legions drawne out into the Continent against the barbarous Nations by Honorius with the rest of the banished Scots recouering their lost countrey created King in the yeare aforesaid some 27 yeares after the decease of Eugenius The more vnpartiall and judicious make this Prince to be the first king of the Scots of Britaine That the Scots were possessed of a part of Britaine in the raigne of Honorius we haue before proued The manner we leaue vnto the credit of our Scottish Relaters Beda otherwise calleth the King or Captaine of the Scots vnder whom they first inhabited this Iland by the name of Reuda The time he setteth not downe Eugenius eldest son to Fergusius The kingdome of the Scots contained at this time the part of present Scotland extended along the Westerne Ocean from the Frith of Dunbriton Northwards He deceased in the yeare 449 slaine in battaile against Hengist and the Saxons Dongaldus brother to Eugenius Constantinus brother to Dongaldus and Eugenius Congallus son to Dongaldus Goranus brother to Congallus Eugenius the second son to Congallus Congallus the second brother to Eugenius the second Kinnatellus brother to Engenius and Congallus the second Aidanus son to Goranus in the time of S. Columbanus and of Austine the Monke the Apostle of the English He deceased in the yeare 604. Kennethus the first Eugenius the third son to Aidanus Ferchardus the first son to Eugenius the third succeeding in the yeare 622. Donaldus brother to Ferchardus the first Ferchardus the second son to Ferchardus the first Maldvinus son to Donaldus Eugenius the fourth son to Donaldus and brother to Maldvinus Eugenius the fift son to Ferchardus the second Amberkelethus son to Findanus son to Eugenius the fourth Eugenius the sixt brother to Amberkelethus Mordacus son to Amberkelethus Etfinus son to Eugenius the sixt succeeding in the yeare 730. Eugenius the seauenth son to Mordacus Fergusius the second son to Etfinus Solvathius son to Eugenius the seauenth Achaius son to Etfinus he deceased in the yeare 809 Charles the great then commaunding ouer the French Empire Vnder these two Princes after my Authours begun first the auncient league betwixt the French Scottish Nations Congallus the third cosen German to Achaius Dongallus son to Solvathius Alpinus son to Achaius His mother was sister vnto Hungus king of the Picts in whose right the heires of Hungus being deceased he made claime to the Pictish kingdome the occasion of a long and bloody warre betwixt the two nations the issue whereof was the death of Alpinus overcome in battaill and slaine by the Picts and the finall ouerthrow and extirpation of the Picts not long after by king Kenneth and the Scots Scotland at this time contayned onely the Westerne moity of the present extending from Solway Frith Northwards together with the Redshanks or Westerne Ilands hauing the Picts vpon the East vpon the South the Britons of Cumberland and vpon the North and West the Ocean from Ireland Kennethus the second son to Alpinus He vtterly subdued droue out the Picts and enlarged the Scottish Empire ouer the whole North part of the Iland divided from the Britons and English by Solway Frith and the riuer Tweede He deceased in the yeare 854. Donaldus the second brother to Kennethus the second Constantinus the second son to Kennethus the second He was slaine in fight against the Danes in the yeare 874. Ethus brother to Constantine and son to Kenneth Gregorius son to Dongallus Donaldus the third son to Constantine the second Milcolumbus the first son to Donaldus He added to the Scottish dominions the Countryes of Westmoreland and Cumberland part sometimes of Northumberland given vnto him and his Successours by Edmund Monarch of the West Saxons to be held vnder the right and homage of the English Indulfus slaine against the Danes Duffus sonne to Milcolumbus the first Culenus sonne to Indulfus Kennethus the third brother to Duffus By the consent of the states assembled in Parliament he made the kingdome haereditary or to descend vnto the next ofkin to the deceased which vntill that time had vncertainely wandred amonst the princes of the royall blood the vncles most commonly being preferred before the nephewes the elder in yeares before those who were yonger He was slaine by the malice and treason of Fenella a woman in the yeare 994. Constantinus the third son to Culenus chosen king by his faction against the law of Kenneth the third opposed by Milcolumbus son to Kenneth He was slaine in fight by Kenneth base brother to Milcolumbus Grimus son or nephew to King Duffus elected against Milcolumbus and the law of Kenneth overthrown in battaill and slaine by Milcolumbus Milcolumbus the second sonne to Kenneth the third king by right of conquest and the law of Kenneth He confirmed by act of Parliament the Law touching the succession made by his father After this Prince the eldest sons of the Kings or the next of their blood ordinarily succeeded in the Scottish kingdome Hee deceased without male issue slaine by treason Duncanus son to Crinus chiefe Thane of the Westerne Ilands and Beatresse eldest daughter to Milcolumbus the second He was slaine by the treason of Macbethus Macbethus son to the Thane of Anguis and Doaca yonger daughter to King Milcolumbus the second after seventeene yeares tyranny and vsurpation overcome and slaine by Milcolumbus son to Duncanus Milcolumbus the third son to Duncanus succeeding in the yeare 1057. He marryed vnto Margaret
and rich Monasterie of S t Alban in honour of that first British Martyr a Citizen of the neighbouring Verulamium put to death here by the Emperour Dioclesian and now canonized at his cost He deceased in the yeare 796. Egfri● son to great Offa king of Mercia and Monarch of the English deceasing within the yeare Kenwolf descended from Wibba king of Mercia and Monarch or chiefe king of the English deceasing in the yeare 819. After this prince the Mercians lost the sovernignety or chiefe rule of the English to Egbert and the West-Saxons hapning through the feeble vnripe yeares of Kenelme his next successour the quarrels and devisions hereof for the Crowne and the power of Egbert growne mighty through the accesse of the East and South-Saxons and Kentish kingdome Kenelme son to Kenwolf at the age of seaven yeares succeeding in the kingdome of Mercia murthered by his sister Quendrid ambitious of the gouernment Ceolwulf king of Mercia Vncle to Kenelme and brother to Kenwolf after one yeares troublesome raigne driuen out by his seditious subiects and thorough the treason and faction of Bernulf Bernulf King of the Mercians vsurping the kingdome against Ceolwulfe Hee contended with great Egbert for the chiefe rule or soveraignty of the English by whom he was ouercome in fight was lastly slaine against the East-Angles Ludecan King of Mercia intruding the Bernulf overcome slaine by Egbert the East-Angles Withlafe King of Mercia vsurping after Ludecan subdued afterwards made tributary substituted by Egbert Berthulf king of Mercia after Withlafe substituted by the West-Saxons He was driuen out by the bloudy all-conquering Danes Burdred appointed by Ethelwolf the West-Saxon or English Monarch After two and twenty yeares raigne wearied out with continuall warres fresh invasions of the Danes leaving England vnto fortune about the yeare 886 he tooke sanctuary in Rome where in a private state he dyed the last Prince of the long languishing Mercian kingdome after whom some few yeares revelling of the Danes the countreyes hereof by Alfred the Danes brought vnder were vnited to the English or VVest-Saxon Monarchy THE KINGDOME OF NORTHVMBERLAND IT was thus called from the more famous river or creeke of Humber vpon whose North it lay It contained the Brigantes of Ptolemy with other parts of North Britaine extended from hence vnto the Bodotria Glota of the same Authour now the Friths of Edinburgh and Dunbriton on after Malmes buriensis the present countryes of Yorkeshire Lancashire Durham Westmoreland Cumberland Northumberland Wee adde Tweedale Merch Lauden Carict Galloway with other parts of moderne Scotland vnto the Glota and Bodotria for thus farre after Malmesburiensis the Empire of the English whose North this was shortly vpon their invasion conquest extended It had vpon the South the riuers of Mersey and Humber from the kingdome of the Mercians vpon the East the German Ocean vpon the West the Irish sea and vpon the North the two Friths before mentioned parting it from the Scots and Picts It was divided into two Provinces more aunciently commaunded a part by their kings of Deira which was the part intercepted betwixt Humber and the river of Tees and Bernicia lying betwixt the Tees and Frith of Edinburgh The kingdome was occasioned by Otha and Ebusa the brother and son of Hengist shortly after the comming of the first Saxons the better to strengthen their party sent for out of Germany by Hengist and by the good leaue of Vortigern king of the Britons arriuing and planting in those Northerne parts pretending their guard against the injurious and ill neighbouring Picts and Scots whose successours the truce and amity betwixt the two Nations quickly broken in continuance of time subduing the Country thus limited and governing the same with the title of Dukes vnder the right and soveraigne commaund of the kings of Kent about the 60 and 72 yeares after the death of Hengist chaunged their stile into the name of kings of Bernicia and Deira for thus the parts hereof as before then were called vniting againe not long after into one onely kingdome and common name of Northumberland called thus in regard of the Northerne situation thereof vnto that famous river The Northumbrians after Ethelred and the yeare 794 being much distressed through their ciuill dissentions and the invasions of the Danes by the advantage hereof the Scots and Picts got seazed of the parts of Bernicia situated vpon the North of the river Tweede and Solway Frith the ordinary bounder afterward of the English and Scottish kingdomes The Britons before this inhabiting the parts where now lye Cumberland and Westmoreland with Fournesse Fels in Lancashire subiect aunciently to the Saxon kings of Northumberland about the yeare 685 revoulting from vnder the government hereof begun the kingdome of the Cumbri or Cumberland continuing after the Heptarchy of the English expired In this māner the kingdome of Northumberland stinted towards the North with the Frith of Solway and the river Tweede about the yeare 827 and some 33 years after the decease of Ethelred before mentioned ouer-charged with forreine and domestique wars submitted to the protection of great Egbert and his West-Saxons by whom it was lastly vnited to the West-Saxon or English Monarchy The princes hereof were Ida the first king of Northumberland after Mat. of Westminster elected by the victorious Dutch or English of these Northerly parts in the yeare 548 and about the 60 yeare after the death of Hengist By Floretinus Monke of Worcester he is stiled only king of Bernicia Ida deceasing the Northumbrians in the yeare 560 after Mat. of VVestminster first became divided into the two kingdomes of Deira vsurped with this title by Ella son to Duke Iffus and Bernicia the portion remaining vnto Adda son and successour vnto Ida succeeded vnto in Bernicia during the long raigne of Ella by Clappa Theodulphus Freothulfus Theodoricus and Ethelricus all sons to Ida and brethren to Adda Adda Clappa Theodulphus Freothulfus Theodoricus and Ethelricus kings of Bernicia and sons to Ida successiuely raigning one after another Ella king of Deira son to Duke Iffus After the decease of Ella king Ethelricus Edwin thrust out son to Ella obtaineth the soueraignty of the whole Northumberland Ethelricus son to Ida Edwin son to Ella excluded king of Northumberland or of both Provinces of Deira and Bernicia Ethelfrid king of Northumberland son to Ethelricus He confirmed and much enlarged the kingdome of the Northumbrians through his conquests and victories against the Scots and weake remainders of the Britons He was slaine in battaile by Redwald king of the East-Angles and Monarch of the English in the quarrell of Edwyn king of Deira expulsed by Ethelricus Edwyn king of Deira son to Ella after Ethelfrid succeeding in both Provinces of Deira and Bernicia the first Christian king of the Northumbrians converted by the meanes of his Queene Ethelburga daughter to Ethelbert the first
first embraced the Orthodox tenent the whole Spaine is againe become Catholique in the which the same persisted vntil the expiration of the name Monarchy hereof in Rodericus In the yeare 714 raigne of this Prince hapned that fatall invasion of the Moores whereby this country almost in a moment of time became over-whelmed with the new Mahumetane superstition religion confined within the Mountaines of Biscay Asturia After long fierce warres for aboue the space of 700 yeares the kingdome of Granado their last retraite being taken in by Ferdinand the fifth and Isabel kings of Castile and Aragon the Infidels are again beaten home into Afrique the Province is totally recovered vnto the Christian beliefe if by this time it may rightly be esteemed Christian corrupted by long Popish impostures which although since in part reformed in most other parts of Christendome hath here in its full impurity beene maintained vnto this day The Religion then here only allowed is that of the Romish Church without all visible shew of other mixtures An especial cause hereof besides the vnnaturall stiffnes of the Nation not easily changing hath beene the Inquisition with extreamest diligence and watchfulnesse still crushing Religion in the shell Protestants bookes all freer discourse and commerce vtterly prohibited taking away all meanes of attayning to the light hereof This was first begun in the yeare 1478 in the raignes of Ferdinand the fifth and Elizabeth kings of Castile and Aragon by the especiall procurement of D. Pedro Gonsales de Mendoza Cardinall Archbishop of Sevilla occasioned by the Apostacy of the newly then baptized Iewes and Moores beginning to returne to their ancient Superstition against whom then chiefly the name of Lutheran Protestant not being extant it was intended It was first exercised in the Kingdomes of Castile and Granado afterwards receiued into Navarre Arragon and lastly into Portugall The power and authority hereof is to enquire after and to censure Infidelity haeresie witchcraft sins against nature The Inquisitours are all of the Saecular Cleargy besides Portugal distributed into 12 Courts or Tribunals the Courts of Inquisition at Vallidolid Logronnio for Navarre so much of the kingdome of Castile as lyeth on this side the Mountaines of Segovia Avila at Toledo and Cuença for New Castile at L'erena for Estremadura at Murcia for that Countrey at Sivilla and Cordova for Andaluzia at Granado for the kingdome thereof at Valentia for that Province at Saragoça for Aragonia at Barcelona for Catalonia The residence hereof for Portugall I finde not By these mercilesse Tyrannies thus dispersed ouer the bodie of these Realmes the people here are so bridled in that nothing can be spoken scarcely knowne much lesse attempted or done prejudiciall to the present Romish Church and Religion Insomuch that here the Priests may lye by authority coyne forge miracles without contradiction say doe whatsoeuer they please without any one daring to oppose euen against their palpable impostures most shamelesse impudency These as in all other Countreyes subiect to the See of Rome are distinguished into Archbishops Bishops Secular Priests sundry sorts of Regulars The Bishops besides those of Leon Oviedo who by auncient exemptions acknowledge no superiour but the Pope are ranked vnder their Archbishops or Metropolitanes as follow Vnder Toledo the Bishops of Cordova Cuenca Siguença Iaen Murcia and Vxama Vnder S t Iago Orense Mondonedo Badaios Tui Placenza Lugo Salamanca Avila Zamora Astorga Coria Cuidad Rodrigo Vnder Sivilla Malaga Cadiz and of the Canary Ilands Vnder Granado Guadix and Almeria Vnder Burgos Pampelona and Calahora Vnder Valentia Orihuela Segorve and Xativa Vnder Saragoça Huesca Iacca Balbastro Taradona and Albarracino and vnder Taragona Barcelona Tortosa Vique Vrgel Girona Lerida and Elna in the land of Russillon In Portugall are 3 Archbishops Sees of Braga Lisbona and Evora Whereunto are subordinate the Bishops of Coimbre Lamego Viseo Porto Miranda Portalegre Guarda Elvis Leira and Silvis Of these Toledo Taragona and Braga doe all contend for the Primacy the matter yet remaining vndetermined Howbeit Toledo now carryeth the accompt the most honourable and richest hereof whose reuenues are esteemed at 300000 duckats by the yeare the perpetuall Chancelour of Spaine Amongst the inferiour Cleargie the most memorable proper almost to this Countrey are the Orders del Resgate and de la Merced the former flourishing most in Aragonia where it begun the other much the greater in the kingdome of Castile but scattered neverthelesse over France and other parts bordering vpon the Sea Mediterranean The profession and exercise hereof is with almes gathered amongst the people to redeeme such Christian Captiues as what by chance of warre and by the daily pyracyes and incursions of the Turkes and Moores doe in Barbary and other Mahumetane countries liue enthralled to the Infidells for this cause sending yearely their Agents to Algier and Fez where managing this affaire with no lesse diligence then faithfulnes they first ransom the religious then the king of Spaine Lay subiects and of those first the yonger sort then those of other nations as farre as their almes will extend They leaue also here certaine of their brethren to informe them of the state quality and necessitie of the Captiues to make the better way for their liberty the yeare following The king with a liberall hand greatly furthereth this busines giuing ordinarily asmuch more as the Fryers haue collected Neither are the people wanting herein few here dying who leaueth not some legacie for these charitable vses Besides these numberles Cleargie here are another sort of Regulars which although for the most part they are of the Laity depend notwithstanding and had their beginning from Religion They are the Knights of the Crosse instituted in the holy warres against the Saracens whose office it was by armes to defend the Christian faith and the professours thereof againgst the force and outrages of the Infidells besides the Malteses who here yet hold good possessions devided into six orders peculiar to this Province those of Calatrava S. Iames and Alcantara in the kingdome of Castille of Avis and of Christ in Portugals and of Montesa in Aragon The order of Calatrava was first occasioned in the yeare 1157 by certaine Monkes of the order of Cisteaux vndertaking the defence of that city then newly surprized vpon the Infidell and in regard of the danger forsaken by the Knight Templars to whose charge is was committed In processe of time it grew to that state that besides 8 faire Monasteries it now enjoyeth no lesse then 61 townes and castles in both kingdomes of Castille Aragon The Knights doe weare for a marke of their order a white coate with a red crosse vpon it and are subject to the Monkish discipline of Cisteaux They haue made many flittings of their chiefe residence from Calatrava to Ciruelos to Buxeda to Corcolos to Salvitierra and from thence to the castle of
Cape Finisterre they end with the auncient world Pliny seemeth to call these Iuga Asturum Not vnfitly we may name them the Mountaines Cantabrian from their neighbourhood vnto that Sea Guipuscoa Biscay Asturia with part of Galitia or the parts of Spaine lying North hereof betwixt them and the Ocean are called by the natiues the Countries beyond the Mountaines A more eminent top hereof is the Mountaine S t Adrian situated in the high roade to Baione and France cut through in the middest for the more easie passage of travellers from whose top Vasaeus Brugensis reporteth that he saw both the Cantabrian and Mediterranean Seas Out of those craggie hills towards the head of the riuer Ebro proceedeth a third ridge which running directly South by the cities Burgos Taradona Daroca at length end at the Mediterranean a litle West of the fall of the riuer Ebro The whole was aunciently by Ptolemy Strabo named mons Idubeda It is now called by diuerse names neere vnto the towne of Burgos Monte D'oca at the head of the riuer Duero Sierra de Coçollo neere to Taradona Monte Moncaio to Daroca Sierra Balbaniera and at the sea Monte Moncia From Idubeda a little beneath Monte Moncaio ariseth a fourth banke of mountaines which first directing their course South-west by the townes Molina and Cuença afterwards at Segura and Alcaroz doe part into two branches the one extending to the towne of Muxacra Murcia and the Levant the other passing through the kingdome of Granado along the coast of the Levant vntill ending at the towne and straights of Gibraltar This whole ridge is named Orospeda by Strabo Ptolemy calleth part hereof Montem Illipulam now the tract of the Alpuxarras It now hath diverse names Neere vnto the towne of Molina it is called Monte de Molina to Cuença Monte de Cuença to Alcaraz Sierra de Alcaraz to Segura Monte de Segura to Granado Sierra Nevada to Velez Malaga the Alpuxarras and to Ronda Sierra de Ronda The extreame point hereof aunciently named Calpe now the mountaine of Gibraltar was one of the two famous pillars of Hercules the end and bounds of his labours answered on the other side of the straights in Afrique by another like copped mountaine called Abila which was the other pillar The narrow Seas betwixt those two hills were named from hence Fretum Herculeum now the straights of Gibraltar Out of Orospeda about the towne of Alcaraz brancheth the a fift mountaine named by Ptolemy Mons Marianus now Sierra Morena which running along the right shoare of the riuer Guadalquiver still accompanieth the same vnto the Atlantique Ocean The part hereof from Alcaraz vnto Cordova was particularly named by Caesar Saltus Castulonensis from the city Castulo now Navas de Tolosa Neere vnto the Mountaine Moncaio and the beginning of Orospeda in the middest of a spacious plaine ariseth by degrees a sixt ridge of Mountaines which keeping the riuer Taio continually vpon the left side from the which it is neuer farre distant first distinguisheth New Castille from the Old then deviding Portugal into two equall parts at the towne of Sintra some 28 miles from Lisbona maketh the Promontory aunciently called Lunae Montis Promontorium by Ptolemy now Capo de S t Gian This long ridge is not now knowne by any one name new or auncient but onely by the names of such townes it passeth by neere to the towne of Avila being called Monte de Avila to Segovia Monte de Segovia to Placenza Vera de Placenza The part hereof in the kingdome of Castille was called by Pliny u Iuga Carpetania the part in Portugal Lunae Mons by Ptolemy THE RIVERS THe rivers for the most part issue out of those Mountainous tracts The greater are the Ebro Guadalquivir Guadiana Taio Duero Minio The Ebro ariseth with two heads out of the Cantabrian Mountaines neere to the beginning of Monte D'oca at the towne which is named from hence Fuentibre Passing from hence through the kingdomes of Navarra and Aragon by the townes Tudela Saragoça and Tortosa a litle below this city deviding its streames after the course of 460 miles it falleth into the Mediterranean Chiefer riuers which are hereinto receyved are first out of the mountaines of the Pyrenes Arga rio occasioning the name of that kingdome now confining the countries Aragonia and Navarra Gallego rio Senga and Segre On the other side of the Ebro out of the mountaine Idubeda Xalon rio Guadalquivir signifieth in the language of the Moores a great water It springeth out of Sierra de Alcaraz part of Orospeda not farre from the towne of Caçorla Flowing through Andaluzia by the cities Cordova and Sivilla a litle from S t Lucar de Barameda it is disburdened into the Ocean Chiefer streames which empty hereinto are Guadalimar rio out of Sierra de Alcaraz and Xenil out of the mountaines of Granado Guadiana signifyeth in the same Moorish language the water Anas the auncient name It ariseth amongst the mountainous heapes of Orospeda in Campo de Montiel neere vnto an obscure towne named Cagnamares Afterwards betwixt the townes Medelino and Villaria it is hidden vnder ground for the space of ten miles Deviding first Estemadura then that country Portugal betwixt Ayamonte and Castromarin it is swallowed by the Ocean There are not any riuers of accompt which are receiued into the channell hereof although the course be very long which hapneth thorough an extraordinarie drines of the neighbouring Countries The Taio streameth out of Orospeda about 6 miles from a litle towne called Tragaçet not farre from Cuença Through New Castille Portugall and by the cities Toledo and Lisbona at Cascais it falleth into the Ocean Of the famous gold hereof is made the Scepter of the kings of Portugal Chiefer riuers flowing hereinto are Henares and Guadaraema both of them issuing out of the Mountaines of Castille Duero ariseth out of the Sierra de Coçollo part of Idubeda not farre from the towne of Soria and the ruines of the auncient Numantia It first directeth its streames towards the South but meeting with the Mountaines of Castille it diverteth to the West whence carrying along all the riuers of Castillia la Veia and Leon and passing through Portugall a litle below the towne of Porto it is disburdened into the Atlantique This is thought to containe a greater quantity of waters then the Taio doth although straitned within a more narrow channell flowing for the most part amongst hills and mountaines it seemeth lesser It is neither by reason of the swift current so navigable as the other Chiefer riuers emptied hereinto are the Pisverga and Termes The riuer Minio springeth out of the Alpes of Galitia at Castelverde some 6 miles vpon the North of Lugo Meeting with the river Avia at the towne of Valentia then deviding Galitia and
seated betwixt Hispalis Emerita The Celtici of Pliny now the part of Estremadura confining vpon Portugal whose townes were Aruci Arucci of Plinie Arunda Arunda of Pliny Curgia Acinipo Acinippo of Pliny and Vama Pliny addeth amongst the Bastuli Paent the townes Ossonoba surnamed Lusturia Interfluentes Luxia Vrium and Mellaria Mellaria of Strabo and Mela and Mellaria of Antoninus in the way betwixt Malaca Gades Amongst the Bastitani Segeda surnamed Augurina Virgao surnamed Alba Vergi in the bay Vergitanus after Mela now Vera. Singilia now Antiqueria Hegua Arialdunum Aglaminor Baebro Castra Vinaria Episibrium Hipponova Illurco Succubo and Nuditanum In the resort of Corduba Ossigi surnamed Laconicum Ipasturgi surnamed Triumphale Ripepora Faederatorum Corbulo and Decuma In the resort of Hispalis Osset surnamed Iutia Constantia Celtica Axatiara Vergentum and Colobona In the resort of Astigi Attubi surnamed Claritas Iulia. Vrso surnamed Genua Vrbanorum Vrso of Strabo now Ossuna Munda Munda of Strabo now Munda Ostippo Ostippo of Antoninus in the way betwixt Gades Corduba Callet Castra Gemina Merucra Sacrana Oningis Vertobrige Concordia Iulia. Laconimurgi Constantia Iulia. Turobrica Lastigi Alpesa Saepona and Serippo And in the resort of Gades Vlia Vrgia surnamed Castrum Iulium Besaro with others whose present names places we finde not Strabo addeth Apetua Astenas and Luciferi Fanum now S. Lucar de Barrameda The whole number of townes after Pliny amounted to 175 of all sorts amongst which were foure iuridicall resorts Gades Corduba Astygi and Hispalis 8 Roman colonies 8 Roman Municipia 29 enjoying the rights of the auncient Latines 6 free townes and 120 Stipendiaries The part lying betwixt the riuer Anas Baetis he more particularly nameth Baeturia distinguished into Baeturia Celtica surnamed thus from the Celtici which was the part adjoyning to Lusitania and Baeturia Turdulorum ●ying neere to Tarraconensis surnamed thus from the people of the Turduli LVSITANIA THus named from the chiefe inhabitants the Lusitani The bounds hereof were the riuer Anas common herevnto and Baetica the Ocean intercepted betwixt the Anas and Duero the Duero deviding it from the Callaici Bracarenses and a line from the Duero vnto the Anas parting it from Tarraconensis Mariana draweth this line from the confluence of the Duero Pisuerga by Puente de Arcibispo a noted bridge over the Taio vnto that part of the Anas where sometimes dwelt the Oretani and called now Comarcha de Almagro It comprehendeth now the part of the kingdome of Portugal betwixt the Guadiana Duero with parts of Estremadura and the two Castiles The people were the Turditani Turduli Veteres called otherwise the Barduli and Tapori after Pliny continuate with those of Baetica lying on both sides the Promontory Sacrum from the Anas vnto the river Tagus and contayning now the kingdome of Algarue with part of the true Portugal vnto that riuer whose cities were Balsa Balsa of Pliny and Balsa of Antoninus seated in the way from Estris vnto Pax Iulia now Tavilla Ossonoba Ossonoba of Pliny and Ossonoba of Antoninus now Gibraleon or Faro Salacia Salacia of Pliny and Salacia of Antoninus in the way betwixt Olisipon Emerita now Setunel Caetobrix Pax Iulia Pax of Pliny and Pax Iulia of Antoninus now Beia or Badaios and Iulia Myrtilis Myrtylis of Pliny The Celtici Celtici of Strabo continuate likewise with those of Baetica and comprehending now part of the true Portugal betwixt the riuers Palma and Taio whose cities were Lancobriga Langobriga of Antoninus Piana Braetoleum Mirobrica Mirobrigenses of Pliny Mirobriga of Antoninus in the way betwixt Emerita and Caesaraugusta Arcobriga now Alcaçor Meribriga Merobrica of Pliny Catraleucos Turres Albae and Arundae Arunditani of Pliny The Lusitani particularly so called containing now Portugal betwixt the riuer Taio and Duero with part of Estremadura and New Castile whose cities were Oliosipon Olisipon of Antoninus Olysippo surnamed Faelicitas Iulia of Pliny now Lisbona Lavara now Avero Aritium Aritium Praetorium of Antoninus in the way betwixt Oliosipon and Emerita Selium Sellium of Antoninus in the way betwixt Oliosipon and Bracara Augusta Elcoboris Araducta Verurium Velladis Aminium Chretina Arabriga Scabaliscus Scalabis surnamed Praesidium Iulium of Pliny and Scalabis of Antoninus in the way betwixt Oliosipon and Bracara Augusta now Trugillo or Santaren Tacubis Concordia Concordienses of Pliny Talabriga Talabrica of Antoninus in the way from Oliosipon to Bracara Augusta Rusticana now Cuidad Rodrigo Menteculia Carium Caurenses of Pliny now Coria Turmogum Burdua Colarnum Colarni of Pliny Salaecus Amaea Ammienses of Pliny Norba Casarea Norba Caesariana of Pliny now Alcantara Licinniana Augusta Emerita Augusta Emerita of Pliny and Strabo Emerita of Antoninus Emerita the chiefest city in Lusitania after Mela now Merida Evandria Evandriata of Antoninus in the way from Oliosipon to Emerita now Caçeres Geraea Caecilia Gemelliana Castra Caecilia of Antoninus in the way from Emerita to Caesaraugusta now S. Maria de Guadalupe and Capasa The Vettones Vettones of Strabo now part of Leon Castillia la Veia whose cities were Lancia opidana Lancienses of Pliny Cottaeobriga Salmantica Salmantica of Antoninus in the way betwixt Emerita and Caesaraugusta now Salamança Augustobriga Augustobrigenses of Pliny and Augustobriga of Antoninus in the way from Emerita to Caesaraugusta Ocellum Ocelenses of Pliny and Ocellum Duri of Antoninus in the way from Emerita to Caesaraugusta Capara Caperenses of Pliny Manliana Laconimurgi Deobriga Obila and Lama Pliny addeth the Pesuri and of townes Conimbrica Conimbrica of Antoninus in the way from Oliosipon to Bracara now Condexa neere Coimbre Minium Colippo Eburo Castra Iulia. Ebora surnamed Liberalitas Iulia Ebora of Antoninus in the way from Oliosipon to Emerita now Ebora with others whose places are lost The whole number of townes he putteth downe to be 45 amongst which were one Roman Municipium Olysippo 5 Roman Colonies Emerita Augusta Pax Iulia Norba Caesarea Metallinensis and Scalabis three free townes of the ancient Latines Ebora Myrtilis and Salacia and 36 Stipendiaries divided amongst 3 iuridicall resorts of Emerita Pax Iulia and Scalabis TARRACONENSIS NAmed thus from Tarraco now Taragona sometimes the chiefe city The bounds hereof were the lines before described dividing it from Baetica together with the Pyrenaean mountaines from France It contained all the rest of Spaine at this day the Countreyes of Galitia Asturia Biscaia Olava Guipuscoa Murcia the greatest parts of the two Castiles la Veia and la Nueva Portugal betwixt the riuers Duero and Minio Navarra and the kingdome of Aragon The people were the Callaici Braecarij surnamed thus from the city Braecara Callaici Callaeci and Gallaeci of Strabo and Bracari of Pliny comprehending now the part of the kingdome of Portugal lying betwixt the riuers Minio and Duero whose Cities were Braecaria Augusta Braecara of Antoninus Bracae of Pliny a iuridicall resort now Braga Calodunum Calodunum of Antoninus in the way from Bracara to Austrica Pinetus Pinetum of Antoninus in the way
read in Iornandes de Regn Tempo Successione accompanying the Gothes in their inroades excursions into Pannonia That originally they were Germans their distinctions of Ostro-gothes Wisi-gothes signifying in their language as now with the Dutch the Easterne Westerne Gothes names of Alaric Theodoric Reccared with others the same or alike terminated with the auncient French doe almost make certaine The name succession hereof Iornandes by nation a Goth continueth from the times before the Troian warres beyond the report of other prophane histories But whose relation grounded only vpon vnknowne barbarous authours we reject as fabulous Their first certaine expresse mention in approved authours wee finde to haue beene in the raigne of the Emperour Antoninus Caracalla overcome hereby in certaine tumultuary fights in his way towards Persia and the East Their mention after this is familiar and common In the raigne of the Emperour Maximinus vpon occasion of his parentage whose mothers was of this nation Of Decius then ransacking Thrace overthrowing in battaill killing this Emperour Of Galienus wasting Greece Pannonia Pontus Asia Of Claudius the second after their 15 yeares spoile of Illyri●um and Macedonia slaine and overthrowne by him with great slaughter Of Iulianus accompanying ayding him in his vnfortunate warre against the Persians Of Valens with the Taifali and other Barbarians driven then by the Huns from beyond the further shore of the river Ister into the Roman Provinces afterwards in fight overcome slaine by them Of Theodosius the first overthrowne by him in sundry battails Of Honorius Arcadius vnder their kings Alaricus Radagaisus invading Italy and at Pollentia putting Stilico the leiftenant of Honorius vnto flight Of Honorius Theodosius the second then taking Rome Of the same Emperours vnder their king Athaulphus vpon a composition made with Honorius seating in Gaule Spaine After this time we reade of a continuall succession of them in the French Spanish histories and vntill their finall ouerthrow extirpation Their country since their expresse name was Dacia or the further shore of the river Ister quarting vpon the other side Pannonia Maesia or Thrace the common Rendez-vous of the many successions of barbarous nations Driven over that river by the more fierce and barbarous Huns they had Thrace permitted vnto them to inhabite in by the Emperour Valens with condition to serue vnder the pay of the Romans and to become Christians the cause of their Arrian infection wherewith so long time after they troubled the Christian Common-wealth vnto which Haeresie that Emperour was addicted A little before their comming into Italy and the West they enlarged their bounds as farre as Pannonia In the raignes of Arcadius and Honorius denyed their accustomed pay of the Romans by the treason of Stilico Protectour and Lieftenant to Honorius vnder their kings Rhadagaisus and Alaricus they drew into Italy in two Armies the former whereof at Fesulae was slaine and his Army discomfited by Stilico the other by the treachery hereof permitted to liue and by iniuries provoked to the taking of the city of Rome to the ruinating of the Westerne Empire After this their invasion we finde the nation distinguished and more famously knowne by the names of Ostrogothes and Wisigothes Of both which seuerally THE OSTRO-GOTHES THE Ostrogothes and Wisigothes signified in their language the Easterne and Westerne Gothes and argument of their Dutch descent Mariana yet whom I finde not backed by the authority of auncient authours would haue them to haue beene thus named from their more Easterne and Westerne situations in Scandia before their comming to the Ister Roman confines Paulus Diaconus in his additions to Eutropius with better authority from such their positions in Dacia or beyond the Ister in the raigne of the Emperour Valens at what time vnder their Captaines Athalaricus and Fridigernus first dividing into two plantations or companies those which with Fridigernus inhabited the more Westerne Countreyes were from hence in their natiue language named the Wesegothi or the Westerne Gothes the other vnder Athalaricus planted in the East the Ostrogothi Trebellius Pollio notwithstanding long before those times nameth the Austro-gothi in the raigne of the Emperour Claudius the second But whether by these were vnderstood the Easterne or Ostrogothes or rather as the Latin word more properly doth signifie the Southerne Gothes we can not determine Ammianus Marcellinus in his 31 booke and raigne of the Emperour Valens and Gratianus maketh often mention of Fritigernus and the Gothes but in whom we finde no where the distinctions of Ostro-gothes and Wisigothes In Ablavius in Iornandes we heare of the Wesegothae and Ostrogothae vnder their king Ostrogotha inhabiting then in S●ythia vpon the shore of the sea Euxinus But whose narration wee haue before accompted as fabulous That the Gothes had these distinctions giuen them before their descent into the Westerne Roman Provinces it is manifest out of the 2 d booke in Eutropium of the Poet Claudian liuing in the time of the Emperour Honorius where he mentioneth the Ostro-gothi when as yet onely these were in the East The iust time and place in the East where these names begun is vncertaine They grew more famous after the plantation of the nation in the Provinces of the Westerne Roman Empire the Italian Gothes being distinguished in the histories of those times by the name of Ostrogothes and those of Spaine or Gaule by the name of Wisigothes The Ostrogothes then to speak more certainly were a remainder of the Gothes in the East after the departure of Alaricus and Rhadagaisus towards Italy Gaule and the West In the raigne of the Emperour Valentinian the third these accompanied Atilas and the Huns invading the Westerne Roman Provinces partakers of their ouerthrow in the plaines of Chaalon giuen by the valiant Aetius the Wisigothes French and other barbarous confederates Shortly after this in the raigne of Marcianus they returned againe to their wonted pay and service of the Romans by the leaue of this Emperour seating themselues in Pannonia In the raigne of the Emperour Zeno threatning war against the Grecians by the policy and persuasion hereof they turned vpon the Heruli then possessing Italy the Westerne Empire being at that time troden vnderfoote by barbarous nations whom after sundry battailes hauing slaine their king Odoacer they finally vanquished inhabiting and taking vp their left roomes and extending their conquests there ouer Italy Rome Illyricum Dalmatia Sicily and the neighbouring Iles together with the part of Gaule Narbonensis contained betwixt the Alpes and the riuer Rhosne now called Provence vsurped vpon the Wisigothes By Amalasiunta daughter to Theodoricus then Governour of the kingdome for her yong son Athanaricus fearing a tempest of warre from the Grecians to make their better peace with the potent French Nation their part of Gaule Narbonensis was surrendred to Theodebert the French king of Mets or Austrusia By Iustinian the first Roman Emperour of
the East after a long and bloody warre lasting the raignes of six of their kings and managed on the Emperours side by the famous captaines Belisarius and Narses they were at length subdued and their name and memory here as in all other parts of the world vtterly extinguished making roome for the Longobards through the anger and discontent of Narses shortly after called into Italy and succeeding in their voide places Their Religion was Arrianisme corrupted by the Emperour Valens Their kings whereof we finde more distinct mention were Athalaricus before mentioned liuing in the raigne of the Emperour Valens vnder whom after Paulus Diaconus the name of the Ostro-gothes first began Theodomirus in the raigne of the Emperour Leo at what time these yet were in the East and before their last descent into Italy Theodoricus in the raignes of the two Emperours Zeno and Anastasius vnder whom they conquered the Heruli and Italy Athanaricus son to Amalasiunta daughter to Theodoricus During the warres with the Emperour Iustinian the first Theodatus sonne to Amalafreda sister to Theodoricus Vitigis Vldebaldus Ardaricus Totilas Teya their last king Their whole raigne in Italy after Sigonius lasted 70 yeares THE VVISI-GOTHES ABlavius in Iornandes as hath beene related fabulously maketh mention of the Wesegothae in the time of Ostrogotha king of the Ostrogothae residing then in Scythia neere vnto the Sea Euxinus and lying vpon the West of the Ostrogothes Paulus Diaconus in his additions to Eutropius otherwise beginneth their name from the raigne of the Emperour Valens and their king Fridigernus concerning whom see the Ostrogothes Isidore continueth their History onely from their king Athanaricus who preceded Alaricus in the kingdome Vnder their king Alaricus in the raigne of Honorius Emperour of the West they first descended into Italy taking sacking the city of Rome Vnder Athaulfus who succeeded to Alaricus marrying vnto Galla Placidia sister to Honorius entring into league and confederacy with the Romans leaving Italy they had Gaule Narbonensis given vnto them to inhabite in with the part of Spaine Tarraconensis where now is Catalonia with condition to keepe them for the Roman Empire and to serue vnder the pay hereof Vnder Walia subduing the Alans in Spaine for a reward of their service for the countries recovered by them were by their league herewith to returne vnto the Romans they had given vnto them the part of Aquitania which is extended betwixt the river Garonne and the Pyrenaean mountaines added vnto their other possessions in Gaule Vnder Theodoric the victorious conquerour of Rec●iarius and the Suevians with the good leaue of the Romans they joyned Bae●ica to their Spanish dominions won from that nation Vnder Eurycus breaking their faith league with the Romans they recovered from them whatsoever these held in Spaine Vnder the same king they also tooke from the Romans the countries of the Rutheni Cadurci and Auverni with other parts in Gaule enlarging their conquests in that province vnto the river of Loire all which notwithstanding with their whole possessions there they shortly after lost to the French Ostrogothes in the next raignes of Alaric the second and Amalaric the part of Narbonensis onely excepted where now is Languedoc By Leutigildis they subdued the Suevians and tooke in the countrie of Calaecia attayning by this meanes to a perfect Monarchy of the whole Spaine which with the part of Gaule Narbonensis before spoken of together with Hispania Tingitana in Afrique they kept entire vnder their subjection vntill their overthrow extirpation vnder their last king Rodericus In the yeare 714 and the raigne of this prince the nation hereof state tooke end overwhelmed by a deluge of the Moores after their continuance here for about the space of 300 yeares Their religion vntill towards the period of their state was Arrianisme corrupted by Valens Emperour of the East Vnder their king Reccaredus in the yeare 586 and the third Councell of Toledo they received the Orthodox Catholique faith Their government was Monarchicall Their maner hereof was electiue Their kings were Fridigernus in the raigne of the Emperour Valens the first king of the Wisigothes after Paulus Diaconus Athanaricus in the time of the Emperours Gratian Valentinian the second With this prince Isidore beginneth the Catalogue of the West-gothish Monarches Hitherto the Wisigothes kept in the East Alaricus in the raigne of the Emperour Honorius vnder whom they first descended into the West and sacked Rome Athaulphus kinsman to Alaricus vnder whom in the yeare 415 they first planted in Gaule Spaine Sigericus Walia by whom the Alans in Spaine being subdued Aquitania in Gaule was added to the dominion hereof Theodoredus slaine against Atilas and the Huns in that memorable battaill fought in the plaines of Chaalon in Gaule Turismundus son to Theodoredus Theodoricus brother to Turismundus by whom Baetica in Spaine was added Euricus by whom the rest of Spaine Calaecia excepted together with the Rutheni Cadurci Auverni and other parts of Gaule vnto the river of the Loire Alaricus the second son to Euricus vnder whom these lost all their conquests in Gaule part onely of Narbonensis excepted won from them by Clovys the great the first Christian king of the French Gesaleicus Amalaricus son to Alaricus the second In the minority hereof Theodoricus king of the Ostrogothes protectour then of the kingdome by the advantage hereof got seazed of the part of Narbonensis lying next vnto his dominions of Italy now called Provençe surrendred afterwards by his daughter Amalasiunta vnto Theodebert French king of Mentz Theudis an Ostro-goth formerly governour of the kingdome for Theodoricus king of the Ostro-gothes in the minority of Amalaricus elected king of the Wisi-gothes Theudeselus descended from the Ostro-gothes and nephew to king Totilas Agila Athanagildus In the raigne hereof the Spanish Suevians vnder their king Theodomirus received againe their left Catholique religion Liuva Leutigildus brother to Liuva vnder whom Andeca the Suevians being subdued the whole Spaine was vnited into the Gothish Monarchy Reccaredus son to Leutigildus In the raigne hereof these changed their Arrian heresie for the Catholique faith which ever after with great zeale constancy they maintained Liuva the second son to Reccaredus Witericus Gundemarus Sigebutus Reccaredus the second son to Sigebutus Suinthila Sigenandus Chintila Tulga Flavius Chindasvinthus Reccesvinthus son to Chindasvinthus Wamba Flavius Ervigius Egica Witiza son to Egica Rodericus the last king of the Wisigothes slaine with the whole flower and strength of the nation in the yeare 714 in that great battaill at Xeres de la Frontera by Tarif the Infidels after whom Christianity and the nation hereof being extinguished succeeded the faithles Moores whose turne is next to come vpon the stage THE DOMINION AND SVCCESSION OF THE MOORES THese as the Latine word doth signifie more properly were the inhabitants of Mauritania in Afrique extended after Ptolemy from the Westerne
name and accompt they at this day continue Henry the first king of Castile son to Alfonsus the eight He dyed without issue Ferdinand the third son to Alfonsus the ninth king of Leon and of Berengaria yonger sister to Henry the first deceased in right from his mother king of Castile Blanche elder sister to Berengaria then wife to Lewes son to Philip the French King refused His father deceasing hee succeeded likewise in the Kingdome of Leon. After this last vnion the two Kingdomes were neuer againe seuered incorporated into one entire state knowne now by the name of Castille Leon. He recouered from the Moores the countries of Andaluzia and Murcia contayning then the petty Kingdomes of Murcia and Sivillia with part of the Kingdome of Cordova In the raigne hereof and yeare 1239 began the famous kingdome of Granado by Mahomet Aben-Alhamar King of Cordova vpon the surprisall of that city by Ferdinand remouing hither his royall seate Alfonsus the tenth King of Castile and Leon son to Ferdinand the third He was that famous Astronomer whose workes are now extant with vs the framer of the Tables of Alfonsus named from him The German Electours diuided he was chosen by his factiō Emperour of the Romans against Richard Earle of Cornwall brother to Henry the third King of England detained notwithstanding at home during his whole raigne with civill warres against his vnnaturall son Sanctius much more happy in the loue of the Muses then of his subiects Sanctius the third king of Castile and Leon the rebellious son of Alfonsus the tenth Ferdinand the fourth son to Sanctius the third Alfonsus the eleauenth son to Ferdinand the fourth Peter the first son to Alfonsus the eleauenth He was driuen out for his cruelty and was restored againe by Edward named the Blacke Prince son to Edward the third king of England Destitute of the English succours not long after he lost both his kingdome life overcome and slaine by his brother Henry Henry the second brother to Peter the first and naturall son to Alfonsus the eleaventh Iohn the first king of Castille Leon son to Henry the second opposed by Iohn of Gaunt duke of Lancaster pretending the right of Constance his wife daughter to Peter the first In this prince by his marriage of D. Maria Diaz de Haro daughter and inheretresse to Don Lopez Diaz de Haro last prince of Biscaia and Guipuscoa these seigneuries were annexed to the crowne of Castille Comming to composition with Iohn duke of Lancaster hee marryed his sonne Henry vnto Catherine daughter to the other by agreement created vpon the marriage prince of Asturia which title occasioned from the English whose eldest sons are named princes of Wales hath ever since bin continued in the heires of Castille or Spaine Henry the third son to Iohn the first He married vnto Catherine daughter to Iohn of Gaunt duke of Lancaster Iohn the second son to Henry the third Henry the fourth son to Iohn the second He deceased without heires of his body Elizabeth queene of Castille Leon sister to Henry the fourth She married vnto Ferdinand the fift king of Aragon Sicily In the raigne hereof the countreyes of Granado Navarra the French Moores being expulsed became annexed to the house hereof and incorporated with Castille and the whole Spaine the kingdome of Portugall excepted vnited vnder one Monarch Naples likewise was then conquered from the French and the house of Ferdinand the bastard and the rich new-found world first discovered added to the dominion hereof Philip the first Arch-duke of Austria and Duke of Bungundie son to the Emperour Maximilian the first Mary Dutchesse of Burgundie king of Castille Leon in right of his wife Ioane eldest daughter to Ferdinand the fift and Elizabeth kings of Castille Aragon Philip deceasing and Ioane of Aragon his Queene in regard of her frenzy and indisposition being vnfit to governe Ferdinand the fift in the minority of Charles the fift reassumed againe the kingdome of Castille Charles the fift son to Philip the first and Ioane of Aragon after the decease of his grandfathers Maximilian the first Emperour and king Ferdinand the fift elected Emperour of the Romans and succeeding in the kingdomes of Castille Leon Aragon Naples Sicily Hierusalem and of the Indyes the Dukedomes of Austria Burgundy and the dominions of the low-countries He added vnto these in Italy the great Dukedome of Milan after the decease of Francis Sforcia without heires according to the composition made betwixt them and in the Netherlands the Provinces of Vtreicht Over-Ysel Zutphen Gelderland Wearyed with long sicknes and the burthen of so great an Empire he voluntarily surrendred all his estates vnto his younger brother Ferdinand and his son Philip the second cloistering himselfe vp in the monastery of S t Iustus in Estremadura where in a private fortune he dyed Philip the second son vnto the Emperour Charles the fift lord of all the kingdomes and possessions belonging to the house of Burgundy Spaine The German Empire and the dominions of Austria were left vnto his vncle Ferdinand Sebastian king of Portugal being slaine in Afrique by the Moores at the battaile of Alcacar and his vncle Cardinall Henry not long after surviuing by the great captain Don Ferdin̄d Alvares de Toledo in the yeare 1580 he cōquered that kingdome the first Monarch of Spaine since king Rodericus and the Gothes To giue a checke vnto this sudden and over-great prosperity the Low-countries in his time revolted eight of whose richest provinces Holland Zealand Vtreicht Over-Ysel Gelderland Zutphen West-Freisland Groninghen haue now by armes freed themselues from the Spanish yoake and subjection Philip the Third son to Philip the second succeeding in the dominions conquests of Spaine The Netherlands were assigned by his father vnto his sister Isabella marryed vnto Albert Arch-duke of Austria Philip the fourth son to Philip the third now king of Castille Spaine and of the many provinces subject to the great Empire hereof THE KINGDOME OF NAVARRA THe Kingdome hereof was first begun amongst the Pyrenean Mountaines in the parts whereabout now standeth the towne of Suprarbe by the Vascones the naturall inhabitants or rather by certaine remnants of the shipwrack'd and flying Christians in that great invndation of the Moores retreating amongst the safer rocks and shelters hereof The exact time when it begun is not set downe Onely thus much is agreed vpon that Garcias Ximinius the first king dyed in the yeare 758 some 42 yeares after the first erection of the kingdome of the Asturians or Leon. It was first entituled the kingdome of Suprarbe then the chiefe towne of those mountainous parts Afterwards it tooke the name of Navarra most probably vnder Innicus Garcias at what time first descending from the mountaines where the former kings had kept themselues immur'd they tooke in Pampelona and the plaine countrey from the Moores By the raigne of Sanctius the Great
meanes of this marriage the Earledome of Begorre Lordship of Bearn became annexed to the house of Navarra as they doe yet continue Francis Earle of Foix Begorre Lord of Bearn and king of Navarra son to Gaston prince of Viane son to Gaston the fourth and Leonora He dyed young sans issue Iohn duke of Albret in the right of his wife Catherine sister to Francis succeeding in the kingdome of Navarra the Earledome of Begorre and soveraigne Lordship of Bearn He lost Navarra vnto Ferdinand the fift and Elizabeth kings of Castille Aragon since incorporated with the kingdome of Castille retayning onely the countries of Begorre Bearne and the title of Navarra left vnto his successours Henry d' Albret titulary king of Navarra son to Iohn duke of Albret and Catherine Anthony de Bourbon duke of Vendosme prince of the blood in right of his wife Ioane d' Albret daughter to Henry d' Albret Earle of Begorre Lord of Bearn titulary king of Navarra Henry the third king of Navarra son to Anthony de Bourbon and Ioane d' Albret After the murther of Henry the third the last French king of the house of Valois ●e succeeded in the kingdome of France by the name of Henry the fourth being the next of the line masculine and descended from S. Lewes after infinite troubles mastered and ouerpast and a fast peace established in that kingdome slaine of late yeares in Paris by that bloody Assassine Ravaillart Lewes the thirteenth son to Henry the fourth succeeding now in the kingdome of France and in the right and title of Navarra THE KINGDOME OF ARAGON THE estate was begun shortly after that of Suprarbe or Navarra in the raigne of Garcias Innicus the second king of Suprarbe by one Aznarius son to Eudo the Great Duke of Aquitaine in France who hauing taken from the Moores certaine townes about the riuers Aragon and Subordanus by the good leaue of that Prince entitled himselfe from the riuer Earle of Aragon subiect then as were his successours for some time after vnto the kings of Suprarbe and commaunding here in nature of Marqueses In Fortunius sonne to Garcias Innicus king of Navarra and Vrraca sister to Fortunius Ximinius the last Earle hereof who deceased without issue the Earledome was annexed to the house and kingdome of Navarra King Sanctius the Great againe divided Aragon from Navarra giuing it with the title of king to his bastard sonne Ramir. The extent of the country was but little at what time vnder Ramir the first it was first made a kingdome By the time of king Ramir the second Saragoça Huescar and other townes being wonne from the Moores it became enlarged ouer the whole countrey called now Aragonia By the marriage of Petronilla daughter to Ramir the second vnto Raimund Berengarius the fift Earle of Barcelona in the yeare 1137 the country of Catalonia was added By Raimund son to Raimund Berengarius the fift the Earledome of Russillon By Iames the first the kingdomes of Valentia and of the Ilands of Mallorça and Menorça conquered from the Moores the present extent of the kingdome of Aragon In forreine parts Peter the third annexed to the house of Aragon the kingdome of Sicilye Iames the second the Iland of Sardinia Alfonsus the fift Naples all which the kings of Spaine in right hereof doe at this day enioy The Princes were Aznarius the first Earle of Aragon in the raigne of Garcias Innicus the second king of Suprarbe The country then onely contained certaine small townes about the riuer Aragon occasioning the name enlarging afterwards as did the conquests hereof Aznarius the second son to Aznarius the first Galindus son to Aznarius the second Semenus Aznarius son to Galindus slaine in the battaile of Ronceval against the Emperour Charles the Great Semenus Garcias vncle to Semenus Aznarius Fortunius Semenus or Ximinius He deceased without issue Fortunius king of Navarra Earle of Aragon in right from his mother Vrraca sister to Fortunius Semenus Sanctius Abarca king of Navarra brother to Fortunius king of Navarra succeeding in the Earledome of Aragon by the same right Garcias Sanctius king of Navarra son to Sanctius Abarca Sanctius Garcias and Ramir ioint kings of Navarra son to Garcias Sanctius Garcias the Trembler king of Navarra son to Sanctius Garcias Sanctius the Great king of Navarra and Earle of Castille son to Garcias the Trembler He againe divided Aragon from Navarra erecting it into a petty Kingdome in the person of Ramir his base son Ramir the first naturall son to Sanctius the Great King of Navarra the first King of Aragon advanced hereunto by his father at the earnest suite of his step-mother Elvira the defence of whose life and honour he had voluntarily vndertaken vniustly accused of adultery by her vnnaturall sonne Garcias de Nagera an honourable and iust beginning of afterwards so renowned and famous a Kingdome Sanctius the seauenth son to Ramir the first He was elected King of Navarra after Sanctius son to Garcias de Nagera Peter the first son to Sanctius the seauenth king of Aragon and Navarra Alfonsus the first King of Aragon and Navarra brother to Peter the first and son to Sanctius the seaventh Ramir the second surnamed the Monke King of Aragon brother to Peter the first and Alfonsus the first and to son to Sanctius the sevaenth Navarra by the wil of Alfonsus the first returned vpon the right heire thereof Ramir Earle of Mouçon descended from Garcias de Nagera The Kingdome of Aragon at this time contained onely the present country of Aragonia Raimund the first Earle of Barcelona in the right of his wife Petronilla daughter to Ramir the second succeeding in the Kingdome of Aragon In those two Princes the houses and estates of Aragon and Barcelona were vnited into one family and Kingdome Raimond the second King of Aragon son to Raimund the first and Petronilla Hee chaunged his name to Alfonsus Gerard the last Earle of Russillon deceasing without issue he added that Earledome to the dominion hereof Peter the second son to Raimund the second or Alfonsus Drawne on it is vncertaine by what superstitious zeale or necessity of state in the yeare 1214 he made the Kingdome of Aragon tributary to Pope Innocent the third and the See of Rome Repenting as it seemeth afterwards of this errour he tooke part with the Albigenses in France slaine in their quarrell by Simon Earle of Montfort and his crossed followers Iames the first son to Peter the second Hee tooke from the Moores their two Kingdomes of Valentia and of the Ilands of Malorça and Menorça remaining since parts of the Kingdome of Aragon He deceased in the yeare 1314. Peter the third son to Iames the first King of all the dominions of Aragon the Ilands of Malorça and Menorça excepted giuen with the title of King to Iames his yonger brother by his father Iames the first revnited notwithstanding not long after to the Kingdome of Aragon He married
of the nation to the South and East are fully accomplished the Sea-coasts of Afrique Brasil Asia perfectly viewed forts colonies of the Portugalls planted in convenient places the way to the East Indies by the backe of Afrique traced out the riches of the East brought by Sea into Europe the great navies and armies of the Aegyptian Sultans of other barbarous Princes discomfited ouerthrowne and no small part of Aethiopia India Persia subdued or made tributary Iohn the third son to Emanuel Sebastian son to Iohn Prince of Portugal son to Iohn the third With more then youthfull folly adventuring his person against the Moores in Afrique yong vnmarried without any knowne successour that might continue the house he was there vnfortunately slaine at the battaile of Alcaçar in the yeare 1578. Henry the second Cardinall and Bishop of Evo●a son to king Emanuel In this Prince being a Priest vnmarried and leauing no heires ended the line masculine of the kings of Portugal He deceased in the yeare 1580. Philip son to the Emperour Charles the fift Isabel daughter to king Emmanuel the first Monarch of Spaine since the Gothes his Competitour Don Antonio naturall son to Lewes son to king Emmanuel driuen out Philip the third son to Philip the second Philip the fourth son to Philip the third By this meanes after so many chaunges and successions Spaine as hath beene declared is become at this day divided into three distinct kingdomes vnited vnder one Monarch but otherwise differing in Lawes in the manner of their government 1 of Castille Leon whereof Navarra Granado are parts 2 of Aragon 3 of Portugal contayning together 18 lesser divisions or Provinces 1 of Portugall betwixt the rivers Minio Duero 2 betwixt the Duero Taio 3 betwixt the Taio Guadiana 4 Castillia la Veia 5 Castillia la Nueva 6 Asturia 7 Biscaia 8 Galitia 9 Guipuscoa 10 Navarra 11 Estremadura 12 Andaluzia 13 Granado 14 Murcia 15 Aragonia 16 Valentia 17 Catalonia 18 and the Land of Russillon The occasions of the names of Portugall Castille we haue before related Galitia Asturia were called thus from the Calaeci and Astures their auncient inhabitants Guipuscoa Biscaia corruptly from the Vascones intruding hereinto Granado Murcia Valentia from their chiefe cities thus named Aragonia from the riuer Arga or Aragon where the state begun Navarra from the more euen plainer situation thereof Andaluzia from the Vandals or Silingi there sometimes inhabiting Russillon from the auncient Castle so named Estremadura from the riuer Duero beyond the which it lay the bounds sometimes of the Christians Moores the name in continuance of time being remoued further from the riuer Southward vnto the Guadiana as it hapned vpon the like occasion vnto those of Northumberland in England and Austria or Oosterriech in Germany The name of Catalonia some haue drawne from the Catti and Alani there inhabiting together Others from the Catalauni an ancient French people Both vncertainly Their descriptions follow THE SEAVENTH BOOKE Contayning the Chorographicall description of Spaine PORTVGAL BOunded vpon the South and West with the Atlantique Ocean intercepted betwixt the rivers Guadiana and Duero vpon the North with the rivers Minio and Avia dividing it from Galicia and vpon the East with a line from the towne of Ribadania standing vpon the Avia drawne by the river Duero and the towne of Miranda vnto the Guadiana a litle below Badaios then with the river Guadiana continued from thence vnto the Ocean dividing it from Andaluzia Estremadura and the two Castilles It contayneth 400 miles in length in breadth where it is widest 100 miles where it is narrowest fourescore miles The country is healthy pleasant but not so fruitfull yeelding litle corne shipped hither for the greatest part from neighbouring countries enriched chiefely by meanes of the trade of the nation in Afrique Brasil and the Indies and rather by forreine then home-bred cōmodities It is divided into the parts named from their situations betwixt the Taio and Guadiana betwixt the Taio and the Duero and betwixt the Duero and Minio PORTVGAL BETVVIXT THE TAIO AND GVADIANA THis is the most wilde and desert part of the kingdome dry leane asperous peopled with few townes neither those very populous The South part hereof is named Algarve divided from the rest of the countrey by a line drawne from the Guadiana betwixt the litle rivulets Vataon and Careiras Westwards vnto the litle towne of Odeseiza vpon the Moores and with that title given to Alfonsus the third by Alfonsus the tenth king of Castille continued since in his Successours stiled now Kings of Portugal Algarve Chiefe townes here are Elvis Portelegre Bishops Sees Beia supposed to be Pax Iulia of Pliny Ptolemy then a Roman colonie and one of the 3 juridicall resorts of Lusitania The towne is meane and ill inhabited Setunel Salacia of Ptolemy now a noted port situated at the mouth of the river Palma Evora Ebora of Pliny Antoninus surnamed Faelicitas Iulia and free of the rights of the auncient Latines now an Arch-bishops See and Vniversity founded of late yeares by Cardinall Henry afterwards king of Portugall seated in the middest of a spacious pleasant plaine surrounded with wooddy mountaines the chiefe towne of the countrey Olivença beyond the river Guadiana in the parts belonging sometimes vnto Baetica In the kingdome of Algarve Tavila Balsa of Ptolemy Pliny Faro supposed to be Ossonoba of Ptolemy and Antoninus Lagos all three noted parts vpon the Ocean More within the land Sylvis a Bishops See Neere to Lagos lyeth the noted Promontory de Santo Vincente named thus from the reliques of that holy Martyr brought hither from Valentia by certaine persecuted Christians flying the cruelty of Abderrahmen the first king of the Spanish Moores remoued afterwards to Lisbona by king Ferdinand Strabo Ptolemy call it Promontorium Sacrum adjudged then to be the furthest point of the world towards the West The auncient inhabitants of this part of the kingdome were the Celtici and Turdetani of Ptolemy and Strabo continuate with those other of the same names inhabiting Baetica Strabo nameth the wedge of land where lyeth the Promontory Cuneum called thus from the forme thereof PORTVGAL BETVVIXT THE TAIO AND DVERO COntayning the part of the countrie lying betwixt those two rivers Chiefer townes are Lisbona Oliosipon of Ptolemy Olisipon of Antoninus Olyssippo of Solinus Olysipo of Pliny a municipium of the Romans surnamed Faelicitas Iulia afterwards made a kingdome of the Moores then vpon the surprisall thereof by Alfonsus the first the royall seate of the Kings of Portugal now an Archbishops seate the residence of the Vice-royes and a populous and flourishing Empory the staple of all the Merchandise comming from the conquests of the Portugals situated vpon fiue rising hills vpon the right shore of the river Taio and about fiue miles from the
Aragonia The country seemeth a continuate garden the fields in regard of the mild temperature of the Heauens garnished all the yeare long with sweet-smelling flowres and miraculously euery-where abounding with Pomegranates Limons and other delicious fruite-trees Otherwise for corne it yeeldeth not that plenty which might suffice the inhabitants The sheepe heere beare the finest fleece thorough the whole Spaine being as some relate of the breed of Cottes-would in England transported into this Continent in the raigne of Ferdinand the fift The inhabitants by reason of their too great pleasure delicacy are accompted lesse warlike then the rest of the Spanish nation Of these were reckoned of late yeares no fewer then 22000 families of the Moriscos for the most part inhabiting the country and like vnto those of the Alpuxarras retaining the language as in a manner the behaviour and manner of liuing of the auncient Moores with the rest of that race in Spaine banished into Afrique by King Philip the third Chiefer townes here are Orihuela Orcelis of Ptolemy a Bishops See vpon the riuer Segura and confines of Murcia Alicante Illicias of Ptolemy Illici of Pliny Illice of Mela and Ilicis of Antoninus a free Colony of the Romans and giuing the name to the bay called by Mela Sinus Illicitanus now the bay of Alicante a noted port vpon the Mediterranean Denia Dianium of Ptolemy Strabo Pliny and Solinus a stipendiary towne of the Romans first founded by the Massillians seated vpon a hill vpon the brinke of the Mediterranean ouer which it enioyeth a faire and large prospect Hereof was entitled the Marquesse of Denia of the house of Roias and Sandoval since created Duke of Lerma Betwixt this towne and Alicante lyeth the great Promontory Ferraria named Artemus Dianium and Hemeroscopium by the auncients Gandia giving the title and name to the Dukes thus stiled of the house of Borgia a petty Vniversity lately instituted by the Dukes Valentia Valentia of Ptolemy Pliny Mela and Antoninus then a Colony of the Romans founded by Iunius Brutus by the Moores afterwards made the head city of the kingdome thus named now an Archbishops See and the chiefe city of the Province situated vpon the right shore of the riuer Guadalivar some 3 miles from the Mediterranean The towne is rich faire well traded and exceedingly pleasant Here were borne vnder contrary starres the learned Lodovicus Vives and that monster of Popes and men Alexander the sixt Bishop of Rome Xativa Setabis of Strabo and Ptolemy a Bishops See situated vpon the riuer Xucar Xelva or Chelva supposed by Florianus to be Incibilis of Livy where Hanno was ouercome by Scipio African the great Sogorve Segobriga of Ptolemy and Strabo the chiefe city of the Celtiberi now a Bishops See Morvedre vpon a river thus named Saguntum of Strabo Ptolemy and Pliny and Saguntus of Mela and Antoninus founded by the Zacynthians confederate with the Romans destroyed by Hannibal a little before the second Punique warre and reedified afterwards by the Romans and made one of their Colonies The auncient inhabitants of the country of Valentia were parts of the Bastita● Contestani Edetani and Celtiberi of Ptolemy and other more auncient Authours ARAGONIA LYing with an equall division vpon both sides of the riuer Ebro hauing vpon the South Valentia and Aragonia vpon the West the two Castilles vpon the North the riuer of Aragon Navarra vpō the East the Pyrenaean mountaines and France The countrey is nothing so pleasant and fruitfull as are the parts immediatly before described ouerrun with the branches of Idubeda of the Pyrenaean Mountaines and commonly drie and scanted of waters where it is not refreshed with rivers and for this cause ill inhabited especially towards the Mountaines Pyrenaean where in regard of this want in some places neither towne nor house are to be seene for many dayes journeye Chiefer townes are Albarracino a Bishops See Daroca vnder Sierra Balbaniera Calataiut vpon the riuer Xalon named thus from Aiub a Saracen prince the founder thereof Some halfe a mile from hence and vpon the Xalon with whose streames it is almost round encompassed ariseth the hill Baubola the seate sometimes of the city Bilbis of Ptolemy Bilbilis of Strabo and Antoninus a municipium of the Romans and the countrey of the Poet Martial Aboue this hill the litle river Cagedo falleth into the Xalon mentioned likewise by the Epigramatist Taradona Turiaso of Ptolemy Antoninus a Bishops See situated neere to Monte Moncaio and the borders of Castille Saragoça Caesaraugusta of Ptolemy Strabo Pliny Antoninus then a Colonie and Municipium of the Romans and one of their seaven juridicall resorts of Tarraconensis named thus from the Emperour Augustus Caesar by whom it was first made a colony formerly being called Salduba from certaine neighbouring Salt-wiches yet extant in the Mountaines Vnder the Moores it became the head of a particular kingdome thus named recovered in the yeare 1118 by the Christians and afterwards made the chiefe residence of the kings of Aragon It is now an Arch-bishops See an Vniversity and the seate of the Inquisition and Vice-roye of the province situated in a goodly champian vpon the right shore of the river Ebro The city is faire large having wide open and hansome streetes and contayning 17 parishes besides 14 monasteries sundry chappels dedicated to the blessed Virgin amongst the which is that called Nuestra Senora del Pilar beleeued by this credulous people to haue beene erected by Iames surnamed the Lesser the Apostle of Spaine and patron of the Castillians Beyond the Ebro Cuera vpon the river Gallego Fraga vpon the river Senga Gallica Flava of Ptolemy and Gallicum of Antoninus Balbastro vpon the Senga Burtina of Ptolemy Bortina of Antoninus now a Bishops See Monçon Huesca Osca of Strabo Ptolemy and Antoninus the place where Sertorius in Plutarch detayned as hostages for their fathers fidelity the children of the Spanish nobility vnder the pretence of trayning them vp in learning afterwards vpon their revolt cruelly murthered by him It is now a Bishops See and a petty Vniversity Venasque amongst the Pyrenaean mountaines Iacca amongst the same mountaines a Bishops See the first seate or residence of the Kings of Aragon From hence were named the Iaccetani of Ptolemy Strabo and Lacetani of Pliny The ancient inhabitants of Aragonia were the Iaccetani Cerretani and Lacetani now mentioned with parts of the Celtiberi Illergetes and Edetani CATALONIA BOunded vpon the West with Valentia and the river Cinia vpon the North with Aragonia vpon the East with the Earledome of Russillon and the Pyrenaean Mountaines from France and vpon the South with the Sea Mediterranean betwixt the riuer Cinia Cabo de Creux The countrey is hilly full of woods yeelding small store of corne wine and fruites enriched more thorough its maritine situation then by home-bred commodities Chiefer townes are
son to the Emperour Lewis the Godly Charles surnamed the Fat Emperour of the Romans and King of Germany and Italy younger son to Lewis the Auncient and brother to Carloman He deceased in the yeare 888 without issue the last King of Italy of the French and house of Charles the Great succeeded vnto by Berengarius Duke of Friuli Guy Duke of Spoleto other petty tyrants of the Italian Nation the posterity of Charles the Great commaunding in France and Germany being then illegitimate or in nonage and the power of the French thorough their factions the many divisions of that grand monarchy then much declined The whole time that the French commaunded in this province accompting from the overthrow and conquest of Desiderius and the Lombards by Charles the Great vnto the decease of the Emperour Charles the Fat lasted 114 yeares THE KINGDOME OF GERMANY OR EAST-FRANCE THis kingdome was begun as before in the person of Lewis surnamed the Auncient second son to the Emperour Lewis the Godly vnto whose lot it fell in the division of the French Monarchy betwixt him and his brethren Lotharius and Charles the Bauld It contayned all Pannony and the parts of Germany subject to the French Empire After the decease of the Emperour Conrade the first without heires this likewise left off to be French commaunded ever after by princes of the Dutch Nation and resolving into its old name of Germany againe the name and memory of France and of the French extinguished The Kings here of the house of France and Charles the Great and vntill the Dutch or Saxons follow Lewis before mentioned the founder of the kingdome second son to the Emperour Lewis the Godly Carloman Lewis and Charles surnamed the Fat sons to Lewis the first King raigning together the kingdome being divided amōgst them Charles the Fat sole King of Germany his two brethren Carloman Lewis deceasing without heires or issue lawfull After the decease of the Emperour Lewis the Stammeter King of West-France as the onely left heire of the Caroline line or of age to governe he became king of Italy and Emperour of the Romans a title for the greater power and mightinesse of this kingdome still afterwards continued in the princes hereof as during the French race so of that of the Saxons and since these became electiue vnto this day Arnulph naturall son to Carloman brother to Charles the Fat Lewis son to Arnulph Conrade the first son to Conrade brother to Lewis He deceased in the yeare 919 the last Emperour of the Romans and King of Germany of the French of the house of Charles the Great succeeded vnto by Henry surnamed the Fouler Duke of Saxony and by the Nation of the Dutch THE KINGDOME OF LOTREICH OR LORRAINE THis signifyed with the auncient French the kingdome of Lotharius being so called from Lotharius the second son to the Emperour Lotharius whose share it was of the French dominions in whom the kingdome first began It contayned all Austrasia lying in Gaule or in France within the Rhijn being divided from East-France or the kingdome of Germany by the river Rhijn from West-France by the Scheldt and from the kingdome of Burgundy by the Mountaines of the Iour and Vauge Lotharius the second deceasing without heires or legitimate the whole house of the Emperour Lotharius being extinguished after long debate and contention betwixt the Kings of West-France and Germany and sundry divisions revnions and alterations during the Caroline line in the raignes of the Emperour Otho the third and of Lewis the last French King of the house of Charles the Great this kingdome and name tooke end the title of Kings of Lorraine being then left off by those princes and the part hereof contayned betwixt the rivers Meuse the Scheldt belonging to the French Kings being incorporated with France and the other part lying betwixt the Meuse and the Rhijn being added vnto Germany divided afterwards into sundry lesser States partly at this day subject to the Empire partly to the family of Austria and Burgundy and to the States of the vnited provinces of the Netherlands the Dukedome of Lorraine Cl●ve Gulich Zweibruck Brabant Gelderlandt Luxemburg Limburg the Earledomes of Hollandt Zealandt Hainault Namur Zutphen the Lantgravedome of Elsatz the County Palatine of the Rhijn the Marquisate of the Sacred Empire the Lordship of Malines the Bishopricks of Vtreicht Luick Triers Colen Mentz Metz Toul Verdun Spier Worms and Strasburg whose originall and fortunes follow after we haue first set downe the names order of the Kings of Lorraine Lotharius the second the first king son to the Emperour Lotharius He dyed without lawfull issue Lewis surnamed the Auncient King of Germany and Charles the Bauld King of West-France sons to the Emperour Lewis the Godly after the decease of Lotharius the second vsurping this title and name dividing the kingdome betwixt them whereof Lewis had the part lying betwixt the Meuse the Rhijn Charles the part contayned betwixt the Meuse the Scheld Carloman Lewis Charles the Fat sons to Lewis the Auncient Kings of Germany of the part of Lorraine betwixt the Meuse and the Rhijn and Lewis surnamed the Stammerer son to Charles the Bauld Emperour of the Romans King of West-France of the part of Lorraine on this side the Meuse After the decease hereof Lewis and Carloman his two bastard sons succeeding in the kingdome of West-France surrendred their part of Lorraine vnto Carloman Lewis Charles the Fat the sons of Lewis the Auncient Kings of Germany before mentioned Charles surnamed the Fat son to Lewis the Auncient after the decease of his two brothers Carloman Lewis without heires Emperour of the Romans sole King of Germany Lorraine Arnulp base son to Carloman brother to Lewis the Fat Emperour of the Romans King of Germany of the whole Lorraine Zuentebald naturall son to the Emperour Arnulph King of the whole Lorraine He deceased without heires Lewis son to the Emperour Arnulph Emperour of the Romans King of Germany of the whole Lorraine Conrade nephew to the Emperour Lewis Emperour of the Romans King of Germany of the whole Lorraine He lost the kingdome of Lorraine vnto Charles surnamed the Simple King of West-France Charles surnamed the Simple son to the Emperour Lewis the Stammerer King of West-France of the whole Lorraine Vpon agreement made with the Emperour Henry the first he restored vnto him the part hereof betwixt the Meuse the Rhiin Charles the Simple King of West-France of Lorraine on this side the Meuse and Henry the first Emperour of the Romans and King of Germany and of Lorraine beyond the Meuse Rodulph of Burgundy King of France and of Lorraine on this side the Meuse Lewis the fourth French King and of Lorraine on this side the Meuse Otho the first Emperour of the Romans and King of Germany of
devourers that they are growne into a Proverbe It is divided into the Higher and the Lower Limousin called otherwise La Marche de Limousin which is the more hilly asperous part towards Auvergne Chiefer townes are Soubsterraine vpon the riuer Le Grande Creuse neere vnto the confines of Berry Dorat Confoulat both of them vpon the river Vienne Limoges Ratiastum of Ptolemie and civitas Lemavicum of Antoninus a Bishops sea and the Seneschaussee and chiefe towne situated vpon the river Vienne The citty is very populous for the bignesse rich and well gouerned inhabited by an industrious people enimies of slough not enduring idle persons but constraining all to work for this cause named by the French the prison of beggers In a solitary place not farre from hence is the Abbey of Grand-mont naming the Religious order thus called These hitherto lye in the Higher Limousin In the Lower Limousin are Vzarche amongst mountaines vpon the river or torrent Vezere with whose fierce and violent streames it is round incompassed strong for this cause and by artificiall meanes occasioning the French Proverbe Qui a maison a Vzerche a chasteau en Limousin Tullez a Bishops sea Brive la Gaillard Limousin anciently were the Lemovices of Caesar Strabo and Plinie the Limvici of Ptolemie and the Lemavici of Antoninus PERIGORT HAving vpon the North Limousin vpon the East Auvergne Quercy vpon the South Gascoigne and vpon the West Xaintoigne part of Guienne The country is like to Limousin drie rockie and mountainous stucke with woods and trees of all sorts especially of Chesnuts The aire is very pure and temperate in regard whereof the people here as in Limousin are very healthie and vsually liue long Cheifer townes are Perigueux Vessuna of Ptolemy and Ciuitas Petrogoriorum of Antoninus a Bishops sea a Seneschaussee and the best towne in a pleasant vallie environed with viny downes diuided into two townes distant some 100 paces asunder whereof the part wherein the Bishop ordinarily resideth retaineth still the name of Vesune Here remaineth yet sundry markes of its Roman greatnes amongst others the vast ruines of an Amphi-theater Sarlat a Bishops sea Bregerat vpon the riuer Dordonne Nontron defended with a strong castle Marsac Here springeth a well which ebbeth and floweth with the riuer of Bourdeaux Perigort was aunciently the Petrocorij of Caesar Strabo and Ptolemy the Petrogori of Pliny and the Petrogorij of Antoninus GVIENNE THis as hath beene before related is the corrupt word of Aquitania During the command of the English the Dukedome or generall name hereof comprehended all Gascoigne Rovergne Quercy Perigort Limousin Engoulmois and Poictiers with the foure Seneschaussees of Xainctes Bourdeaux Basatz and Baionne It now only containeth these foure last Seneschaussees the rest being excluded from the name and account hereof since their revolt from vnder the English goverment and incorporation to the crowne of France The bounds now are vpon the North Poictou vpon the South the Pyrenaean Mountaines and Spaine vpon the West the Ocean taken betwixt Spaine and Poictou and vpon the East Limousin Engoulmois Quercy and Gascoigne It comprehendeth the many lesser countries of Rochelois and Xaintoigne Le Marquisate de Fronsadez Le Pais entre les deux Mers Bourdelois Le Pais de Medoc Bucqs Le Pais Lapourd Les Landes and Bazadois divided amongst the foure Seneschaussees before mentioned The part towards the Pyrenaean Mountaines is cold mountainous and barren especially for wines Betwixt Bourdeaux and Baionne where lie Les Landes and Le Pais de Bucqs the country is sandie desert and almost fruitlesse The like affected are the parts betwixt Bourdeaux and the mouth of the river Gironde along the left shore thereof sauing that in steed of dry sandie plaines the wastes are here taken vp with waters and deepe vnpassable fennes and marishes The more fruitful are Xaintoigne especially for corne generally all the inland country extraordinarily aboue the rest Le Pais entre les Deux Mers The inhabitants are vsually tall of stature strong actiue generous free haters of basenesse and servitude and well practised in armes Townes of better note are Rochelle Santonum Portus of Ptolemy the Bailliage of the country named from hence Le Rochelois a noted Port seated vpon the Westerne Ocean and amongst deepe marishes towards the land The towne is exceeding strong as well in regard of this situation as of the many platformes bulwarkes and curious defences the iealous inhabitants of later times haue raised famous for a miraculous nine months siege in the yeares 1572 1573 which it sustained against Charles the ninth and the whole power of France It hath still held for them of the reformed Religion their surest retrait in time of warre by ancient exemptions gouerned by its owne magistrates in the manner of a free state Rochelois or the country of Rochelle is by Merula accounted within Xaintoigne Sainctes Mediolanium of Ptolemie Mediolanum of Strabo and civitas Santonum of Antoninus a Bishops sea and the Seneschaussee and chiefe towne of Xaintoigne vpon the riuer Charente S. Iean d' Angely vpon the riuer Boutonne Marans a little Port at that mouth of the riuer in a marishy situation Pons vpon the riuer Seugne Blaye a towne a castle vpon the Gironde held by a garrison commanding the riuer and passage vnto Bourdeaux Here the English ships going for Bourdeaux through an ancient iealousie of the French are to vnlade their Ordnance Bourg sur mer vpon the Dordonne surnamed thus from the widenesse of the riuer containing here some two miles ouer Retraite vpon the Dordonne neere vnto the confluence thereof and of the Garonne The townes hitherto lye in Xaintoigne the Santones of Caesar Strabo Plinie Ptolemie and Antoninus Fronsac a strong towne vpon the Dordonne in the Marquisate of Fronsadez Libourne at the meetings of the Dordonne and the Garonne Here the Garonne and Dordonne loose their names in the Gironde or riuer of Bourdeaux S. Macier These two last lie in the country Entre les Deux Mers named thus from its situation betwixt the two wide great riuers of the Dordonne Garonne Bourdeaux Burdegala of Strabo Ptolemie civits Burdegalēsium of Antoninus now an Archbishops sea the Parliament and chiefe citty of Guienne situated amongst marishes vpon the left shore of the Garonne The citty is very large containing about a third part of Paris beautified with faire and goodly buildings populous and rich one of the most flourishing Empories of the kingdome the staple for Gascoigne wines well knowne vnto the English and Dutch Marchants and honoured with an Vniversitie founded by king Lewis the eleauenth Esparre vpon the Gironde These two lye in Bourdelois anciently the Burdegalenses of Antoninus the Bituriges Iosci of Strabo Bituriges Vbisci of Plinie and the Bituriges Vipisci of Ptolemy surnamed thus to note their distinction from the Bituriges Cubi inhabiting sometimes Berry Soulac Solacus vicus of
Aurelius Cepio and Manlius over throwne in Gaule and Italie by Marius and Luctatius Catulus The Marsi not improbably now Ditmarse and Stormarse in the Dukedome of Holstein The Semnones the Semnones of Strabo and Ptolemie now after Willichius the diocese of H●velb●●g after Glareanus Lusatz after Altham●● L●s●tz or part hereof and of Meissen continued betwixt the rivers Elb the Spreee after Pirckhermerus part of the Marquisate of Brandenburg betwixt the Elb and the Spree the Dukedome of Pomere● after Mont●●● Here begun the great and famous nation of the Suevi containing all the North and East-parts of Germany and besides these comprehending the sundry different names and people following in my author The Longobardi the Longobardi of Ptolemy and Lancosargi of Strabo after Willichius and Ph. M. inhabiting the Diocese of Meydburg and Halbersta●t in Saxony Meissen or VVestphal●n after Glareanus after Pirckhermerus the parts only of Westph●lia where lie the countries of Marck and Bergen These afterwards removed into Pannonia from whence after a short abode they againe flitted into Italy called in by Narses Lieutenant in the Gothish warres for the Emperour Iustinian occasioning their the name nation and kingdome of the Lombards The Reudigni now after Willichius the part of Pomere● neighbouring vnto D●ntzijck with the Aviones now part of Pomeren and Mecklenburg after Glareanus adioining to the Wixel after Pirckhermerus The Angli the Angili of Ptolemy Birtius seemeth to place these in the Dukedome of Schleswijck where is the towne now called Angelen In the waine of the Romane Empire and in the raigne of the Emperour Valentinian the third with the Saxons these removed into the Iland of Great Brittaine giving afterwards the name vnto the most renowned English nation The Varini the Varini of Pliny and Viruni of Ptolomy after Willichius now the New Marches of Brandenburg The Eudoses The Suardones now part of Meissen after Althamerus The Nuithones the Teutones of Ptolemy and Mela after Ph. M. now the Diocese of Havelburg in the Midle Marches of Brandenburg after Pirckhermerus with the Avarpi the countrie about the townes of Berlin Brandenburg The Hermunduri the Hermunduri of Pliny the Hermondori of Strabo after Willichius now part of Bohemia and Meissen extended along the course of the river Elb from the head thereof vnto the Semnones after Althamerus the part of Bohemia about the head of the Elb Meissen after Montanus The Narisci after Willichius Voitlandt and Nortgow Nortgow after Althamerus The Marcomanni the Marcomanni of Ptolemy and Strabo after Willichius now the country of Moravia about Olmuntz Brin and vnto Presburg in Hungary and the Danow after Glareanus part of Moravia after Althamerus inhabiting first Moravia afterwards Bohemia the Boij being vanquished and driven out after Pirckhermerus Moravia with part of Hungary vnto the Danow and the towne of Presburg Moravia after Montanus The Quadi the Quadi of Ptolemy after Willichius now the part of Moravia about Glocow and Iegersdorff with part of the Lesser Poland and of Schlesi about Sweinitz part of Moravia after Glareanus after Ph. M. Moravia and part of Sclesi Moravia and Schlesi after Althamerus after Montanus the Lower Austria The Marsigni after Willichius with the Gothini now part of Schlesi of the Vpper Hungary Schlesi and Poland after Glareanus Duringen after Althamerus after Pirckhermerus with the Turoni the parts of Nortgow about Amberg and to the Mountaines of B●h●imerwald with the Turoni now Schlesi after Montanus The Burii after Ph. M. now the farthest part of Schlesi towards the river Wixel Poland towards the head of the Wixel after Althamerus after Pirckh●●merus now Schlesi about Pres●●w with part of Poland on this side of the river Wixel The Osi part now of Mor●via after Ph. M Ditmarse after Althamerus The Gothini The Arij 〈…〉 Elysij and Naharvali parts of the Suevi Lygij after Willichius now the part of Poland neighbouring to the Wixel where lie the townes of Petro●●w Posna Gnesna and Cur with others The Gotho●es the Guttones of Pliny and not vnprobably the Batones of Strabo after Glareanus now Prussen after Althamerus part of Prussen 〈…〉 The Rugij now the Iland of Rugen belonging to the Dukes of Pomeren The Suiones situated in the Ocean now Norwaie after Birtiu● Sweathland after Willichius with the Sitones Sweathland after Glareanus and Alth●merus after Pirckhermerus Sweathland and Denmarke From hence doubtles hath proceeded the name of the Succi or the Sweathlanders with the Sitones the inhabitants of the greater Scandia of Ptolomie containing now Swethen Norway and part of Denmarke bounded vpon the North after Tacitus with a slow immoueable sea now the Frozen The Lemouij now Pomeren or part thereof after Willichius with the Rugij Leistandt in Glareanus after Althamerus Leiflandt The Aestyi on the right shore of the Suenian sea now Leiflandt after Willichius after Althamerus Pomeren or Prussen The Sitones neighbouring to the Suiones now Finlandt in Swethen after Willichius after Pirckhermerus Lei●●andt after Birtin● Sweathlandt part of Sweathlandt after Althamerus Here ended the S●evi and Germans of Tacitus for concerning the Pencini Vene●i and Fenni which people he likewise here mentioneth they lay beyond the riuer Wixel on the side of the Sarmatae reckned by my author amongst the Dutch onely in regard of their affinity with them in language maners and custome of liuing Ptolemy addeth vnto these of Tacitus the Sycambri Sicambri of Caesar extended after Pontanus most probably betwixt the Ysel and the riuers Lippe and the Roer and containing now A●nheim and Veluwe in Gelderland with part of Cleve on the further shore of the Rhijn The Ingriones with the Tencteri after Pirckhermerus now part of the Land of Hessen bordering vpon the Rhijn containing Hochruck the Earledomes of Nassaw Koningstein and Wederaw Wester-wald with other places The Intuergi after Pirckhermerus now the part of the Lower Palatin●●● lying without the Rhijn The Caritni after Ph M now the Dukedome of Wirtenberg after Pirckhermerus the Dukedome of Wirtenberg with the neighbouring part of Schwaben The Saxones feated vpon the neck of the Cimbrian Cherfonese and containing now the Dukedome of Holstein or the part thereof lying next to the Elb. In succeeding times these grew very mighty and famous with the Angli before mentioned disbourding into Great Britaine where they conquered the best and greatest part of that Noble Iland since called England and in this continent spreading along the Ocean from the riuer Eydore vnto the Rhijn amassed of sundry other of the Dutch nations vn●●●ng into this name The Sig●●ones Subalingij Cobandi Ch●li Phandusij and Char●●des with the Cimbri inhabiting the Cimbrian Chersonese now the two 〈◊〉 The Sident after Pirckhermerus now parts of the Dukedomes of Micklenburg and Pomeren The Pharodeni now part of Saxony after Pirckhermerus The Bugunti inhabiting betwixt the rivers Odera and Wixel The Ch●●mae containing now after Pirckhermerus with the 〈◊〉 M●iores and Angrivarij the parts of Westphalia and Saxony
the Rhijn Lewis the first Duke of Bavaria son to Otho Otho the second son to Lewis the first Marrying vnto Gertrude sole daughter vnto Henry Count Palatine of the Rhijn he added to his house the Palatinat Electorship of the Rhijn created Paltzgraue and Electour by the Emperour Fredericke the second Henry Duke of Bavaria and Count Palatine of the Rhijn sonne to Otho the second Lewis the second Duke of Bavaria and Count Palatine of the Rhijn sonne to Otho the second and brother vnto Henry Lewis the third Duke of Bavaria sonne to Lewis the second Hee was elected Roman Emperour and deceased in the yeare 1347. His elder brother Rodulph had for his share the Palatinate of the Rhijn and Nortgow or the vpper Palatinate together with the title of Electour the founder of the house of the present Paltzgraues and Electours Stephen Duke of Bavaria sonne to the Emperour Lewis of Bavaria His brothers William and Albert were successiuely Earles of Haynault Hollandt and Zealandt and Lords of West-Frieselandt Lewis another brother succeeded in the Marquisate and the Electourall dignity of Brandenburg Stephen of Ingolstadt Iohn of Munchen and Fridericke of Landshut named thus from such parts of the Dukedome they possessed Dukes of Bavaria sonnes to Stephen the first Ernest Duke of Bavaria son to Iohn of Munchen Albert surnamed the Godly sonne to Ernest. Albert the second son to Albert the first William sonne to Albert the second Albert the third sonne to William William sonne to Albert the third Maximilian and Albert sonnes to William the second Dukes of Bavaria in the yeare 1610. The rest of those who haue borne the title of Dukes of Bavaria and haue deceased without issue or not continued the house in regard of our promised methode wee omit Hereof were sometimes parts the Dukedomes of Steirmark Karnten and Earledome of Tirol with part of Austria whose relations follow THE DVKEDOME OF AVSTRIA THis State was first occasioned vpon the warres of the Hungarians who vexing Germanie with continuall excursions and alarums during the raignes of the Emperours Lewis the fourth Conrade Henry the first were the cause that there were ordained by these Princes in the border of the Empire betwixt this enimie and the Bavarians certaine limitary prefects to defend that frontiere from Oosten-reich or the Easterne kingdome by which name Germany was then distinguished from France of whose limit they were Guardians called then the Marquesses of Oosten-reich and by Latin writers corruptly Austrasia and Austria becomming afterwards haereditary and deriving this their title and name to the country now thus called accruing vnto them by their conquests and winnings from the Hungarians and by their after encroachments vpon the Dukes of Bavaria Vnto the Princes of this familie the most potent at this day through the Christian world are now subiect the Kingdomes of Spaine of the Indies Naples Sicilie Bohemia and Hungary the great Dukedomes of Milan Schlesi Steirmarke Karnten and Krain the Marquisates of Lausnitz and Marheren the Earledomes of Burgundie and Tirol Brisgow Sung●w the vpper Elsatz the greatest part of the Low Countries together with the kingdome of Germanie and the Empire of the Romans They were first as before stiled Marquesses then Dukes and now lastly Archdukes Their order and succession follow Leopold surnamed the illustrious sonne to Henry Earle of Bamberg descended from the Dukes of Schwaben the first Marquesse of Austria deriving the title and honour hereof to his ofspring and posterity the former after the custome of those times being only but such Leiftenants or Deputies of the Emperours created by the Emperour Henry the first about the yeare 928. Henry the first sonne to Leopold the Illustrious Albert sonne to Henry the first Ernest sonne to Albert. Leopold the second sonne to Ernest. Leopold the third sonne to Leopold the second Leopold the fourth sonne to Leopold the third Henry the second sonne to Leopold the fourth Marquesse of Austria and Duke of Bavaria He was the first Duke of Austria and added to the name and account hereof the country betwixt the rivers Ens and Inn giuen vnto him by the Emperour Fredericke Barbarossa in lieu of the Dukedome of Bavaria adiudged from him vnto Henry surnamed the Lion Duke of Saxonie Leopold the fift Duke of Austria brother to Henry and sonne to Leopold the fourth Hee most iniuriously detained prisoner Richard the first king of England in his voyage homewards out of the Holy Land suffering shipwrack vpon the coast of Istria and surprised travelling disguised through his country Hee added to the house of Austria the Dukedome of Steirmark purchased from Ottacarus the last Duke with the mony gotten by the ransome of the king of England Fredericke the first Duke of Austria sonne to Leopold the fift His elder brother Leopold succeeded in the Dukedome of Steirmarck He deceased without heires of his body Leopold the sixt eldest sonne to Leopold the fift and brother to Fredericke the first Duke of Austria and Steirmarck Fredericke the second Duke of Austria and Steirmarck sonne to Leopold the sixt Hee deceased sans issue in whom failed the line masculine of Leopold the Illustrious the two Provinces of Austria and Steirmarck becomming after this vsurped by stranger families Ottocarus sonne to Wenceslaus the first king of Bohemia by the pretended right of his wife Margaret daughter to Leopold the sixt succeeding in both Dukedomes Hee became likewise seazed of the countries of Karnten Krain and Marca Trevisana sold by Vlric their last Prince Overmatched by the greater power of the Emperour Rodulph the first hee quitted vnto him and the Empire all these his new got possessions vpon a new quarrell not long after slaine by him in battle at the riuer of Marckh Rodulph the first Emperour of the Romans and king of Germany by right of warre of the Empire Lord of Austria Steirmarck Karnten Krain and Marca Trevisana gotten from Ottocarus In the yeare 1283 by consent of the estates of the Empire assembled in a Diet at Auspurg hee divided these countries and other his hereditary possessions amongst his two sonnes Albert Rodulph and Meinard Earle of Tirol his brother in law whereof Albert the elder brother had Austria Steirmarck and Krain Rodulph Argow the vpper Elsatz and other peeces in Schwaben the proper inheritance of the house of Habspurg with the title of Duke of Schwaben and Meinard Karnten and Marca Trevifana Albert the first eldest sonne to the Emperour Rodulph the first Duke of Austria Steirmarck and Krain of the familie of Habsping created in the yeare 1283. After the decease of his father hee was elected Emperour of the Romans and king of Germanie Hee was slaine by Iohn sonne to his brother Rodulph Duke of Schwaben whose guardian hee had beene in his minoritie discontented with him for detaining his inheritance from him Rodulph created the first Archduke in a Diet held at Nurenberg Frederick the third Leopold the seauenth Henry the third Otho surnamed the
Charles the Great seemeth more probable for that Beda who lived not long before his raigne relateth the part of the Chersonese where sometimes dwelt the English in his time to haue lyen wast and empty of inhabitants without mentioning the Danes At this day they containe the parts of Hallandt and Sohonen in the maine land of Scandia all the Ilands within the straights of the Sundt with the North and South Iutlandts and the Dukedome of Schleswic in the Cimbrian Chersonese divided from the Saxons or Dutch by the river Eydore al now together called by the name of Dane marck or Denmarck signifying the limit of the Danes given first by the neighbouring Dutch to the marches or border hereof derived afterwardes to the whole country THE KINGDOME OF DENMARCK THe gouerment hereof hath been still vnder Kings electiue but where the next of blood most commonly haue succeeded now besides Denmarck Lords of Norwey Islandt and in a manner of whatsoeuer cold and inhabitable regions subiect to the Pole Articke and the North together with the great Dukedome of Holstein lying in Germany betwixt the rivers Eydore the Elb containing the particular country of Holstein Ditmarse Stormarse and Wagerlandt held hereby vnder the fier of the Dutch Emperours The first of their kings whereof we read in histories deseruing credit for those long descents from Dan in Grammaticus Saxo and Krantzius are meerely counterfeit and fabulous were Cochliarius before mentioned slaine with his whole army by Theodebert sonne to Theoderick king of Austrasia Godfrey in the raigne of the Emperour Charles the Great Hemingus nephew to Godfrey Sigifridus and Amilo nephewes also to Godfrey chosen by their seuerall factions and slaine in battle one against the other the side of Amilo prevailing Harioldus and Ragenfridus brothers vnto Amilo driuen out by the sonnes of Godfrey and exiled amongst the Suiones These all commanded in the time of Charles the Great From Christopher the second deceasing about the yeare 1333. to omit the more ancient for a great part fabulous or very confused the succession hath beene continued as followeth Waldemar the third king of Denmark son to Christopher He deceased without issue male Margaret daughter to Waldemar the third She married vnto Haquin king of Norwey After the decease of her husband and of her young sonne Olaus shee ruled both kingdomes transmitting them to succession She overcame and tooke prisoner Albert king of Sweathland whom she forced to resigne his kingdome added by this meanes to her other possessions and enthralled for a long time after to the Danish yoake She died without surviving issue about the yeare 1410. Eric Duke of Pomeren adopted by Queene Margaret descended of her sister Ingelburgis elected king of Denmarck Norwey and Swethen Wearied with tedious hard warres against the rebellious Sweathlanders the towne of Schleswic and the Hanse-citties hee voluntarily left those kingdomes retiring into his Dukedome of Pomeren where he died Christopher the third Count Palatine of the Rhijn sonne to Margaret sister to Eric after the departure hereof elected and succeeding in all the three kingdomes He deceased without issue Christiern the first Earle of Oldenburg and Delmenhorst after the decease of Christopher elected king of Denmarck and Norwey in the yeare 1448 Sweathland revolting and chusing a Prince of their owne nation He annexed to the house of Denmarcke the countries of Holstein Ditmarse Stormarse and Wagerland erected into a Dukedome by the Emperour Frederick the third He recouered likewise the kingdome of Swethen Iohn sonne to Christiern the first succeeding in all three kingdomes Christiern the second sonne to Iohn In this Prince the Sweathlanders after sundry revolts and revnions finally shoake off the yoake of the Danes gouerned ever since by their owne kings In the yeare 1522 hated for his crueltie he was driuen out and depriued of all his estates succeeded vnto by his vncle Frederick after ten yeares banishment and 27 yeares captivitie miserably dying in bonds Frederick the first younger brother to Iohn and sonne to Christiern the first after Christierne the second elected king of Denmarck and Norwey He first reformed religion in his dominions Christiern the third king of Denmarck and Norwey sonne to Frederick the first Frederick the second sonne to Christiern the third Christiern the fourth king of Denmarck and Norwey sonne to Fredericke the second now raigning THE SVIONES THis people are mentioned by Tacitus in his description of Germany being then a part of the Suevi and with the Sitones inhabiting the greater Scandia of Ptolomie By Aimonius with small difference they are named the Sueones in his fourth booke and 101 chapter By Iornandes de Rebus Geticis the Suethidi more neere vnto the moderne At this day by long corruption the Sueci giuing the name to the country now called Suecia or Sweathland extended for a great space of land betwixt the Balticke and the Frozen seas Their mention in more ancient authors is very sparing not bordering vnto or hauing then any affaire with the Romans French or other civill nations who might relate their acts or passing vnder the generall name of the Normans THE KINGDOME OF SWEATHLAND THeir government anciently and in the time of Tacitus was vnder kings commanding in full liberty and not at the will of the subject continued thither if we dare beleeue their histories from Magog sonne to Iaphet the yeare of the world 1745 and the 90 from the Deluge vnto our times In the raigne of the Emperour Charles the Great we finde them likewise to haue beene a free state different from that of the Danes entertaining then Harioldus and Ragenfridus kings of that nation driven out by the sons of Godfrey In the raigne of Sueno the first and of Canutus the Great agreeing with the raignes of the Emperours Henry and Conrade the second wee heare of them subiect to the Danes but by what meanes it is not manifest as neither how they became cleare from their servitude By Queene Margaret about the yeare 1387 and during the raigne of the Emperour Wenceslaus they were againe subdued to the Danish yoake after long warres sundry defections and recoveries not fully delivered herefrom vntill the yeare 1525 the raigne of the Emperour Charles the fift freed by Gustave whose posterity the Danes being expulsed haue ever since held the crowne The order of the first kings fabulous and confused we purposely omit From Albert and more cleare times they were continued as followeth Albert living in the raignes of the Emperours Charles the fourth and Wenceslaus Duke of Mecklenburg and king of Sweathland warred vpon and taken prisoner by Margaret Queene of Denmarck and Norwey Desirous of libertie he resigned his right of the kingdome vnto Margaret aforesaid Margaret Queene of Denmarck Norwey and Swethen by right of Armes and the resignation of Albert. Eric Duke of Pomeren king of Denmarck Norwey and Swethen adopted by Margaret Christopher Count Palatine of the
Rhijn king of Denmarck Norwey and Swethen son to Margaret sister to Eric aforesaid He deceased without issue Charles son to Canutus a knight of the country elected king of Sweathland after Christopher the Danes excluded Christiern the first king of Denmarck Norwey and Swethen Charles being driuen out Charles king of Swethen restored the second time Christiern the first king of Denmarck being againe excluded After the decease of Charles Steno a nobleman of the country governed the affaires of the realme during the rest of the time of Christiern the first Iohn king of Denmarck Norwey and Swethen sonne to Christierne the first about the yeare 1448 admitted by Steno and the Sweathlanders pressed with the warres of the Russes Christierne the second son to Iohn king of Denmarck Norwey and Swethen by armes and the right of his ancestours He afterwards lost all the three kingdomes driuen out in regard of his tyranny and cruelty Gustaue son to Eric a noble man of the country given by the Sweathlanders amongst the pledges for their fidelity to Christiern the second vpon the fame of Christiernes the Danish tyranny making an escape out of prison expulsing that enimie and elected king of Sweathland Since this time the Sweathlanders free from the Danish servitude haue beene still commaunded by princes of their owne nation Eric eldest son to Gustaue deposed vpon pretence of tyranny and misgoverning the state succeeded vnto by his brother Iohn Duke of Finlandt Iohn Duke of Finlandt son to Gustaue the first and brother to king Eric He marryed vnto Catharine daughter to Sigismond the first sister to Sigismond the second kings of Poland Sigismond son to Iohn and Catharine aforesaid before the decease of his father elected king of Poland afterwardes of Swethen vpon the cause of his different religion and the pretence of his breach of covenants with the people excluded and deposed by his factious nobility succeeded vnto by his vncle Charles Charles Duke of Suderman vncle vnto Sigismond the third king of Poland and younger sonne to Gustaue the first during the absence and warres of Sigismond and the Polonians created Administratour and governour of the kingdome afterwardes in the yeare 1608 elected and crowned king of Sweathland Gustave the second sonne to Charles king of Sweathland nowe raigning THE NORVEGIANS VVHether these were called thus from the country of Norwey or the country from them it is vncertaine We haue not yet read either name in any ancient author Both seeme more lately to haue been giuen from their Northren situation THE KINGDOME OF NORWEY THe coūtry by Aymonius was sometimes otherwise named Westerfold a part then of the Danish kingdome For thus it appeareth by his description hereof in his fourth booke and 101. chapter situated then to the West and North and thwarting the extreame point of the Iland of Great Brittaine It afterwardes became a distinct kingdome By meanes of the marriage of Haquin the last prince vnto Margaret Queene of Denmarcke it became annexed to the house of Denmarcke where it hath ever since continued After this maner the name of Germany is become at this day enlarged beyond the ancient over the provinces of Rhaetia and Noricum with parts of Gaule Pannonia as on the other side extended sometimes vnto the river Wixel the Frozen sea is since become straitned within the Eydore the sea Balticke and the confines of the Polonians the auncient then comprehending without the accompt of the moderne the kingdomes of Denmarke Norwey and Swethen with the greatest part of Poland and the moderne now containing lying without the limits and accompt of the auncient the countries of Seirmarck Karnten Krain and Tirol the parts of Austria Bauaria and Schwaben without the riuer Danow and of France betwixt the riuers Rhijn the Meuse and the Soasne The whole now accompted Germany speaking Dutch or subiect to the soverainety hereof may be diuided into three different States 1. the prouinces of the Low Countries 2. the confederacy of the Switzers 3. and the Empire or kingdome of the Germanes the present subiect of this discourse The originall of the many particular states we haue now related There remaineth the generall state or kingdome whereof the other are parts and subordinate THE KINGDOME OF GERMANY THis is otherwise called the Empire in regard of the residence therein of the Imperiall Roman Maiesty Italy being subdued by Odoacer and the Heruli and the rest of the Roman prouinces of the West by other Barbarous natiōs about the yeare 475 left of by Augustulus after an interregnum of 326 yeares resumed againe by Charles the Great king of the Frenchmen and by succession herefrom the French dominions being divided afterwards in the yeare 880 deriued vpon Charles surnamed the Fat king of Germany maintained euer since in the Princes hereof The country after that it became subiect to the Frenchmen was for a long time a part of their kingdome of Austrasia after the policy of those times divided into 4 maine provinces or Dukedomes of Franconia Saxonie Almaigne and Bauaria the parts lying now beyond the riuers of the Elb and Saltza and possessed then by the many nations of the Sclaues not being added vntill afterwards About the yeare 841 in the person of Lewis surnamed the auncient sonne to the Emperour Lewis surnamed the Godly the French Empire being then shared amongst the many sonnes hereof it was first made a distinct kingdome in which title the Princes haue still enioyed it their name of Emperour hauing beene since added vnto them onely as they are soveraigne Lords of Rome and Italy successours to Charles the Great and the French The kingdome contained onely at the time of its first erection the parts now bounded in with the Mountaines of Bohemia the Alpes the German Ocean and the riuers of the Rhijn Eydore Elb and Saltza including Pannonia a part then of Bauaria afterwards taken herefrom by the Hungarians By the Emperours Otho the third and Conrade the second the parts lying in Gaule betwixt the rivers of the Rhijn the Soasne and the Meuse were added The manner wee haue shewed in France By Henry the first and the succeeding Emperours vnto Frederick Barbarossa and by the armes of the Dukes of Saxonie and the Marqueses of Brandenburg were added the parts beyond the rivers Saltza and Elb containing now Mecklenburg Lawenburg Pomeren Meissen Lausnitz and the Middle and Newe Marches of Brandenburg held vnder the right hereof The order of the kings of Germany follow Lewis before mentioned surnamed the Ancient second sonne to the Emperour Lewis the Godly first king of Germany whose portion it was in the division of the French Monarchie betwixt him and his other brethren Lotharius and Charles the Bald. Carloman Lewis and Charles surnamed the Fat kings of Germany sonnes to Lewis the Ancient Charles the Fat sole king of Germany his two brothers Lewis and Carloman deceasing without heires or lawfull The male issue of his vncle the Emperour Lotharius failing
by the river Teya The country is pleasant healthie and abundantly fruitfull in corne and very excellent Wines Here groweth likewise plenty of Saffron also Ginger at the foot of the Mountaines neere Haimburg It is divided by the Danow into the Higher and the Lower Austria Chiefer townes in the Higher Austria are Lintz Aredate of Ptolemie at the confluence of the rivers Draun and the Danow Ens at the meetings of the riuers Danow and Ens. Neere herevnto where now is Lorch stood sometimes the towne Laureacum of Antoninus and the Author of Notitia the station then of the second Roman Legion and the Metropolis of Noricum Ripense Ips Gesodunum of Ptolemie at the meetings of the Danow and the Ips. Wien vpon the Danow Iuliobona of Ptolemie Vendum of Strabo Vindibona of Antoninus and Vindomana of the Author of Notitia the station then of the Tenth Roman Legion It is now the chiefe towne of the country a Bishops sea a noted Vniuersity and a strong fortresse against the Infidells renowned for a stout resolute siege which in the yeare 1529 it sustained against Soliman and the whole power of the Turkish Empire The walls hereof were built with part of the mony obtained for the ransome of Richard the first king of England taken prisoner by Leopold the fift Duke of Austria Haimburg at the confluence of the Danow and the Marckh Nere herevnto beginneth a ridge of Mountaines continued vnto the Rab named Cognamus Mons by Ptolemie and now by the Dutch from hence Haimburger-perg Newsidl vpon a great Lake thus called Newstat Waydhoven vpon the riuer Ips. Wels vpon the Draun Gmundt vpon the lake Gemundersee and the riuer Draun where it issueth from hence Here is great truck for salt digged forth of the bordering mountaines and by the Draun and Danow carried to Wien vnto other neighbouring places In the Lower Austria Krems vpon the left shore of the Danow The ancient inhabitants of the Lower Austria were part of the Marcomanni of Tacitus Those of the Higher Austria were parts of the Norici Ripenses and of the Vpper Pannonia The whole in a manner appertaineth now to the Archdukes of Austria BOHEMIA LIyng in a round circle in the heart of Germany and encompassed with wooddie mountaines part of the Hercynian bounded vpon the South with Austria and Bavaria vpon the West with the Vpper Palatinate and Voitlandt vpon the North with Meissen Lausnitz and part of Schlesi and vpon the East with Moravia The aire here is sharp piercing The country is rough and hilly rich in mineralls and yeelding sufficient plentie of corne and all other necessary provision wines excepted which here grow not or sowre Chiefer townes are Augst nere vnto the head of the riuer Elb. Konigingretz vpon the riuer Labe or Elb. Iaromir vpon the Elb. Kuttenberg where are mines of siluer Littomissel neere vnto the borders of Moravia Czaslaw Tabor a strong towne built by Ziska Budweis Maroboduum of Ptolemie after Lazius Prage an Archbishops sea and the chiefe citty of the kingdome seated in an open pleasant valley vpon both sides of the riuer Muldaw divided into three townes the Old the New Prage lying vpon the right shore of the Muldaw sometimes seuerally walled and now only parted and distinguished with a shallow ditch and the Lesser Prage standing vpon the left shore of the riuer and ioined to the old towne by a wide and spacious stone bridge of 24 arches Here now flourisheth a noted Vniuersitie founded by the Emperour Charles the Fourth Vpon a hill adjoyning to the Lesser Prage standeth the Castle of S. Wenceslaus the ordinary seat and royall pallace of the kings of Bohemia of the last Roman Emperours of the house of Austria Pilsen Schlani Laun vpon the riuer Egra Elbogen vpon the Egra where are hot medicinable bathes Egra a faire and large citty containing some three miles in compasse and seated vpon the river Egra in the confines of Bohemia and Nortgow sometimes Imperiall now subject to the kings of Bohemia The ancient inhabitants of Bohemia were the Boij before mentioned afterwards the Marcomanni and lastly the Sclaves MORAVIA BOunded vpon the South with the Lower Austria and the river Teya vpon the West with Bohemia the Mountaines thereof intervening vpon the East with Hungary and vpon the North with Schlesi divided from either likewise by Mountaines the Asciburgius of Ptolemy branching from the Sudetae or the Bohemian Mountaines The country in regard of such its situation resembleth the Area of an halfe Theater lying open onely towards Austria and the South vpon the other sides environed with great hils and rough forests being plaine within and exceedingly populous and fruitfull for corne wines and fat and rich pasturages The aire is noted to be somewhat vnhealthy as it commonly hapneth to fatter soiles debarred from the cleansing East and Northerne windes Chiefer townes are Igla vpon the riuer thus named and the frontire of Bohemia Znaim vpon the riuer Teya Niclasburg frontiring vpon Austria Brin vpon the riuer Schwatz Olmuntz the chiefe towne of the country and an Vniversity seated vpon the river Marckh Not far from hence in the hill Oderberg part of the mountaines confining this country and Schlesi springeth the great riuer Odera Cremser vpon the Marckh Radisch vpon the Marckh The ancient and first inhabitants of Moravia were the Marcomanni of Tacitus afterwardes the Sclaves thus distinguished The naturall language of the people as also of the Bohemians is the Sclavonian The country belongeth to the kings of Bohemia an appendant of that State SCHLESI BOunded vpon the South with Moravia and Bohemia vpon the West with La●snitz vpon the East with Poland and vpon the North with the Marquisate of Brandenburg It is likewise wholy encompassed with hils and mountaines the North towardes Brandenburg only excepted Within it is plaine rough and wooddy yet abounding in corne The hilly parts yeeld plenty of brasse and copper beside other mettals The aire is sharpe and piercing since lying open to the cold blustering windes of the North. Townes here of better note are Oppelen vpon the Odera Breslaw vpon the Odera a Bishops sea and the chiefe towne of the country large populous faire and orderly built with straight and open streets Glogaw vpon the Odera towardes Brandenburg Lignitz Sweinitz Neisse a Bishops sea vpon the riuer thus called The ancient inhabitants were parts of the Quadi Marsigni Gothini and Burij of Tacitus afterwards the Sclaves of Poland a part sometimes of that kingdome Their common language now is the Dutch excepting in the parts beyond the Odera towards Poland where the Sclavonian more prevaileth It is an appendant state of the kingdome of Bohemia subject to the princes thereof LAVSNITZ BOunded vpon the East with Schlesi vpon the South with Bohemia vpon the West with Meissen and vpon the North with the Marquisate of Brandenburg The country is rough and full of woods the
of their yce and trunckes of trees floating in them not much navigable The people are provident sober patient and industrious Those of the country exercise no manuall trades every man by a singular frugality being his owne artificer The nobility exceede not the dignitie of knights an honour conferred by the Prince Their language differeth only in dialect from the Dutch excepting that of the Fins which resembleth the Russes Their religion is the Lutheran or confession of Augspurg won first to Christianity vnder their king Beorn by S. Ansgarius the Apostle of the Danes They belong in matters Ecclesiasticall vnto the Bishop of Vpsal and those of Lincopen Scara Vexio Strengenes and Abo. Birtius reckoneth in the whole some 1400 parishes The king is electiue but most commonly of the blood royall and the next of kin to the deceased He is stiled king of Sweathland and of the Gothes and Vandals The truth of the two latter titles is vncertaine and to be much doubted of Iornandes placeth in the peninsula hereof the Gothes but who is not seconded by any more ancient and credited Historians At this day notwithstanding the more Southerne part of the kingdome confining with Denmarcke beareth the name of Gothia or Gotland whether from this nation it cannot well be knowne or falsely affecting that more glorious name The Vandals it is certaine spread not thus farre North seated in the continent of Germany along the South shore of the Suevian or Balticke sea It containeth sundry names and divisions of Gotland Suderman VVestman VVermeland Copperdale Helsingen Dalecarle Angerman East and VVest Bodden Finland Corel with others The more chiefe townes are in Gotland and next to Denmarcke Calmer a noted port vpon the sea Balticke Lincopen Scar Bishops seas Against these within the Balticke lyeth the Iland Gotlandt subject to the kings of Denmarcke whose chiefe towne is Wisbuy vpon the East side of the Iland a famous Empory sometimes now ruinous and much decaied Here is likewise Oelandt an Iland against Calmer defended with the strong castle of Borgholm subiect to the kings of Swethen In Suderman Strengnes a Bishops sea and Telge vpon the lake or bay Meler an arme of the sea Baltick Vpon the rocks nere Strengnes as likewise at Scar and Wisbuy in Gotlandt are engrauen sundry auncient vnknowne characters and inscriptions supposed to be of the Gothes In Westman Arosia rich in siluer mines In Vpland Vpsal an Archbishops sea the primate of the kingdome Here the kings of Sweath-land lye enterred Stockholm in an Iland at the mouth of the lake Meler a rich and florishing emporie and the chiefe citty of the kingdome defended with a magnificent and strong castle fortified with 400 great brasse ordinance In Finland Wiburg a strong fortresse and towne of warre opposed against the Russes The more auncient inhabitants of the part of the kingdome within the Sea Baltick were the Suiones of Tacitus part of the great nation of the Suevi of the Germans The part of Finlandt seemeth to haue beene thus first named and inhabited by the Fenni of the same authour The sea lying vpon the South hereof was named by Tacitus the Sueuian sea from the famous Sueui before mentioned which nation it diuided by Mela Sinus Codanus from whence doubtles proceeded the name of the Danes and by Ptolemie Oceanus Sarmaticus Sinus Venedicus from the bordering Sarmatae and Venidae It is a long and spacious creeke of the Westerne Ocean continued East and North from Denmarke for many hundred miles vnto beyond the Circle Articke It is called now the Sundt the Balticke or Oost Zee and more toward the North the Finnisch and Bodner Zees from Finland and Boden which countries it parteth from the more proper and West Sweathland North of Sweathland incorporated with the crowne hereof is Lapland cold barren and without corne fruits and ciuill habitation The people through their cold pigmie-like are of an exceeding little and dwarfish stature barbarous rude and without arts feeding vpon fish and the flesh of wild beasts crafty and much giuen to witchcraft and magicall incantations The commodities which they vent abroad are skinnes and fish exchanged with forrainers The Ocean vpon the North hereof and Russia Hecataeus in Plinie nameth Amalchium or the Frozen sea Philemon in the same author from the Cimbri the sea Cronium and Morimarusa or the Dead sea Tacitus otherwise the Slowe and Immoueable sea The Russes call it at this day Myrmanskoy More signifying in their language the Norvegian and Danish sea first of civill people sailed and adventured into by Richard Chancelour Englishman arriuing in Russia in the yeare 1553 and tracing out the way which the English and Flemmings ever since haue vsed Through this sea since the first discouerie sundry honourable and worthie persons haue attempted to finde out a passage towards China and the East but hitherto without any good successe let by contrary windes fogges and mists vsuall in that clime flotes of Ice cold perpetuall nights for many months together in winter and with the length of the way Their farthest discoueries haue reached only to the neerer coasts of Tartarie short of the riuer Oby Towards the North they haue sailed vnto 80 degrees within tenne of the Pole Articke Norwey Hallandt Schonen and Bleking in Denmarck with so much of the kingdome of Sweathland as lyeth West of the Finnisch and Bodner Sees creekes of the Balticke containe together the great Peninsula called by Ptolemie Scandia by Plinie and Solinus Scandinavia and by Iornandes Scanzia encompassed with the sea Balticke and the Westerne and Northerne Oceans and ioyned to the continent by a neck of land intercepted betwixt the bottome of the sea Bodner and the towne and castle of Wardhuys By Pytheas in Plinie we finde this otherwise named Basilia by Xenophon Lampsacenus in the same author Balthia naming the sea Balticke Ptolemie and the rest of the ancients before mentioned account this an Iland their errour proceeding from the ignorance vnexperience of those times the more Northerne and inner parts hereof not being then fully discouered POLAND HAving vpon the West Schlesi and the Marquisate of Brandenburg in Germany vpon the North the land of Prussen vpon the East Masovia and Lithuania and vpon the South the kingdome of Hungary from the which it is divided by the mountaines Tatri or Carpathian It is in length 480 Italian miles in breadth 300. The aire is pure but sharpe and cold the country plaine like vnto the rest of those Eastlands shaded with darke and thicke woods parts of the great Hercynian full of sundry sorts of wilde beasts for hunting of an incredible number of Bees hiving almost in each tree and breeding waxe and hony in great abundance No country affordeth more plentie of graine in regard of the continuall fresh and newly broken grounds taken from the woods sent
this country vnto her brother Ladislaus the first sirnamed the Saint and to his successours the kings of Hungary By this meanes the line and succession of the princes of Sclavonia or Croatia failing the kings of Hungarie haue euer since that time beene possessed of the right hereof Before this vnion with the crowne of Hungarie in the raignes of Basslius and Alexis ioint Emperours of the Grecians and of Murcemirus king of Croatia the Venetians vnder Pietro Vrceola their 26 Duke to secure their trade and shipping vpon the Adriaticke from this shoare continually infested with pyracies the Ilands of Curzola and Lezina with the Narentines vpon the Continent being forced by armes and the rest of the townes voluntarily submitting subjected vnto their Empire all the seacoasts hereof and of Histria from the Gulfe of Trieste vnto the borders of Macedony and Greece confirmed vnto them afterwards by an other Alexis Emperour of the East in the time of Vitalis Phalerio their 32 Duke By king Coliman who succeeded vnto S. Ladislaus Zara and the rest of the Dalmatians revolting were regained to the Hungarians lost againe not long after to the Venetians vnder Dominico Michaeli their 35 Duke or otherwise for the Venetian Historians are herein vncertaine vnder this Prince and Vitalis Michaeli their 38 Duke Afterwards Bela king of Hungary quitteth his whole right of Dalmatia vnto this state● and to Giacomo Tepulo their 43 Duke After this king Lewis the first inuading Dalmatia with a mighty armie the Venetians vnder their 57 Duke Giovanni Delphino being vnable to retaine the country busied in more dangerous warres neerer home to make their peace with this more potent enemie vtterlie abandoned and quitted vnto him and his successours the princes of Hungary all their conquests hereof from Histria or the Gulfe Cornero vnto Durazzo and Greece leauing off the title of Dukes of Dalmatia which till then they had vsurped Not long after Ladislaus king of Naples contending with the Emperour Sigismond for the realme of Hungary sould and againe deliuered vp Dalmatia vnto the Venetians for 100000 crownes or after others only Zara and the hauen and territory thereof Since this time the Hungarians being detained with more important warres against the Turkes the Venetians became the third time possessed in a manner of the whole sea coasts hereof from the riuer Arsa or Histria vnto the borders of Greece In the raignes of Amurath and Mahomet the second kings of the Turkes and during the warres hereof with Scanderbeg king of the Epirots we finde the Empire of the Venetians here to haue reached Eastwards along the shore of the sea Adriaticke towards Macedonie as farre as Lissus or Alesio in Albania the farthest extension that way of Sclavonia or Illyricum By Mahomet the second Emperour of the Turkes the townes of Scutari Drivasto and Alesio were enthralled to the Turkish tyranny taken from the Venetians and beyond the mountaines Stephen the last prince thereof being captivated and afterwards cruelly murthered the kingdome of Bosna a part sometimes of Croatia and held vnder the fief and tribute of the kings of Hungary reduced since into a Turkish province gouerned by a Bassa By after succeeding Turkish monarches other parts were added to that Empire The towne of Ragusi belonging once vnto the Venetians is now a free commonwealth subiect notwithstanding to the tribute of the Turkes The rest of Illyricum or Sclavonia vnconquered by the Infidels is yet held by the Venetians and the German Emperours of the house of Austria successours to the kings of Hungary whereof these cōmand in the inland parts of Croatia Windischlandt the former in the greatest part of the Ilands sea coast townes of Dalmatia vnto the gulfe and towne of Catharo The languages here now spoken are within the land the Sarmatian or Sclavonian vpon the sea coasts the Italian through their long subjection to the Venetians and commerce with that nation The Religion hereof besides the Mahumetan or Turkish is the pretended Romish Catholick The whole Sclavonia besides Istria belonging vnto Italy contained more anciently the greater parts or divisions of Croatia lying on this side of the mountaine Ardium which mountaine after Strabo divided Illyricum length-wise in the midst Dalmatia lying beyond that mountainous ridge along the coast of the Adriatick sea For by those two generall names we finde in histories the kings of Sclavonia anciently to haue beene stiled Croatia comprehended at this day the parts or names before mentioned of Windischlandt Croatia particularly now thus called and Bosna Dalmatia contained Contado di Zara Dalmatia thus now properly named and Albania whose descriptions in the last place WINDISCHLANDT BY this name the Dutch whose word it is calling the Sclaues by the names of the Winuli and Vendi vnderstand Sclavonia as otherwise it is expressed by Latine authors the generall appellation of the country in continuance of time flitting vnto and confined within this part It lyeth for the most part in Pannonia without the bounds of ancient Illyricum containing more anciently the Province from the river Saw named Suavia in Ru●us Festus and Savia in the author of the Notitia It hath Carniola or K●ain vpon the West vpon the North the river Dra and the Lower Hungary vppon the East the part of the Lower Hungary contained betwixt the Dra Saw vnto Belgrade and comprehending the counties of Poseg Walko Sirmisch and vpon the South extending here beyond the Saw Croatia from the which it is diuided by the riuer Huna or Vna Chiefe places here are Zagabria the chiefe towne seated vpon the riuer Saw Sisseg a strong fort or castle and monastery at the confluence of the riuers Kulp and Saw The right of the country belongeth to the kings of Hungary now the princes of the house of Austria enthralled at this day for the greatest part vnto the Turkes CROATIA OR KRABBATEN BY THE DVTCH BY this generall name were sometimes called all the more inland parts of Sclavonia lying towards the North of the mountaine Ardium of Strabo The reason of the name we yet finde not It was brought first hither by the Sclaues The bounds are vpon the North Windischlandt vpon the West Carniola or Krain vpon the South Dalmatia or Contado di Zara and vpon the East the kingdome of Bosna The country is cold hilly and mountainous yet sufficiently fruitfull and stored with all necessary provision if it were not for the oppression and neighbourhood of the Turkes to whose injuries it is continually exposed The hills hereof seeme to bee the mountaines Baebij of Ptolemie in his second booke of Geographie and 17 Chapter The townes here of better note are Wihitz called otherwise Bigihen by the Dutch the metropolitane or chiefe towne strongly encompassed Iland like by the riuer Vna Zeng Wackat Turnaw Modrisch The country contained anciently the more inland part of Liburnia North of the mountaine Ardium of Strabo THE KINGDOME OF BOSNA NAmed thus from the
fruitfull and pleasant vally of some 60 Italian miles in length continued from the head of the Aada along the course of that riuer vntill the entrance thereof into the Lake of Como divided into 6. goverments or prefectureships The wines of this country are much commended transported in a great abundance over the Alpes into Bavaria Switzer-landt and other parts Chiefer townes following the course of the riuer Aada are Bormio a prefectureship seated at the head of the vally and the river vnder the mountaine Bra●lio called otherwise by the Dutch Wormsser ioch Tiran a prefectureship Teio a prefectureship the chiefe fortresse of the vally Sondrio the chiefe towne a prefectureship The governour or captaine hereof for so he is named is Lieutenant of the whole country having here the like commande as hath the Captaine of Lugano in the prefectures belonging to the 12 Cantons Morbengo a prefectureship situated neere vnto the Lake of Como These 8 prefectureships of Plurs Chiavenna and the Valtolina are subject to the ioint commaund of the three Leagues or Cantons of the Grisons The language hereof as of those other appertaining to the Switzers is the Italian NETHERLAND THE Country hath been thus named from its maritime and more flat and lower situation It is accompted part of Germany with the Free Country of Burgundie making the tenth circle of the Empire although at this day it neither acknowledgeth the Emperours not obeyeth the Laws and orders appointed by the Diets diuided amongst sundry free states and gouerments partly now commanded by the Princes of the house of Burgundie and Austria partly by the generall States of the Vnited Provinces It boundeth vpon the East with the districts of Trier Luick Gulick Cleve and Westphalen vpon the North with the riuer Eems East-Freislandt vpon the South with Lorraine Champaigne and Picardie in France and vpon the North-West with the German Ocean It lyeth betwixt the 22½ and 30 degrees of Longitude and the 48½ and 53½ degrees of Northern Latitude or betwixt the 16 or middle paralel of the 7 clime and the 21 paralel or end of the 8 clime The longest day beyond Arras in the furthest South containeth 16 houres beyond the towne of Dam or at the riuer Eems in the furthest North 16 houres three quarters The circuit of the whole is 340. Flemish miles or some one thousand Italian or English The parts hereof towards the West and North along the Sea-coast are flat plaine and marishie abounding chiefly in pasturages milke butter cheese horses and beeues of an extraordinary stature and bignesse Those contrariwise towards the South-East or bordering vpon Luick Lorraine swell with rising hills and woods reliques of the great forrest of Ardenne All parts are tolerably fruitfull No country for the quantitie is more populous replenished with 225 walled townes and citties besides aboue 6600 burroughs and villages for the most part very strong and numerously inhabited by industrious and curious artificers and rich tradesmen and marchants The shipping of the maritime coasts seeme to exceed in number all the rest of the world amassed together swarming in all seas and Oceans and bringing hither as to a common magazin whatsoeuer riches and commodities the earth or sea affordeth by the commodious situation thereof and oportunitie of the great rivers of the Scheldt Mase and Rhijn distributed from hence into all lands the seat of negotiation and trading The ancient inhabitants were the Frisij now West-Freislandt North-Hollandt with part of the district of Vtreicht the Batavi inhabiting the Iland of the Rhijn intercepted betwixt the middle branch thereof and the Wael with the neighbouring shore of Gaule containing now South-Holland with parts of Vtreicht and Gelderlandt the Caninefates containing also part of the same Iland the Bructeri where now Deventer and Swol in Over-ysel the Vsipij now the country of Zutphen part of the Sicambri now Arnhem and Veluwe in Gelderlandt the Advatici now Brabant or part thereof about Bosleduc or Doway the Morini now Flanders the Atrebates now Artois the Nervij now Hainault and the country about Tournay the Tongri now part of Brabant about Antwerpe and part of the Treveri now the Dukedome of Luxemburg The fiue first nations were Germans inhabiting beyond the Rhijn The rest were parts of the Gaules Belgicke descended notwithstanding from the Germans By C. Iulius Caesar in his warres of Gaule these last were subdued to the Romans vnder which subiection they continued vntill the expiration of that Empire comprehended vnder the Provinces of Belgica Secunda and Germania Secunda The other remained still free from forraine yoak with other neighbouring Dutch people by occasion hereof not long after vniting into the common name of the most warlike and victorious French famous in the later Roman histories and in short time conquering and overspreading all Gaule Germanie vnto the rivers Elb and Saltza Pannonie the greatest part of Italy with part of Tarraconensis in Spaine won from the Moores Vnder the French who here succeeded vnto the Romans the whole was contained vnder the name kingdome of Austrasia or Oosten-reich After that the French Monarchy became divided amongst the posteritie of the Emperour Lewis the Godly the part hereof broke into sundry new principalities and goverments remaining vnto this day partly holding of the French kings or successours of Charles the Bald and partly of the German Emperours the Dukedomes of Brabant Luxemburg Gelderlandt and Limburg the Earledomes of Flanders Hollandt Zealandt Haynault Artois Namur and Zutphen the Lordships of Freislandt Groningen Vtreicht Over-ysel and Malines and the Marquisate of the Sacred Empire the manner and occasion of whose beginnings together with their continuance and state vnto our times is set downe in the Description of France Of these Flanders Artois appertained to the soveraigntie of the kings of France quitted vnto Philip the second king of Spaine and the Princes hereof by Henry the second French king in the late league of Cambraye The rest were held vnder the Dutch Emperours By Philip the Hardie the countries of Brabant Flanders Artois and Limburg with Malines and the Marquisate of the Sacred Empire became added to the dominion and family of Burgundie by Philip the Good Holland Zealandt West-Freislandt Hainault Luxemburg Namur by the Emperour Charles the fift Gelderland Zutphen Vtreicht Over ysel and Groningen the manner whereof is likewise shewed in France Since this vnion by the power and greatnesse of their Princes the Provinces haue beene wholy with drawne from all acknowledgement and subiection of the German Emperours French kings their ancient Lords governed in manner of free States by their Princes and magistrates and making a distinct nation and common-wealth by themselues knowne now by the names of Netherland the Low Countries the Lower Germany and of the 17 Provinces called thus from their number language and situation Duke Charles surnamed the Fighter Prince hereof son to Philip the Good had an intent to vnite the parts then
vnder his goverment into one entire kingdome by the name of Burgundie But because all the Provinces were soveraigne and had their severall lawes priviledges and revenues neither had euer granted to their Princes any other then limited power this project tooke none effect In the raigne of Philip the second king of Spaine heire of the house of Burgundie and in the yeare 1566 begun those memorable ciuill broiles so long afflicting those rich and flourishing countries continued with the spoile and ransacking of all their chiefe townes and citties much bloodshed and vnspeakable misery and calamity for aboue the space of 40 yeares during the Regencies of Margaret Dutchesse of Parma Fernando Alvares de Toledo Duke of Alva Lewis Requeseims great Commendador of Castille Don Iohn d' Austria naturall sonne to the Emperour Charles the Fift Alexander Fernese Prince of Parma and Ernest Count Mansselt deputies and Le●uftenants hereof and after the decease of that king and the assignment of the Netherlands vnto the Archdukes Albert and Isabella vntill the yeare 1609 occasioned first vpon pretence of the violation of their priviledges by the erecting of new Bishoppricks and attempting to bring in the Spanish Inquisition and afterwards through the harshnesse of some of the Spanish governours the insolencie and rapine of their souldiers the naturall hatred of the people against strangers and impatiency of forraine subjection the stiffnesse of the Prince in opposing the Reformed Religion and maintaining the authority and rites of the sea of Rome his pretended many injuries oppression tyranny in the yeare 1581 breaking out into manifest and open revolt of the most part of the Provinces renouncing vtterly their faith and allegiance herevnto offering their subjection and soueraigntie to neighbouring Princes refused by Henry the third French King and Elizabeth Queene of England the issue of all which was Brabant and Flanders regained by armes and better moderation the libertie of Hollandt Zealandt Vtreicht Over-ysel Gelderlandt Zutphen West-Freislandt and Groningen better assured by their seas and marishes and the advantage of their shipping protected and aided by the English during the raigne of the late Queene of famous memory for their stronger defence and more firme vnion amongst themselues ioyned and confederate together in a strict league since from hence famously called the Vnited Provinces in the yeare 1609 after long vnprofitable warre treated withall and acknowledged as free countries by Philip the third king of Spaine and the Archdukes yet notwithstanding some contradiction with reservation of their rights herevnto in which qualitie and separation although the truce of 12 yeares being expired the warres are again renewed they still to this day remaine By meanes hereof Netherlandt is now become diuided into two different parts and as it were Common-wealths the Provinces subject to the Princes of the house of Burgundie and Austria and those other of the Free confederate States THE PROVINCES OF NETHERLANDT SVBIECT TO THE PRINCES THese also in the beginning of the tumults rebelled with the rest recovered by force of armes and better moderation of their governours They confine vpon the East with the districts of Gulick Luick and Trier in Germany vpon the South with Lorraine and Champaigne and Picardie in France vpon the North-West with the German Ocean vpon the North with the Free vnited Provinces They containe 9 of the 17 Provinces and 7 maine countries of Limburg Luxemburg Namur Haynault Artois Flanders and Brabant in which last the Provinces of Mechlin and of the Marquisate of the Sacred Empire are included THE COVNTRY OF LIMBVRG SItuated betwixt the Bishoppricke of Luyck Gulich land and the Dukedome of Luxemburg The soile is fruitefull for all needefull commodities wines excepted Limburg the chiefe towne is pleasantly seated amongst shadie woods full of medicinable simples vpon an high hill vnder which runneth the river Wesdo defended with a strong Castle mounted vpon a steepe and precipitious rocke Amidst the shades thickets of the great forrest of Ardenne about two Dutch miles and an halfe from hence in the Diocese of Luick lyeth the famous borough and water of the Spa. Here are reckned some fiue walled townes and 125 boroughs and villages The ancient inhabitants seeme to haue beene part of the Eburones of Caesar. THE DVKEDOME OF LVXEMBVRG BOunded vpon the North with Luyck and Namur vpon the East with the Moselle and the district of Trier vpon the South with Eorraine and vpon the West with Eyfel and the riuer Meuse The country is hilly and shaded with thicke woods remainders of the great forest Ardenne The soile is fruitfull The more hilly and woodland part retaineth yet the name of Ardenne stored with plenty of all manner of game Here are accompted 23 walled townes and 1168 burroughs and villages Chiefer townes are Theon-ville a strong frontire place seated vpon the Moselle neere vnto Metz and the border of Lorraine Rode-Macheren Greven-Macheren neere vnto Trier Echternach Dechry both situated vpon the riuer Saur Vianden Nueburg Lutzenburg vnequally seated in a plaine and vpon the brow and top of a rising hill divided by the riuer Alsaltz the chiefe towne of the country Arlon vpon the top of an high hill Bastoigne Neuf-chastelle Mont-medy Marville Dampvillers The ancient inhabitants were part of the Treveri NAMVR LYing betwixt Brabant Haynault and the district of Triers The country swelleth with woodie hills enioying a sweete and pleasant aire and affording plenty of all necessary commodities Herein are contained 4 walled townes and 184 villages Chiefer townes are Bouignes vpon the Meuse Namur a Bishops sea and the chiefe towne of the country seated in a vallie betwixt two hils or mountaines on both sides of the riuer Sambre at what place this entreth into the Meuse The citty is rich and adorned with faire buildings and fortified with a strong and well furnished Castle or Citadel The ancient inhabitants seeme to haue beene part of the Nervij of Caesar. HAYNALT BOunded vpon the East with Namur and Luick vpon the South with Champaigne and vpon the West and North with Flanders The country is hillie and full of shady woods like vnto the parts before described The soile is very fruitfull abounding in come Here are numbred 24 walled townes and citties and 950. burrowes and villages Chiefer townes are Charlemont vpon the toppe of an high hill vnder which runneth the Meuse Marieburg Philippe-ville strong frontire places opposed against the French and named thus from their founders the Emperour Charles the fift Mary Queene of Hungary and Philip the second king of Spaine Avesnes vpon the riuer Hepre a strong towne affronting the same enimie Chimay seated amongst woods vpon the riuer Blanc Landresy vpon the Sambre Malbuge vpon the Sambre Beaumont vpon the same riuer Binche Halle famous for the image of the blessed Virgin and the impostures and fained miracles there done Bergen seated vpō a little rivulet named Trulle The citty is large and strongly fortified rich