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A48960 Analogia honorum, or, A treatise of honour and nobility, according to the laws and customes of England collected out of the most authentick authors, both ancient and modern : in two parts : the first containing honour military, and relateth to war, the second, honour civil, and relateth Logan, John, 17th cent.; Blome, Richard, d. 1705. 1677 (1677) Wing L2834; ESTC R17555 244,594 208

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Realm to do Justice shew Mercy keep Peace and Unity c. The King is enabled to perform this great and weighty Office by certain extraordinary powers and priviledges which he holds by the Law of Nations by the Common Law of England or by Statutes The Regalia were anciently called Sacra Sacrorum as his Lands are called in Law Patrimoni●● S●c●●● now commonly Royal Preroga●ives The King being Principium Cap●● ●inis Parli●menti may of his meer will and pleasure Convoke Adjourn Remove and Dissolve Parliaments He may to any Bill that is passed by both Houses of Parliament refuse to give his Royal Assent without rendring a Reason and without his Assent a Bill is as a ●ody without a Soul He may at his pleasure encrease the number of the Members of both Houses by creating more Peers of the Realm and bes●owing priviledges upon any other Towns to send Burgelles by Writ to Parliament and he may refuse to send his Writ to some others that have sate in former Parliaments He hath alone the choice and nomination of all Commanders and Officers for Land and Sea-service the choice and election of all Magistrates Counsellors and Officers of State of all Bishops and other Ecclesiastick Dignities also the bestowing and conferring of Honours and the power of determining Rewards and Punishments By Letters Patent his Majesty may erect new Counties Universities Bishopricks Cities Boroughs Colledges Hospitals Schools Fairs Markets Courts of Judicature Forests Chases Free Warrens c. The King by his Prerogative hath power to enfranchise an Alien and make him a Denison whereby he is enabled to purchase Lands and Houses and to bear Offices He hath the power to grant Letters of Mart or Reprisal to grant safe Conducts c. He hath at all times had the right of Purveyance or Preemption of all sorts of Victuals within the Verge viz. Twelve miles round of the Court and to take Horses Carts Ships or Boats for the Carriage of his Goods at reasonable rates Also by Proclamation to set reasonable rates and prices upon Flesh Fish Fowl Oats Hay c. sold within the limits of the Verge of the Court in the time of his Progress Debts due to the King are in the first place to be satisfied in case of Executorship and Administratorship and until the King's Debts be satisfied he may protect the Debtor from the Arrest of other Creditors He may dis●rein for the whole Rent upon one Tenant that holdeth not the whole Land He may require the Ancestors Debt of the Heir though not especially bound He is not obliged to demand his Rent according to the Custome of Landlords He may distrein where he pleaseth and sue in any of his Courts No Proclamation can be made but by the King No protection for a Defendant to obstruct the course of the Law against him if he be not one of his Majesties Menial Servants In case of loss by Fire or otherwise his Majesty granteth Patents to receive the Charitable Benevolences of the people No Forest Chase or Park to be made nor Castle Fort or Tower to be built without his Majesties especial Licence Where the King hath granted a Fair with Toll to be paid yet his Goods shall be there exempted from the said Duties of Toll His Servants in Ordinary are priviledged from serving in any Offices that require their Attendance as Sheriff Constable Church-warden or the like All Receivers of Money for the King or Accomptants to him for any of his Revenues their Persons Lands Goods Heirs Executors and Administrators are at all times chargeable for the same for Nullum tempus occurrit Regi His Debtor hath a kind of Prerogative Remedy by a Quo minus in the Exchequer against all other Debtors or against whom they have any cause of personal Action supposing that he is thereby disabled to pay the King and in this Suit the King's Debtor being Plaintiff hath some priviledges above others In doubtful Cases semper praesumitur pro Rege no Statute restraineth the King except he be especially named therein The quality of his Person alters the descent of Gavelkind the Rules of joynt Tenancy No Estoppel can bind him nor Judgment final in a Writ of Right Judgments entred against the King's Title are entred with Salvo Iure Domini Regis That if at any time the King's Counsel at Law can make out his Title better that Jugment shall not prejudice him which is not permitted the Subject The King by his Prerogative may demand reasonable Ayd-money of his Subjects for the Knighting his Eldest Son at the Age of Fifteen years and to marry his eldest Daughter at the Age of Seven years which Ayd is 20 s. for every Knights Fee and as much for every 20 l. per annum in Soccage Moreover if the King be taken prisoner Ayd-money is to be paid by the Subjects for his Redemption The King upon reasonable Causes him thereunto moving may protect any of his Subjects from Suits of Law c. In all Cases where the King is party his Officers with an Arrest by force of a Process at Law may enter and if any entrance be denied may break open the House of any man by force A Benefice or Spiritual Living is not full against the King by Institution only without Induction although it be so against a Subject None but the King can hold Plea of false Judgments in the Courts of his Tenants The King by his Prerogative is Summus Regui Custos and hath the Custody of the Persons and Estates of such as for want of understanding cannot govern themselves or serve the King that of Ideots to his own use and that of Lunaticks to the use of the next Heir So the Custody or Wardships of all such Infants whose Ancestors held their Lands by Tenure in Capite or Knights Service were ever since the Conquest in the King to the great honour and benefit of the King and Kingdom But abuses which too often happened made the people complain thereof which was the cause of its laying aside His Majesty is Vl●imus Haeres Regni and is as the great Ocean is of small Rivers the Receptacle of all Estates for want of Heirs or by Forfeiture Revert or Escheat to the King All Spiritual Benefices for want of presentation in due time by the Bishop are elapsed to the King All Treasure Trove that is Money or Gold and Silver plate or Bullion found and the owners unknown belongs to the King So doth all Waifs Strays Wrecks not granted away by him or any former Kings All waste Ground or Land recovered from the Sea All Lands of Aliens dying before Naturalization or Denization and all other things whereof the property is not known All Gold and Silver Mines in whose Ground soever they are found Royal Fish as Whales Sturgeons Dolphins c. Royal Fowl as Swans not mark't and swimming at Liberty on the River belong to the King In the Church the King's prerogative and power is
Habit or Order assigned them Pope Honorius at the request of Stephen Patriarch of Ierusalem prescribed unto them an Order of Life whereby they were to wear a white Garment and Pope Eugenius added thereto a red Cross and in the presence of the said Patriarch they made their Vows of Obedience Poverty and Chastity and to live under the Rule of Regular Canons of St. Augustine Being thus entred into an Order they elected an Head or Great Master and in process of time through the daily encrease of their number and their famous enterprizes not only for securing the passages but also for waging War both by Sea and Land against the Infidels they became highly favoured of the Christian Princes who assigned to them great Revenues to be spent in God's Service and in process of time they became exceeding wealthy and powerful so that they grew proud and withdrew themselves from the Obedience of the Patriarch of Ierusalem and joyned with the Pope But in the end they found not the favour from the Pope as they expected for by him or through his consent upon some infamous crimes charged against them their Lands and Possessions were seized upon and otherways disposed of their Order suppressed and they themselves imprisoned condemned and cruelly executed but according to the Opinion of many Authors they were unjustly accused by subornation of Witnesses meerly to gain their Revenues which according to Dr. Heylin were exceeding great having no less than Sixteen thousand Lordships in Europe Knights of St. Lazarus THis Order at the first Institution was only a Brotherhood of Religious Monks and became an Order of Knighthood in or about the time of St. Basil being first instituted upon a most charitable account to wit to take care of persons infected with the Leprosie which was a Disease very frequent in the Eastern parts by reason of which they were separated from the Society of men and had assigned to them a famous Hospital in Ierusalem called St. Lazarus for the reception of Lepers And through the incursion of the Sarazens and Barbarians in these parts this Order was as it were extinguished but when the Latin Princes joyned together in a Holy League to expel them the Holy Land these Religious Men entred into a Martial Discipline and performed great Service insomuch that they gained great fame and esteem of Baldwin the second King of Ierusalem in whose time this Order much flourished under the Government of a Great Master And about the year 1150. they made their Vows of Obedience Poverty and Chastity before William Patriarch of Ierusalem and submitted themselves to the Order of St. Benedict They also constituted several Orders to be observed amongst them viz. to wear a green Cross and that all before they entred into this Knighthood should prove themselves born in Wedlock of Christian Parents and to be a Gentleman by the Fathers and Mothers side also to be of an unblameable life and conversation and to perform daily certain Religious Ceremonies Knights of St. Bass. THese Knights were founded under the Rule of St. Basil and were also called Knights of St. Mary Their Garment was skie colour with a gold Cross which they wore before their breast having in the midst thereof the picture of St. Basil their Patron and were Officers and Servants to the Kings of Armenia Knights of St. Katharine at Mount Sinai THE reason of the Institution of these Knights which was about the year of Christ 1063. was to guard and defend the Sepulchre of St. Katharine their Patron whose Body is said to be buried in Mount Sinai near to which place a Monastery was erected and dedicated to her Name to secure the passage for Travellers who came thither for Devotion sake and to entertain them during their abode They lived under the Rule of St. Basil the Great vowed Obedience to the Abbot of this Monastery and wore a white Garment But when the Turks became Masters of these parts this Order of Knighthood suffered very much notwithstanding some Remains of the Order doth yet continue Knights of the Martyrs in Palestine THese Knights followed the Rule of St Basil and wore on their Garments a red Cross in the midst whereof within a Circle was the Figures of Cosmas and Damianus their Saints and Patrons who were martyred Their Hospital or place of abode bore the name of their Saints where they exercised all Acts of Charity to sick Strangers and people in necessity to redeem Captives taken by the Sarazens and to bury the Dead ORDERS OF KNIGHTHOOD IN SPAIN Knights of the Oak in Navarr THE Inhabitants of the Kingdom of Navarr being almost over-run by the Moors notwithstanding their great Army raised to oppose them for that they wanted an experienced General to command them at length one Don Garcia Ximenes who had betook himself to a religious and solitary Life was perswaded to take upon him that Command which was about the year of Christ 722. And as he was marching out of the City to fight the Moors there appeared to him from the top of an Oaken Tree the sign of the Cross which was adored by an innumerable quantity of Angels In this Battel he gained so signal a Victory that the people elected him their King and shortly after he instituted this Order of Knighthood investing therewith the Nobles and persons of Renown in his Kingdom whom he obliged to defend the Christian Faith and to own Obedience to him and his Successors Kings of Navarr The Habit that he assigned them was a white Garment having thereon a plain red Cross set on the top of an Oaken Tree in its Verdure Knights of the Lilly in Navarr GRacius King of Navarr the sixth of that Name lying in a languishing and sick Condition sent to St. Saviour de Lyra and other places of Devotion to the end that prayers might be made for his Recovery In which time in the City of Naiera where he kept usually his Court there was found the Image of our Virgin Mary issuing out of a Lilly holding her Son betwixt her Arms and suddenly after if you will believe the Story the King not only recovered his health but divers other Miracles were done on diseased people in that place and in honour whereof the King in Anno 1048. erected this Order which consisted of Eight and thirty of which himself was Sovereign as were his Successors to be after him The Badge which these Knights daily wore on their Breasts was a Lilly embroidered in Silver and on Festival days they wore a double Chain of Gold interlaced with Letters M. after the manner of a Gothish Letter with an enamelled Lilly in an Oval Medal hanging at it and their Habit was white Knights of the Band. THIS Order was first erected by Alphonso King of Spain in Anno 1368. and for this reason The King considering that he had many Enemies to deal with for his better security thought it convenient to institute an Order of Knights making himself
extraordinary great He only hath the patronage of all Bishopricks none can be chosen but by his Conge d'Es●ire whom he hath first nominated none can be consecrated Bishop or take possession of the Revenues of the Bishoprick without the King 's special Writ or Assent He is Guardian or Nursing Father of the Church which our Kings of England did so reckon amongst their principal Cares as in the Three and twentieth year of King Edward the First it was alledged in a pleading and allowed The King hath power to call a National or Provincial Synod and with the advice and consent thereof to make Canons Orders Ordinances and Cons●itutions to introduce into the Church what Ceremonies he shall think sit to re●orm and correct all Heresies Schisms and p●nish Contempts c The King hath power not only to unite consolidate separate inlarge or contract the limits of any old Bishoprick or other Ecclesiastical Benefice But also by his Letters Patents may erect new Bishopricks as Henry the Eighth did Six at one time and the late King Charles the Martyr intended to do at St. Albans for the Honour of the first Martyr of England and for the contracting the too large extent of the Bishoprick of Lincoln In the 28. of Eliz. when the House of Commons would have passed Bills touching Bishops granting Faculties conferring Holy Orders Ecclesiastical Censures the Oath Ex Officio Non-Residency c. The Queen being much incensed forbade them to meddle in any Ecclesiastical Affairs for that it belonged to her prerogative His Majesty hath also power of Coynage of Money of pardoning all Criminals of dispensing with all Statutes made by him or his Predecessors which are Malum prohibitum and not Malum in se. The diversity between these terms is set down in the Statute made Term. Mich. Anno 11 H. 7. 11. Thus where the Statute doth prohibit a man to coyn Money if he do he shall be hanged this is Malum prohibitum for before the said Statute it was lawful but not after and for this Evil the King may dispense But Malum in se neither the King nor any other can dispense with As if the King would give leave to rob on the High-ways c. this is void yet after the Fact done the King may pardon it So it is in Ecclesiastical Laws for conformity to the Liturgy c. which are Malum prohibitum and the King may by his Prerogative Royal as well dispense with all those penal Statutes as with Merchants to transport Silver Wooll and other prohibited Commodities by Act of Parliament The King cannot devest himself or his Successors of any part of his Royal Power Prerogative and Authority inherent and annext to the Crown nor bar his Heir of the Succession no not by Act of Parliament for such an Act is void by Law These Prerogatives do of right belong to the Crown of England which I have collected out of the most Authentick Modern Authors And to compleat this Chapter I shall proceed to his Superiority and Precedency The King of England acknowledgeth no Superior but God alone not the Emperor Omnem potestatem Rex Angliae in Regno suo quam Imperator vendicat in Imperio yet he giveth Precedency to the Emperor Eo quod antiquitate Imperium omnia regna superare creditur Touching our King's Supremacy before any other these Reasons are offered First Lucius King of this Land was the first Christian King in the World as also Constantine our Country-man the first Emperor that publickly planted Christianity Secondly The King of England is anoynted as no other King is but France Sicily and Ierusalem Thirdly He is crowned which honour the Kings of Spain Portugal Navarr and divers other Princes have not The honour of Precedency amongst Christian Kings is often disputed by their Ambassadors and Commissioners representative at General Councils Diets publick Treaties and other Honourable Assemblies at Coronations Congratulations in Foreign Countries c. which by the best Information I can get is thus stated As to England next to the Imperial Ministers the French take place as being the largest Realm in Christendom and most Noble since Charles le mayne their King obtained the Imperial Diadem the second place in the Western Empire was undisputably the right of our English Kings so enjoyed for hundreds of years 'till Spain grown rich and proud by the addition of the Indies claimed the priority yet could not gain it till their Charles the Fifth was Elected Emperor but after his Resignation the Controversie renewed upon the Treaty of Peace between Queen Elizabeth and Philip the Third King of Spain at ●oloign in France Anno 1600. Our Ambassadors were Sir Henry Nevil Iohn Harbert and Thomas Edmonds Esquires and for Spain Balthazer de Coniga Ferdinando Carillo Io. Ricardett and Lewis Varreyken The English challenged precedency as due to them before the Emperor Charles his time as doth appear by Volatteram in the time of our Henry the Seventh when the like difference being in question 't was joyntly referred to the Pope who adjudged to England the most Honourable place But the Spaniards refusing to stand to that old Award or to admit of an equality the Treaty of Peace broke up neither hath any certain Resolution been hitherto taken in the matter as ever I heard of OF THE PRINCE CHAP. III. THE King 's Eldest Son and Heir apparent from the Day of his Birth is entituled Prince of the Latin word quasi Principalis post Regem The first that we read of in England was Edward eldest Son to King Henry the Third since which time the eldest Son of the King hath been by Patent and other Ceremonies created Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester and Flint By Patent also Edward the Third in the Eleventh year of his Reign added the Dukedom of Cornwal to the Principality of Wales and Anno Regni 36. he makes his eldest Son Edward the Black Prince Prince of Aquitain for which he did Fealty and Homage at Westminster Sed tamen Principatum Walliae Ducatum Cornubiae Comitatum Cestriae Cantii non reliquit Walsing fol. 172. Since the Union of England and Scotland his Title hath been Magnae Britanniae Princeps but ordinarily Prince of Wales As eldest Son to the King of Scotland he is Duke of Rothsay and Seneschal of Scotland from his Birth And so long as Normandy remained in the possession of the English he had always the style of Duke of Normandy At his Creation he is presented before the King in Princely Robes who putteth a Coronet upon his Head a Ring on his middle Finger a Verge of Gold in his Hand and his Letters Patents after they are rea● His Mantle which he wears in ●arliament is once more doubled upon the sho●●●●rs than a Dukes his Cap of State indente●●nd his Coronet formerly of Crosses and Flower de lis mixed But since the happy Restauration of his Majesty it was solemnly ordered that the Son and Heir apparent
time but by a Statute made the Twelfth of Edward the First Wales was incorporated and united to England and became part thereof Also by another Statute made 27 Hen. 8. c. 24. a general resumption of many Liberties and Franchises heretofore granted or taken from the Crown as the Authority to pardon Treasons Murder Manslaughter and Felony also power to make Justices in Oyer Justices of Assize Justices of the Peace Goal deliveries and such like so that from thenceforth the King 's eldest Son hath only the Name and Style of Prince of Wales but no other Jurisdiction than at the King's pleasure is permitted and granted him by his Letters Patents as by the tenor thereof here following made by King Henry the Eighth to Edward his Son and Heir apparent may appear HENRY by the Grace of God King of England and of France Lord of Ireland c. To all Archbishops Bishops Abbots Priors Dukes Earls Barons Iustices Viscounts Governors Ministers and to all our Bayliffs and faithful Subjects Greeting Out of the Excellency of Royal Preheminence like leaves from the Sun so do inferior humours proceed neither doth the integrity of Royal Lustre and Brightness by the natural disposition of the Light affording Light feel any loss or detriment by such borrowed Lights yea the Royal Scepter is also much the more extolled and the Royal Throne exalted by how much the more Nobleness Preheminencies and Honours are under the power and command thereof And this worthy Consideration allureth and induceth us with desire to increase the Name and Honour of our Firstbegotten and best Beloved Son Edward in whom we behold and see our self to be honoured and our Royal House also and our people subject to us hoping by the grace of God by conjecture taken of his gracious future proceedings to be the more honourably strengthened that we may with honour prevent and with abundant grace prosecute him who in reputation of us is deemed the same with us Wherefore by the counsel and consent of the Prelates Dukes Earls Viscounts and Barons of our Kingdom being in our present Parliament We have made and created and by these Presents do make and create him the said Edward Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester And unto the same Edward do give and grant and by this Charter have confirmed the Name Style Title State Dignity and Honour of the said Principality and Connty that he may therein in Governing Rule and in Ruling direct and defend we say by a Garland upon his Head by a Ring of Gold upon his Finger and a Verge of Gold have according to the manner invested him to have and to hold to him and his Heirs the Kings of England for ever Wherefore we will and command for us and our Heirs that Edward our Son aforesaid shall have the Name Style Title State Dignity and Honour of the Principality of Wales and of the County of Chester aforesaid unto him and his Heirs the Kings of England for ever These being Witnesses the Reverend Father John Cardinal and Archbishop of Canterbury Primate of England our Chancellor and William Archbishop of York Primate of England Thomas Bishop of London John Bishop of Lincoln William Bishop of Norwich our most well beloved Cosins Richard Earl of Warwick Richard Earl of Salisbury John Earl of Wiltshire and our well beloved and faithful Ralph Cromwel Chamberlain of our House William Falconbridge and John Stourton Knights Dated at our Palace at Westminster the 15th day of March and in the year of our Reign 32. And here by the way may be observed That in ancient time and in the time of the English-Saxon Kings the use was as well in pennings of the Acts of Parliament as of the King's Letters Patents when any Lands Franchises or Hereditaments did pass from the King of any Estate of Inheritance as also in the Creations of any man unto Honour and Dignity the Conclusion was with the sign of the Cross in form aforesaid his testibus c. But long since that form hath been discontinued so that at this day and many years past the King's Patents for Lands Franchises and Hereditaments do conclude with Teste me ipso Nevertheless in all Creations of Honour and Dignity of Letters Patents the ancient form of concluding His testibus is used at this day And it hath been resolved by the Judges of all Acts of Parliament and Statutes which do concern the Prince who is the Firstbegotten Son of the King and Heir apparent to the Crown for the time being perpetuis futuris temporibus be such Acts whereof the Judges and all the Realm must take Cognizance as of General Statutes For every Subject hath interest in the King and none of his Subjects who are within his Laws be divided from him being he is Head and Sovereign so that the business and things of the King do concern all the Realm and namely when it doth concern the Prince the Firstbegotten Son of the King and Heir apparent to the Crown Although the Prince by express words hath no priviledge by the Great Charter of the Forest● 9 Hen. 3. cap. 11. for hunting in the King's Forests or Parks passing by them and sent for by the King's Command yet the Prince is to take the benefit and advantage thereby as well as the Earls Bishops or Barons who are expressed Crompton's Courts des Iustices de Forest 167. In the Parliament 31 Hen. 8. cap. 10. an Act concerning the placing of King's Children and Lords in the Parliament and other Assemblies was amongst other things made as followeth That no person or persons of what degree estate or condition soever his or they be of except only the King's Children shall at any time hereafter attempt to sit or have place on any side of the Cloth of Estate in the Parliament Chamber whether his Majesty be there personally present or absent The Prince shall not find Pledges for the prosecution of any Action and therefore shall not be amerced no more than the King or Queen should be The Prince is a distinct person from the King he is a Subject and holdeth his Principalities and Seigniories of the King and subject to the Law of the Land as a Subject And in token of the Prince's subjection he doth not upon his Posie in his Arms disdain the old Saxon words Ich Dieu I serve And there is a Case that Glascoine Chief Justice of England in the time of Henry the Fourth did commit the Prince who would have taken a Prisoner from their Bar in the King's Bench And the Prince did humbly submit himself and go at his Command And this did much rejoyce the King to see that he had a Judge so bold to administer Justice upon his Son and that he had a Son so gracious as to obey his Laws The Exercises befitting Princes whilst they are young are Chivalry and Feats of Arms and to adjoyn therewith the knowledge of the Law and God For it is the Duty and
Adversaries in this manner viz. The Writ of Summons to the Parliament whereby the Baron by Writ hath his Original is to call that Honourable and Worthy Person so summoned to the number of that Right High and Honourable Assembly and to be a Judge to sit hear and determine Life and Member Plea and right of Land if there shall come occasion likewise to give Counsel and Advise in the most mighty Affairs of the Realm But these things are convenient for the quality and condition of men unfitting and altogether unbeseeming the Sex of women Ergo having respect unto the scope and final purpose of such Writs such Inheritances should only descend unto the Heir Female The Second Argument contra Secondly If it shall be answered That although the Heir Female to whom such Inheritance is descended be unfit in her own person for the accomplishing of these things yet she may marry with one sufficiently able for her and in her behalf to execute the same This Answer will neither satisfie nor salve the inconveniences For admit that such an Heir Female were at full Age at the death of her Ancestor unmarried for it doth lye in her own choice then whom shall be her Husband The Third Argument contra Thirdly If such Husband shall be called by the right of his Wife the Writ shall make some mention thereof for otherwise it may well be taken that the Husband was chosen in his own person and in behalf of himself and not in regard of his wife or such pretended Dignity descended unto him But there was never such a Writ of Summons seen wherein the wife was mentioned And if the husband of such a wife have been called to the Parliament which is always by General Writ not mentioning his wife he is thereby made a Baron of himself by virtue of the said Writ Having thus heard both sides to dispute place it doth now require to interpose Opinion to compound the Controversie This point in que●tion is somewhat perplexed by means of difficult Presidents For first it is observed That some Presidents do prove that Baronies by Writ have descended unto Heirs Female whose husbands have been called to Parliament whether in regard of themselves or in respect of their wives right it maketh no matter but since it is that the marriage of such Ladies gave that occasion to be summoned and such husbands and their Po●●erity have and do lawfully bear the same Title of Dignity which the Ancestors of such a wife did before rightfully bear For by this Controversie the●e is no purpose to call the right of such Noble Houses into question Howbeit Secondly this is to be observed out of the Presidents and to be acknowledged of every dutiful Subject That the King's Majesty is nevertheless at liberty to call to his High Council of Parliament whom he shall in his Princely Wisdom think fit which by his Majestie 's Noble Progenitors have in former Ages likewise observed And therefore whereas Ralph Lord Cromwell being a Baron by Writ died without Issue having two Sisters and Coheirs Elizabeth the eldest who married Sir Thomas Nevile Knight and Ioan the younger who married Sir Humphrey Butcher Knight who was called to Parliament as Lord Cromwell and not the said Sir Thomas Thirdly It is to be observed That if a Baron by Writ die without Heir Male having his Daughter Sister or other Collateral Heir Male that can challenge the Land of the said Baron deceased by any ancient entail or otherwise the Title of such an Heir Female hath heretofore been allowed as by the honourable Opinions and Relations of the Right Honourable the late Commissioners in the Office of Earl-Marshal signified unto the late Queen upon Petition of the Sister and Heir of Gregory Lord Dacres deceased may appear Moreover in the same Pedigree of the Lord Dacres it was expressed That Thomas sometimes Lord Dacres had issue Thomas his eldest Son Ralph his Second and Humphrey his third Thomas the eldest died in the life of his Father having issue Ioan Daughter and Heir who was married to Sir Richard Fines Knight and after Thomas Lord Dacres his Grandfather and Father to the said Ralph and Humphrey died after whose death Henry the Sixth by his Letters Patents bearing date at Westminster the Seventh of November in the Seventh year of his Reign reciting the said Pedigree and Marriage doth by his said Letters Patents accept declare and repute the said Richard Fines to be Lord Dacres and one of the Barons of the Realm But afterwards in the time of Edward the Fourth the said Humphrey Dacres after the attainder of the said Ralph and himself by an Act of Parliament which was the first of Edward the Fourth And after the death of the said Ralph and the Reversal of the said Act by another Act in the Twelfth of Edward the Fourth the said Humphrey made challenge unto the said Barony and unto divers Lands of the said Thomas his Father whereupon both parties after their Title had been considered of in Parliament submitted themselves to the Arbitrement of King Edward the Fourth and entred into Bond each to other for the performance thereof whereupon the said King in his Award under his Privy Seal bearing date at Westminster the Eighth of April Anno Regni sui decimo tertio did Award that the said Richard Fines in the right of Ioan his wife and the Heirs of his body by the said Ioan begotten should keep have and use the same Seat and Place in every Parliament as the said Thomas Dacres Knight Lord Dacres had used and kept and that the Heirs of the body of the said Thomas Dacres Knight then late Lord Dacres begotten should have and hold to them and to their Heirs the Mannor of Holbeach And further That the said King Edward did Award on the other part that the said Humphrey Dacres Knight and the Heirs Males of the said Thomas late Lord Dacres should be reputed had named and called the Lord Dacres of Gillesland and that he and the Heirs Males of the body of the said Thomas then late Lord Dacres should have use and keep the place in Parliament next adjoyning beneath the said place which the said Richard Fines Knight Lord Dacres then had and occupied And that the Heirs of the body of the said Ioan his wife shall have and enjoy and that the Heirs Males of the said Thomas Dacres late Lord Dacres should have to them and the Heirs Males of their bodies begotten the Mannor of Iothington c. And so note that the name of the ancient Barony namely Gillesland remained unto the Heir Male to whom the Land was entailed Moreover this is specially observed If any Baron by Writ do die having no other Issue than Female and that by some special entail or other assurance there be an Heir Male which doth enjoy all or great part of the Lands Possessions and Inheritances of such Baron deceased the Kings have used to call to the
but afterwards the Lord upon such dislike or other cause do discharge any of them from their attendance or service the Lord in this case cannot retain other thereby to give them priviledge during the life of them so retained and discharged And the reason thereof is because the first Chaplains were lawfully retained and by virtue thereof during their lives might purchase Dispensations to have advantage according to the Statute and therefore if the discharge of their service and attendance might give liberty to the Lord to retain others by such means he might advance Chaplains without number by which the Statute might be defrauded And the said Statute must be strictly construed Non-residents Pluralities as a thing prejudicial to the service of God and the ordinary instruction of the people of God By the Statute 3 Hen. 7. cap. 4. it is enactect as followeth Forasmuch as by quarrels made to such as have been in great Authority Office and of Council with the King 's of this Realm hath ensued the destruction of the Kings and therefore the undoing of this Realm so as it hath evidently appeared when the compassing of the death of such as were of the King 's true Subjects was had the destruction of the Prince was imagined thereby and for the most part it hath grown and been occasioned by malice of the King 's own Houshold Servants and for that by the Laws of this Land if actual deeds were not there was no remedy for such false compassing imaginations and confederacies had against any Lord or any of the King's Council or great Officers in his Houshold and so great inconveniences did ensue because such ungodly demeanours were not strictly punished before that any actual deed was done for remedy whereof it was by the said Statute ordained That the Steward Treasurer or Comptroller of the King's Houshold for the time being or one of them shall have full authority to enquire by twelve discreet persons of the Check Roll of the King 's honourable Houshold if any person admitted and sworn the King's Servant and his name put in the Check Roll in any quality or degree whatsoever under the state of a Lord do make any Confederacies or Conspiracies with any person or persons to destroy or murther the King or any Lord of this Realm or any other person sworn to the King's Council Steward Treasurer or Comptroller of the King's Houshold that if it be found before the said Steward for the time being by the said twelve men that any such of the King's Servants as aforesaid hath confederated or conspired as abovesaid that he so found by the enquiry be put thereupon to answer and the Steward Treasurer or Comptroller or two of them have power to determine the said matter according to Law And if he put in trial that then he be tried by Oath of twelve discreet men of the same Houshold and that such Misdoers have no challenge but for maliace And if such Misdoers be found Guilty by confession or otherwise that the said Offence is adjudged Felony and they to have Judgment and Execution as Felons attainted ought to have by the Common Law By the Statute made in the second of King Henry the First cap. 8. Authority is given to the Sheriffs and other the King's Justices for the better suppressing of Riots to raise posse Comitatus and the same liberty doth in Common Law guide in many other cases Nevertheless the Sheriff may not by such Authority command the person of any Nobleman to attend the Service But if the Sheriff upon a Supplicavit against a Nobleman in that case do return that he is so puissant that he cannot nor dare not arrest him the Sheriff shall be grievously amerced for such his return For by the Writ under the Great Seal of England the King's Command is to all Archbishops Bishops Earls Counts and Barons and to all Leigemen of the County to be aiding unto him in that which to his Office appertaineth and therefore no person whatsoever can respit the execution of the said Writ of the King 's Also the Sheriff at his discretion may levy three hundred men if need be to aid him in that behalf The words of the great Charter of the Forest in the eleventh Chapter are as followeth To every Archbishop Bishop Earl or Baron coming to us and passing by our Forest it shall be lawful for him to take one Beast or two by the view of the Forest if he be present or else he shall cause one to blow a Horn for him that he seem not to steal our Deer Although the Statute doth speak but of Bishops Earls and Barons yet if a Duke Marquiss or Viscount which are Lords of the Parliament be coming towards the King by his command they also shall have the benefit of this Article So if the King send to any of the Lords aforesaid to come to his Parliament or send for him by Writ of Subpoena to appear in the Chancery or by Privy Seal to appear before his Council or send for him by Letters Missive or by Messenger or Serjeant at Arms in all these cases he shall have the benefit of this Statute because that they come at the King's command The same Law is if a Scire Facias go out of the Chancery or Kings Bench to a Lord of Parliament But if such Process go forth against a Lord to appear before the Justices of the Common Pleas or the Barons of the Exchequer and he cometh upon the same he shall not have the benefit of the Statute for he doth not come unto the King and the words of the Statute are Veniens ad nos And all the Process which are made out of the Chancery and King's Bench are Quod sit coram nobis and so are the Process out of the Star-Chamber Also Lords which come to visit the new King after the death of his Father though not sent for shall have the same priviledge And so that this Statute is a Warrant dormant to such Lords which also is to be understood as well of their returning homeward as of their coming to the King And note that this Statute doth extend to give Licence to kill or hunt in the King's Parks though the Letter of the Statute be Transiens per Forestam nostram The Oath of Supremacy is not imposed on the Peers of the Realm A Peer shall for his first Offence of Felony though he cannot read have the benefit of his Clergy and without burning If any person shall divulge false and scandalous Reports of any Lord of Parliament the Offender is to be imprisoned until he bring forth the Author In personal Actions the Plaintiff may pray a day of Grace but against a Lord of Parliament it shall not be allowed him It is Actionable for any to deface the Coat Armour c. of any Nobleman or Gentleman that is placed in a Church or Window Certain Cases wherein a Lord of the Parliament hath no
to the party for so it is termed in Brook's Title Additions 44. but an Honour to the Kingdom And therefore it hath been an ancient Prerogative of the Kings of this Realm at their pleasure to compel men of worth to take upon them that Degree upon payment of a Fine But we see by Experience in these days that none are compelled thereunto and that is the reason wherefore if the Plaintiff be Knighted having the Writ it shall abate because he hath changed his name and that by his own Act. And for that cause also by the Common Law not only the King but every Lord of a Mannor ought to have of every of his Tenants a reasonable Aid to make his eldest Son a Knight And all Lands are subject to these Aids except only ancient Demesne and grand and petty Serjeanty-Tenures as the Law hath ●een anciently delivered And in Io. Shelden 131. where also it is said one that wrote a little after the Statute of Westminster the first allows as a good barr to the Avowry for the Tenant to plead that the Father himself is no Knight so that one not Knighted cannot claim this Ayd of his Tenants Bri●an cap. de prices de avers And it was at the liberty of the Lord to make more or less of his Tenants by the Common Law in this Case but by the Statute of Westminster the first Chap. 35. it is put in contrary viz. forasmuch as before this time reasonable Aid to make ones Son Knight or to marry his Daughter was never put in certain nor how much should be taken nor at what time whereby some levied unreasonable Aid and more often than seemed necessary whereby the people were sore grieved It is provided that from henceforth of a whole Knight's Fee there be taken but Twenty shillings and of Twenty pounds in Land holden in Soccage Twenty shillings and of more more and of less less after that rate And that none shall levy such Aid to make his Son a Knight until his Son be of fifteen years old nor to marry his Daughter until she be of the Age of seven years And of that there shall be mention made in the King's Writs formed on the same when any will demand it And if it happen that the Father after he hath levied such Aid of his Tenants die before he hath married his Daughter the Executors of the Father shall be bound to the Daughter for so much as the Father received for the Aid And if the Father's Goods be not sufficient his Heir shall be charged therewith unto the Daugher And this Aid is so incident that although the Lord do confirm unto the Tenant to hold by Fealty and certain Rent and release unto him all other Services and Demands yet shall he have the Aid to make his eldest Son a Knight But the King was not bound by the Statute aforementioned because the King was not named in the Statute Therefore by the Statute 25 Edw. 3. chap. 11. the King's Aid were brought to a like value The intention of the Law is That an Heir until the Age of One and twenty years is not able to do Knights Service But such a presumption of Law doth give place to a Judgment of proof to the contrary as Bracton saith S●abitur presumptioni donec probetur in contrarium And therefore when the King who is the Sovereign Judge of all Chivalry hath dubbed him a Knight he by this hath adjudged him able to do him Knight's Service and all men are concluded to say the contrary to it And therefore such an Heir being made a Knight either in the life time of his Father or afterwards during his minority shall be out of Ward and Custody both for his Land and Body and marriage by the Award of the ancient Common Law By reason also that the Honour of Knighthood is so great that it is not to be holden under by any yet if the King do create such an Heir within Age a Duke Marquess Earl Viscount or ●aron by this he shall not be out of Ward and Custody both for his Land and Body And therefore it is propounded by the Statute of Magna Charta chap. 3. Ita tamen quod si ipse dum infra aetatem fuerit fiat miles nihilominus terra remaneat in Custodia Dominorum suorum So that although such an Heir within Age be made Knight and thereby to this purpose is esteemed as of full Age yet the Land shall remain in Custody of the Lord till his Age of One and twenty years by the purview of the said Act. Question If the Son and Heir of the Tenant of the King by Knights Service c. be made Knight in Paris by the French King whether he shall be out of Wardship after the death of his Father or no for thereby he is a Knight in England Coke's seventh part b. 2 Edw. 4. fol. tamen vide in Coke's sixth part 74. b. mention is only made of Knights made by the King himself or by his Lieutenant in Ireland But when the King doth make an Heir apparent within Age of a Tenant by Knights Service a Knight in the life of his Ancestor and after the death of his Ancestor the said Heir being within Age shall in this Case be out of Ward and shall pay no value for his marriage neither shall the Lord have the Custody of the Land for in that Case by the making of him Knight in the life of his Ancestor he is made of full Age so that when his Ancestor dieth no interest either in the Body or in the Land shall invest in the Lord but the Knight may tender his Livery as if he were of full Age And in that case the King shall have primier Seisin as if he had been One and twenty years of Age at the time of the death of his Ancestor and not otherwise For the Statute of Magna Charta doth not extend unto it for the purview of it doth extend only when the Heir in Ward infra aetatem is made Knight then remanet terra in Custodia c. But when the Heir is made Knight in the life of his Ancestor then the Custody cannot remain which never had any inception or essence Also when the Heir after the death of his Ancestor within Age is made Knight if after tender made to him he within Age do marry elsewhere yet he shall not pay the forfeiture of his marriage for by the making him Knight he is out of Ward and Custody of his Lord for then he ought to be sui Iuris and may imploy himself in feats of Arms for defence of the Realm c. and therefore may not be within the Custody of another and none shall pay any forfeiture but when after any refusal he doth marry himself during the time when he is under the custody and keeping of his Lord And this doth appear by the Statute of Merton chap. 6. Si se mariturierit sine licentia
Ceremony ended Of Degrading of Knights DEgrading of Knights is not very customary Examples being seldom found it being used only for great and notable Facts and Offences against Loyalty and Honour as absenting themselves dishonourably from their King's Service for leaving their Colours and flying to the Enemy for betraying Castles Forts and the like hainous Crimes The manner of Degrading a Knight hath been as followeth When a Knight had been found thus disloyal or corrupt he was to be apprehended and armed Cap-a-pe as if he was going to the Wars was to be placed upon a high Scaffold made for that purpose in the Church and after the Priest had sung some Funeral Psalms as are used at Burials as though he had been dead first they take of his Helmet to shew his face and so by Degrees his whole Armour then the Heralds proclaiming him a disloyal Miscreant with many other Ceremonies to declare him Ignoble he was thrown down the Stage with a Rope and this was done about the time of King Arthur as is affirmed by Mills fol. 84. Also about the Degrading of Knights these things have also been used as the reversing their Coat of Arms by seizing of their Equipage except one Horse ne qui dignitate f●ctus est eques cogatur pedes incedere b● cutting of the Spurs from their Heels and by taking away their Sword and breaking it But of late the Martial Law is usually put in Execution both in our Civil Wars as in France and elsewhere that is to dispatch such trayterous persons by a File of Musquetiers KNIGHTS OF THE Round Table CHAP. XXII THE Founder of this ancient Order of Knighthood was Arthur King of the Britains who reigned about the year of Christ 516. whose Valour was so great and admirable that many now living do believe the same rather fabulous than real This Noble King having as Sir William Segar noteth driven out of England the Saxons conquered Norway Scotland and the greatest part of France where at Paris he was crowned and returning home lived in such great Renown that many Princes and worthy Knights came from all Parts to his Court to give Evidence of their Valour in the Exercise of Arms. Upon this he erected a Fraternity of Knights which consisted as some say of Four and twenty others a greater Number amongst whom he himself was Chief And for the avoiding of Controversies for taking place when they met together he caused a Round Table to be made from whence they took their Name which said Table if you will believe the Inhabitants of Winchester hangs up in their Castle where they used to meet and the time of their meeting was at Whitsontide Into this Society none were admitted whether Britains or Strangers but such as did make sufficient proof of their Prowess and Dexterity in Arms and such as were Renowned for their Vertue and Valour The Articles which they vowed to keep were To be always well armed both for Horse or Foot Service either by Land or Sea and to be always ready to assail Tyrants and Oppressors To protect and defend Widows Maidens and Children and to relieve all that are in necessity To maintain the Christian Faith contribute their Aid to Holy Church and to protect Pilgrims To advance Honour and suppress Vice To bury Souldiers that wanted Sepulchres To ransom Captives deliver Prisoners and administer to the cure of wounded Souldiers hurt in the Service of their Country To Record all Noble Enterprizes to the end that the Fame thereof may ever live to their Honour and the Renown of the Noble Order That upon any complaint made to the King of Injury or Oppression one of these Knights whom the King should appoint was to Revenge the same If any Foreign Knight came to Court with desire to shew his Prowess these Knights ought to be ready in Arms to answer him If any Lady Gentlewoman or other oppressed or injured person did present a Petition declaring the same whether the Injury was done here or beyond Sea he or she should be graciously heard and without delay one or more Knights should be sent to make Revenge And that every Knight for the advancement of Chivalry should be ready to inform young Lords and Gentlemen in the Orders and Exercises of Arms. For what I can find there was no Robe or Habit prescribed unto these Knights nor can I find with what Ceremony they were made neither what Officers did belong unto the said Order except a Register to record all their Noble Enterprizes Not to pass over this Noble Arthur give me leave to repeat what I find mentioned of him by Sir William Segar in the said Chapter This valiant Prince not confining himself to the narrow limits of his own Kingdom left the Government thereof to the management of his Cosin Mordred and began his Journey or rather Conquest for in all places he found Fortune to favour him And after his many Victories gained of the Saxons Scots Norwegians Romans Saracens and French in the end being laden with Honour he returned into England but found Mordred a Traitor as usurping the Government and obstructing his Landing But all that he could do was in vain for being landed he fled to London but the Citizens refusing to give him Entrance he went into Cornwall where King Arthur gave him Battel which proved unfortunate to them both for Mordred was slain by King Arthur who was also desperately wounded and after this wound as some say he was never found alive or dead which made the Poets to feign that he was taken up into the Firmament and there remaineth a Star amongst the Nine Worthies Which phansie is founded upon the Prophesie of old Merlin which was his Counsel and esteemed as a Prophet who for many years before affirmed That King Arthur after a certain time should resuscitate and come unto Carlion to restore the Round Table He wrote this Epitaph Hic jacet Arturus Rex quondam rexque futurus According to Andrew Favin there was an Order of Knighthood called Knights of St. Thomas which was instituted by King Richard the First after the surprisal of the City of Acon and consisted of all English men Their Patron was St. Thomas Becket their Garment was white and their Ensign was a red Cross charged in the midst with a white Escallop But A. Mendo believeth that these Knights were rather some of those which joyned themselves with the Knights Hospitallers for that they wore the same Habit followed the same Rule and observed the same Customes as did the Knights of St. Iohn of Acon KNIGHTS OF THE THISTLE OR OF St. Andrew in Scotland CHAP. XXIII HVNGVS King of the Picts the Night before the Battel that was fought betwixt him and Athelstan King of England saw in the Skie a bright Cross in fashion of that whereon St. Andrew suffered Martyrdom and the day proving successful unto Hungus in memorial of the said Apparition which did presage so happy an Omen the Picts and
boast of and principally with hearts that contemn death it self which to other Nations is so dreadful having an affection to Arms and are covetous of Fame Soveraignity and Honour above other men But it may be objected How then comes it to pass that we are confined within the narrow Bounds of our Brittish Seas Secondly Wherefore have we quitted our Claim to France or suffered it to lye dormant so many Ages To the first may be Answered That it was the piety of our Princes to content their selves within their own Limits and were unwilling to be troublesome to other Princes until our Henry the Second was supplicated by the Irish to commiserate their Calamities and deliver them out of their Intestine Broyls into which their irreconcileable Divisions and unchristian-like Fewds had plunged them Thus by Composition rather than Conquest was our Soveraignity confirmed in Ireland and the Charter signed by the Irish Princes and the Commonalty which being transmitted to Rome was confirmed by Pope Adrian about the Year 1174. For France it may also be Answered That we were constrained to vindicated a just Title to that Crown by force of Arms when Arguments and fair Means would not prevail and for the loss of it 't is apparent in all Histories that our Discords at home not the Courage or Force of France forced us to quit the same gaining with few Blows what otherwise they would not so much as have attempted Add hereunto the covetousness and envy of some of our Natives who being themselves out of Command will yield any tearms to a Forreign Enemy rather than maintain an Army in pay for their security by which facile Concessions and Peace thus purchased we discourage our Souldery suffer them to lose their Discipline and to degenerate by Sloath and Idleness a Depravity which cost the Romans very dear at the beginning of their second Carthagenian War being almost ruined before they could recover their former practise of Arms but for us meliora spero War being in divers Cases just upon the Offensive part and absolutely necessary on the Defensive 't is fit we consider the proper Definition thereof It is generally said to be the Exercise of Arms against an Enemy but more properly 't is a Contention between Princes or States by force of Men under Discipline to obtain Victory And the end of War is either to obtain Victory or to live in Peace and Honour The Division of War for so much as concerns England may be of two sorts or kinds viz. Terene and Naval in open Field or upon the Seas The Art and Exercise of both are absolutely necessary it being impossible for us to secure our Shoars if we are not Masters of the Seas nor were we ever victorious in our Transmarine Attempts before our Enemies Naval Forces were conquered as appears by the Histories of Edward the Third Henry the Fifth c. Thus are our Oaken Castles our securest Bulwarks to defend us from our Enemies nor can we offend them abroad without these floating Squadrons how needful then is the excellent employ of Navigation to our Nation and how glorious or rather terrible might we be to the Universe it we did more encourage it by maintaining a Royal Navy and having an Army ready upon any occasion be it either by standing Troops or a reformed and well disciplined Militia which is held more grateful to the People in general Philip de Comines tells us of his own knowledge That the English at their first Arrival in France were very raw and ill disciplined Souldiers but within the space of two or three weeks which they spent in moderate Exercise before the French could rally up a Force to engage them they grew expert in their Weapons and became fit for the Field-Service from whence he concludes That the English of all People in the World are the most prone to War and aptest to make good Souldiers Our late Actions at home and abroad justifie our ligitimate Succession from such valiant Ancestors nor is there any thing so much wanting amongst us as Encouragement to the truly generous Martial Spirits Charles the Fifth advises his Son to preserve his old Souldiers from sloath by constant Exercise and to train up the Youth of Spain under Leaders who had Lands Goods and Relations to secure their Loyalty to the Crown if they were naturally addicted to Arms because sense of Honour or shame of Punishment with the loss of Estate must necessarily prevail more with such that can be expected from others who carry all their Interest in their Persons and have nothing to care for but their own safety Also the priviledge of wearing a Martial Robe the priority of place in some publick Assemblies or the like would much encourage Youth to Martial Discipline Nor is this only a Spanish Device but 't was the practise of the Romans who had their several Triumphs for their Victorious Generals and also particular Rewards for their private Souldiers He who had first boarded an Enemies Ship entred their Camp or Garrison slain one of their Captains in Combat taken a Standard c. was rewarded with a Silver Crown of form denoting his Exploit with a Collar of Gold or the like the wearing 〈◊〉 which in their Theatres was prized 〈◊〉 to the possession of a Seignory without ●●ch an Honour We read of a young man ●● Scipio's Army who had done gallant Exp●o●ts in a Battel under him so that he deserved such a Reward as aforesaid Scipio judging of his mind gave him a good sum of Money exhorting him to persevere in his Valour but he with a sad countenance laid down the Gold at Scipio's feet demanding of him the Honourable Ensign of Victory in lieu of the Gold preferring Glory before Gain for which noble Act he was not only commended but advanced by the General as most fit for Honour and Office having a Spirit free from the sordid Vice of Covetousness which blasts the Fame of many a valiant Captain and ruins many a brave Army It were to be wished that such Roman Spirits were now to be found amongst us and then 't is probable the War might have proved more succesful but now-adays such true Valour gives place to Interest and to an Officer of Fortune the dread of being disbanded makes a Victory more fatal to him than a Foil for who will beat his Enemy that must feel a want when he has none to appear against What then more serviceable than a well disciplined Militia to be imployed upon all occasions at Sea and Land For the Officers as men of Estates would be glad to win Honour with hazard of their Lives and if they should return with the loss of a Limb would not put the King to the Charge of a Pension And for the Souldiers when dismist may immediately fall to their Trade or to Husbandry pleasing themselves to tell their Neighbours the Story of their Adventures Thus the large Armies of Horse which support the Turkish
That he hath appeared magnanimous in Campaigns Leguers Battels and Seiges by Land in the most furious and dreadful Sea fights in which he hath given life to some Enemies and taken it from others His escaping such Hazards and passing by Domestick Broyls with a Princely Scorn would half perswade a credulous person that he had evaded the time of dying and that for the World 's general good it were decreed he should endure as long as the Sun and Moon to support the Grandure of the Brittish Monarchy in the Person of his Sacred Majesty King Charles the Second and his lawful Successors The Effiges of the Right Noble George late Duke of ALBEMARLE Earle of Torrington Baron Moncke of Potheridge● Beauchamp and Teys Knight of the Noble order of the Garter Lord Leiutenant of Devonshire Captaine Generall of all his Majestyes Land Forces Ioynt Admirall with his Highness Prince Rupert in the last Dutch Warr● one of the Lords Comissioners of his Majestys Treasury● one of the Gentlemen of his Bedchamber one of the Lds of his most honble privy Councell c a. Edw. Le Davis sculp Thus in a Victor's Garland oft we see Laurels with Cypress intermixed be But I could lose my self in the Admiration of these Objects were I not again surprized by the late Generous and Noble Exploits of the Heroick Prince Iames Duke o● Monmouth whose brave Spirit disdaining to be confined to the ease of a Court life contemning the soft pleasures of Peace seeks out Dangers abroad makes Bellona his Mistress de●ies death in his ascent to Honour and thus immortalizes his Name throughout Christendome by his Valour and Conduct at Mastricht in Anno 1673. To affect Glory in Youth is becoming a Royal Birth and to begin with Victory is a happy Omen of Future Success In a long progress of time a Coward may become a Conquerour Some others from mean Adventures passing through gross Errors grow to Experience and in time perform great Exploits But as there are few Rivers Navigable from their first Fountain so are such Men doubtless very rare and singular who have not any need either of growth or years nor are subject either to the Order of Times or Rules of Nature Proceed brave Prince in the path you have so fairly traced out and let the World see your renowned Valour Of a lower Orb we may justly boast of our English Fabius General Monk who so wisely wearied out Lambert by his delays and cajoled the rebellious Rump Parliament He was a Person of great Valour Experience and Prudence whose Loyalty and Conduct hath given him a never dying Fame to be celebrated by the Pens and Tongues of all good Subjects whilst the Name of Britain lasteth His Exploits were truly great his Success in his Conduct renowned with too many Victories to be here inserted Let it suffice to say he was bred a Souldier and after the many risks of Fortune got the Art to mannage that fickle Lady so well that he triumphed over his Foes both in War and Peace acted the part of a good Politician the trusty old Cushai confounding the Counsel of Achitophel to preserve his Royal Master and was the blessed Instrument of his Majestie 's most happy Restauration to his Crown and Dignity and the Kingdom to its pristine Laws and Liberties securing to himself and Posterity that well purchased Title of the most High Potent and Noble Prince George Duke of Albemarle Earl of Torrington Baron Monk of Potheridge Beauchamp and Teys besides which Hereditary Titles he was Knight of the Noble Order of the Garter one of his Majesties most Honourable Privy Council and Captain General of all his Majesties Forces during life an Honour and Office scarce ever before intrusted in the hands of a Subject in times of Peace He lived the darling of his Country dearly beloved of his Majesty and all the Royal Stem and dreadful to our Forreign and Home-bred Foes but laden with Love Honour and Years He yielded up his Life to the Hands of him that gave it and departed in peace the Third Day of Ianuary Anno Dom. 16 69 70. lamented by all good Subjects Post funera Virtus We have many more that by Experience and Conquest are very well known to be eminent Warriers whose Noble Acts were enough to fill large Volumes and whose worthy Atchievements will be recorded in the Histories of that Age for an Encouragement to Posterity the Effigies of some of which I have here lively represented to your View The Effigies of ye. Right honble Charles Earle of CARLISLE Viscount Morpeth Baron Dacres of Gillsland Lord Leiutenant of Cumberland Westmoreland Vice Admirall of ye. Countyes of North●mberland Camberland Westmoreland the Bishoprick of Durham The Towne County of Newcastle Maritin parts There adiacent one of his Matyes most honble priuy Councell c a Abra. Bl●thing sculp The Effiges of the Right honble William Earle of Craven Viscount Craven of Vffington Baron Craven of Hampsted-Marshall Lord Leiutenant of the County of Middlesex and Borough of Southwarke and one of the Lords of his Majestys most honble privy Councell ca. This Portraiture is in memory of Bertram Ashburnham of Ashburnham in Sussex who in the tyme of King Harold was Warden of the Cinqueports Constable of Dover and Sheriff of the said County and being a person in soe great power at the Landing of William the Congueror King Harold who was then in the North sent him a Letter to raise all the force under his Comand to withstand the Invador And when the King cam● vp to oppose y● Conqueror the said Bertram who had an eminent Comand in the Battle received soe many wounds that soon after he dyed thereof And since which tyme through the mercy of god the Said family in a direct male line have euer since continued at Ashburnham aforesaid and are the present possessors thereof Edw Le Davis Sculp THE SECOND PART OR Honour Civil AND Treateth of the Nobility and Gentry according to the Laws and Customes of England CHAP. I. Of Honour General and Particular HONOUR is the Reward of Vertue as Infamy the Recompence of Vice and he that desireth to mount her footsteps as naturally all men in some degree or other are addicted unto must arrive thereunto by the way of Vertue which was strictly observed by the Romans for Dignities by Birth were not enough to advance them thereunto if they were not endowed with Heroick and Vertuous Qualifications and Honour should be a Testimony of their Excellency therein Some Learned Writers say That Honour consisteth in exterior Signs and Aristotle calleth it Maximum bonorum exteriorum Others say it is a certain Reverence in Testimony of Vertue Honour is of greater esteem than Silver or Gold and ought to be prized above all Earthly Treasure And for the encouragement of Youth to vertuous Atchievements the Romans were no more slack in their Rewards and Badges of Honour than they were in their punishment
lawfully do by Office that is to say The Steward of the King's Houshold notwithstanding the Liberty of any other although in another Kingdom when the Offender may be found in the King's Houshold according to that which happened at Paris in the Fourteenth year of Edward the First when Engelram of Nogeut was taken in the Houshold of the King of England the King himself being then at Paris with silver Dishes lately stoln at which deed the King of France did claim Cognizance of the Plea concerning that Theft by Jurisdiction of that Court of Paris The matter being diversly debated in the Council of the King of France at length it was Ordered That the King of England should use and enjoy that Kingly Prerogative of his Houshold who being Convicted by Robert Fitz-Iohn Knight Steward of the King's Houshold of the Theft by consideration of the said Court was hanged on the Gallows in St. Germans Field And here by the way may be noted from those recited Books alledged That the person of the King in another King's Dominions is not absolutely priviledged but that he may be impleaded for Debt or Trespass or condemned for Treason committed with in the said Dominions For it is the general Law of Nations that in what place an Offence is committed according to the Law of the said place they may be judged without regard to any priviledge Neither can a King in any other Kingdom challenge any such Prerogative of Immunity from Laws For a King out of his proper Kingdom hath not merum Imperium but only doth retain Honoris titulos dignitatis so that where he hath offended in his own Person against the King in whose Nation he is per omnia distringitur etiam quoad personam And the same Law is of Ambassadors ne occasio daretur delinquendi That Ambassadors are called Legats because they are chosen as fit men out of many and their Persons be sacred both at home and abroad so that no man may injuriously lay violent hands upon them without breach of the Law of Nations and much less upon the person of a King in a strange Land Bracton a Judge of this Realm in the Reign of King Henry the Third in his first Book and eighth Case saith There is no respect of Persons with God but with men there is a difference of Persons viz. the King and under him Dukes Counts Barons Lords Vavasors and Knights Counts so called because they take the Name from the County or from the word Sociati who also may be termed Consules of Counselling for Kings do associate such men unto them to govern the People of God ordaining into great Honours Power and Name where they do gird them with Swords that is to say Ringis gladorium Upon this cause were the Stations and Encampings of Arms called by the Romans Castra of the word Castrare since they ought to be Castrata vel Casta. In this place ought a good General to foresee that Venus Delights be as it were gelded and cut off from the Army So Sir Iohn Fern's Book entituled The Glory of Generosity Ring so called quasi renes girans circundans for that they compass the Reins of such that they may keep them from Incest of Luxury because the Luxurious and Incestuous persons are abominable unto God The Sword also doth signifie the Defence of King and Country And thus much in general of the Nobility of England Now followeth a more particular Discourse of each particular Degree and first of his Majesty the Fountain from whence all these Rivulets and swelling Streams of Honour's Spring The most high and mighty Monarch CHARLES the second by the Grace of God King of Great Britaine● France and Ireland● Defender of the faith ca. The Effiges of the most high and mighty Monarch CHARLES the second by the Grace of God King of Great Britaine France and Ireland De●ender of the faith c●● OF THE KING OR MONARCH OF Great Britain CHAP. II. MONARCHY is as ancient as Man Adam being created Soveraign Lord of the Universe whose Office was to govern the whole World and all Creatures therein His Posterity after his Death dividing into Tribes and Generations acknowledged no other Dominion than Paternity and Eldership The Fathers of Nations were instead of Kings and the Eldest Sons in every Family were reverenced as Princes from whence came the word Seignior amongst the Italians and French and Seignories for Lordship and Dominion of which Seneca makes two kinds viz. Potestas aut Imperium power to command Proprietas aut Dominium Property or Dominion These Empires in the Golden Age were founded upon natural Reverency and Piety their Power was executed with the soft Weapons of paternal perswasions and the greatest penalties that they inflicted upon the most Capital Criminals was the malediction of their Primogenitors with an Excommunication out of the Tribes But as Men and Vice began to increase Pride and evil Examples overshadowed Filial Obedience and Violence entred upon the Stage of the World the mighty Men tru●ling in their own strength oppressed the Feeble and were at length forced to truckle under the tyranny of others more Gygantick than themselves which necessitated them to submit to Government for self-preservation many housholds conjoyning made a Village many Villages a City and these Cities and Citizens confederating established Laws by consent which in tract of time were called Commonwealths some being governed by Kings some by Magistrates and some so unfortunate as to fall under the yoak of a popular Rule Nam Plebs est pessimus Tyrannus The first Chiefs or Kings were men of Vertue elected for their Wisdom and Courage being both Reges Duces to govern according to their Laws in Peace and to lead them forth to Battel against their Enemies in time of Hostility And this Rule proving more safe for the people honourable amongst men and ●●rm in it self than the other most Nations followed it approving the Sentence of Tacitus Pr●stat sub Principo ●alo esse quam nulle Lamentable Experience the Mistress of Fools in some and of Wisdom in others in the Ages sequent necessitated them again to quit the ●orm of Election and to entail the Soveraign Power in the Hereditary Loyns of their Kings to prevent the fatal consequence of Ambition amongst equal pretenders in popular Elections Thus the beginning of an Empire is ascribed to reason and necessity ●ut 't was God himself that illuminated the minds of men and let them see they could not subsist without a Supream in their human affairs Necessitas ●st firmum judicium immutabilis providentiae potestas This Island of Great Britain when Barbarism was so happy as to submit to a Regal Power as Caesar in his Commentaries witnesseth then divided into many Kingdoms under which Government of Kings with some small alterations according to the necessity of times and pleasure of Conquerors it hath flourished descending from the British Saxon Danish Norman and
Scotch Kings to our gracious Soveraign Charles the Second into whose Veins all those several streams of Royal Blood are conjoyned to unite those jarring Nations into one Body under a Head unto which each one may justly claim an interest God hath thus restored our ancient Government and seated our Soveraign in the Throne of his Ancestors giving him a power just and absolute as well to preserve as curb his people being not only Major singulis but Major universis and his power is super totam Rempublicam which I thus prove Either the whole power of the Commonwealth is in one or not if not then he is no absolute King or Monarch but if he be as all must yield a Monarch I ask if there be a power in the Commonwealth which is not in him Is it subordinate to his power or not If subordinate than his power is above that power and so super totam Rempublicam Major universis if it be not then there are a simul semel to Supream Civil Powers in the same individual Kingdom and Gubernation and yet divided against it self which is most absurd and impossible This in Answer to a monstrous Pamphlet which the lasciviousness of our late unhappy Wars produced which asserted Rex minor universis But the Divine Providence hath I hope put a period to all such Trayterous Tenents and concluded such Disputes by Acts of Parliament so that no person for the future shall dare to question who hath the right of making Peace or War the power of Militia by Land and Sea all strong Holds and Forts c. being the inherent right of the English Monarchs by their Prerogative Royal. The King is God's Vicegerent and ought to be obeyed accordingly If good he is a blessing if bad a judgment and then against whom we are to use no other weapons but prayers and tears for his amendment He is styled Pater Patriae Caput Re●publicae and because the protection of his Subjects belongs to his care and office the Militia is annext to his Crown that the Sword as well as the Scepter may be in his hand The Parliament then all Roman Catholicks in the behalf of Henry the Eighth writ to the Pope declaring that his Royal Majesty is the Head and the very Soul of us all his Cause is the Cause of us all derived from the Head upon the Members his Griefs and Injuries are ours we all suffer equally with him Camden in his Britannia fol. 100. calls the King the most excellent part of the Commonwealth next unto God He is under no Vassuage he takes his Investure from no man Rex non habet Superiorem nisi Deum satìs habet ad poenam quod Deum expectat ultorem In England France Spain c. Kings are styled Dei Gratia c. and as the French King is said to be Rex Francorum Christianissimus the most Christian King of France The King of Spain the most Catholick The Emperour the Defender of the Church So the Kings of England by a Bull from Pope Leo the Tenth sent to King Henry the Eighth for a Book of Controversie written by him against Luther have the Title of Defenders of the Faith and by Act of Parliament he is declared Supream Head of the Church of England It is the manner also for Kings to write in the plural Number which is God's own style Mandamus Volumus c. and in the Scripture we find them called Gods in which sense they may be styled Divi or Dii quia Dei Vicarii Dei voce judicant Our Lawyers also say Rex est persona mixta cum Sacerdote habet Ecclesiasticam Spiritualem Iurisdictionem This shews the King's power in Ecclesiastical Causes being anoynted with Oyl as the Priests and afterwards the Kings of Israel were which signifies his person to be both Sacred and Spiritual And therefore at the Coronation hath put upon him a Priest's Garment called the Dalmatica or Colobium and other such Vests And before the Reformation the King as a Spiritual person received the Sacrament in both kinds He is capable of holding Tithes all Extra-Parochial Tithes some Proxies and other Spiritual profits belong to the King The Ceremonies at the Coronation of the King are many and with us in England more than in many other Countries As the Anoynting with Oyl which is proved by Mr. Selden to be of above one thousand years standing the Crown set upon his Head with many Religious Ceremonies besides the Ensigns of Regality which are a Ring to signi●ie his Fait●fulnes a Bracelet for Good Works a Scepter for Justice a Sword for Vengeance Purple Robes to attract Reverence and a Diadem triumphant to blazon his Glory It was the saying of Thomas Becket Archbishop of Canterbury Inunguntur Reges in Capi●e etiam pect●re brach●is quod significat gloriam sanctitatem for●●n● in●●n King's are Anoynted on the Head to signi●●e their Glory on the Breast to Emblematize their Sanctity and on their Arms to declare their power He is crowned with an Imperial Crown the Crown set on his Head by the Arch-bishop of Canterbury a prerogative belonging to that See as it is in Spain to Toledo in France to Rheims and in Sueden to Vpsalia But this Imperial Crown hath not been long in use amongst us though our Kings have had Imperial Commands as over Scotland Ireland Man and other Isles being in a manner like that of an Earls now Neither is it found that any such thing as a Diadem was at all in use until the tune of Constantine the Great For before the distinction was some kind of Chaplet or rather a white silk Fillet about the Head which was an ordinary way to distinguish them And we read that Alexander the Great took off his white Diadem to cure the madness of Seleucus The first King that was crowned with this Imperial Crown floried and arched was Henry the Third but some say Henry the First and indeed it is left in dispute However it is very probable and plain That the ancientest Ensign of Regal Authority was the Scepter which is every where spoken of both in Scripture and Prophane History There is another Ensign of their Authority which is a Globe or Mound with a Cross which hath been in use amongst us ever since Edward the Confessor's time which is placed in the left hand as is seen in most of their Coyns The Cross denoting his Faith the Globe his Empire by Sea and Land as 't is said of Iustinian the Emperor who was the first that ever used it The Office of the King of England according to Fortescue Pugnare bella populi sui eos rectissime judicare to fight the Battels of his people and to see Right and Justice done unto them or more particularly as is promised at the Coronation to preserve the Rights and Priviledges of Holy Church the Royal Prerogatives belonging to the Crown the Laws and Customs of the
to the Crown of England shall bear his Coronet of Crosses and Flower de lis with one Arch and in the midst a Ball and Cross as hath the Royal Diadem That his Royal Highness the Duke of York and all the immediate Sons and Brothers of the Kings of England shall use and bear their Coronets composed of Crosses and Flower de lis only But all their Sons respectively having the Title of Dukes shall bear and use their Coronets composed of Leaves only as the Coronets of Dukes not being of the Royal Blood Note That by Order not Creation our present King was admitted Prince of Wales had the Principality with the Earldom of Chester c. confirmed to him by Patent and was allowed to hold his Court apart from the Kings The Prince by the Common Law is reputed as the same Person with the King and so declared by Statute temp Hen. 8. The Civilians say the King 's eldest Son during his Fathers life may be styled King by the Law of Nations because of his so near Relation to the Crown that if the Father die he is ipso momento Rex though he be not crowned A usual custome in Spain and once allowed here to Henry Son of King Henry the Second yet he holdeth his Seigniories and Principalities of the King as Subject to him and giveth the same respect to him as other Subjects do He hath certain priviledges above other persons To him it was permitted by the Statute 24 Hen. 8. cap. 13. to wear Silk of the colour of Purple and cloth of Gold of Tissue in his Apparel or upon his Horse And by the Statute 24 Ed. 3. ca. 2. Takings shall not be from henceforth made by others than the Purveyors of the King of the Queen and of the Prince their eldest Son And that if any mans Purveyor make such takings it shall be done of them as of those that do without Warrant and the Deed adjudged as a thing done against the Peace and the Law of the Land and such as do not in manner aforesaid shall be duly punished To eschew Maintenance and nourish Peace and Amity in all parts of the Realm many Statutes have been made in the Reign of King Henry the Fourth prohibiting the giving of Signs or Liveries to any but Menials nevertheless by the Statute 2 Hen. 4. cap. 21. it is provided that the Prince may give his honourable Liveries or Sign to the Lords or to his Menial Gentlemen and that the same Lords may wear the same as if they were the King's Liveries and that the Menials of the Prince may also wear the same as the King's Menials But afterwards by occasion of divers other Statutes made by sundry Kings for the suppressing o● that enormity of Maintenance and of the general word in them that priviledge of the Prince was abridged or rather taken away therefore the Statute 12 Ed. 4. cap. 4. was made By the Statute 21 H. 8. cap. 13. the Prince may retain as many Chaplains as he pleaseth although all other of the Nobility except those of the Blood Royal are constrained to a certain number and they or any of them may purchase Licence and Dispensation and take and retain two Parsonages or Benefices with Cure of Souls By the Order of the Common Law the King may Levy a reasonable Ayd of all his Tenants as well of those that did hold their Lands of him by Knights Service as in Soccage pur faire fitz Chevalier pur File marrier and the sum of Money was not in certainty Note that the Ayd is not to be recovered before the Son be of the Age of Fifteen years and the Daughter accomplish the Age of Seven years Fitz. Natur. B. 28.6 But in the King's pleasure till by the Statute in the 25 Ed. 3. cap. 11. it was Enacted That for the Knighting his eldest Son and marrying his eldest Daughter as aforesaid the Ayd following shall be demanded and levied viz. of every Knight so holden of the King without mean 20 s. and no more and of every 20. l. of Land holden of the King without mean in Soccage 20 s. and no more And so after this rate for the Lands in Soccage and for Land in Tenure of Chivalry according to the quantity of the Fee By another Statute made in the said 25 th of Edward the Third cap. 2. amongst other things it is declared That to compass or imagine the death of the King 's eldest Son and Heir is Crimen laesae Majestatis or if a man do violate the Wife of the King 's eldest Son and Heir it is High Treason And so the Statute 26 Hen. 8. cap. 13. doth declate And so was the ancient Common Law of this Realm and not a new Law made by the Statute Coke 8. part 28. b. but this Statute is a Manifestation and Application of the ancient Common Law in this Case Because the people were in ambiguity Whether Children born in parts beyond the Sea and out of the King's Dominions should be able to demand any Inheritance within his said Dominions or not It was declared at a Parliament holden at Westminster in the Seventeenth of King Iames for the removing of those doubts That les Enfants du Roy the Children of the Kings of England in whatsoever parts they are born in are able and ought to bear the Inheritance after the death of their Ancestors Read the Statute in Coke's Seventh Part 8. a. where you shall see that though generally the Birth-place is observed yet many times Legiance and Obedience without any place in the King's Dominions may make a Subject born For we see by Experience almost in every Parliament that Ambassadors Merchants and the King's Souldiers do sue therein in such Cases to have their Children Naturalized or made Denisons And in the Articles confirmed by Parliament touching the Marriage between Philip King of Spain and Queen Mary Anno primo Parliamenti 2. cap. 2. a special Proviso was to bar him from being Tenant by the Courtesie of the Crown in case he should have Issue by her and survive which was superfluous because the Common Law would have denied it For this last point see the Lord Chancellor's Speech in the Case Postnati f. 36. But note If an Alien Enemy come into this Realm and his Wife English or Stanger be here delivered of a Child this Child notwithstanding his Birth-place is an Alien born for want of Allegiance in the Parents ibid. King Henry the Third did create Edward his eldest Son the first Prine of Wales and did give unto him the Dominion and Dignity thereof to be holden of him and his Heirs Kings of England And after that time the eldest Sons of the Kings of England have been Princes of Wales and as incident to the State and Dignity of a Prince did and might make Laws and Statutes and use Jurisdiction and Authority as amply as any King of that Nation could do for Wales was a Kingdom in ancient
Hen. 1. fol. 3. and so doth Vlpian the Civilian determine And this is one of the three Reasons alledged wherefore by the policy of our Law the King is a Body Politick thereby to avoid the attainder of him that had right to the Crown Coke's seventh part 12. a. lest in the interim there should be an interregnum which the Law will not suffer because of the manifold Incumbrances thereof For it hath been clearly resolved by all the Judges of the Land That presently by the descent of the Crown the next Heir is compleatly and absolutely King without any essential Ceremony or Act to be done ex postfacto And that Coronation is but a Royal Ornament and outward Solemnization of the Descent And this appeareth evidently by abundance of Presidents and Book-Cases Let us take one or two Examples in a Case so clear for all King Henry the Sixth was not crowned till the Eighth year of his Reign and yet divers men before his Coronation were attainted of Treason Felony and the like Crimes and he was as absolute and compleat a King for matters of Judicature Grants c. before his Coronation as he was after Queen Mary reigned three moneths before she was crowned in which space the Duke of Northumberland and others were condemned and executed for Treason which they had committed before she was Queen And upon this reason there is a Maxim in the Common Law Rex nunquam moritur in respect of his ever living and never dying politique capacity In France also the same Custome hath been observed and for more assurance it was expresly enacted under Charles the Fifth That after the death of any King his eldest Son should immediately succeed for which cause the Parliament Court of Paris doth accompany the Funeral Obsequies of those that have been their Kings not in mourning attire but in Scarlet the true Ensign of the never dying Majesty of the Crown Nevertheless certain Cities in France not long since alledged for themselves that because they had not reputed Henry the Fourth for their King and professed Allegiance unto him they were not to be adjudged Rebels Whereupon the chief Lawyers of our Age did resolve That forasmuch as they were original Subjects even Subjects by Birth they were Rebels in bearing Arms against their King although they had never professed Allegiance unto him To conclude this Chapter I shall give you a View of the Ceremonies of the Creation of Henry Prince of Wales which began on the Thirtieth of May 1610. as followeth The Prince accompanied with divers young Noblemen together with his own Servants rode from his Court at St. Iames's to Richmond where he reposed that night on the next day the Lord Mayor Aldermen with the several Companies in their Barges attended his Highness about Barn Elmes where he was entertained with a Banquet and in other places with Speeches by a Neptune upon a Dolphin and a Sea Goddess upon a Whale c. His Highness landing at Whitehall was received by the Officers of his Majesties Houshold according to order viz. by the Knight Marshal and the Serjeant Porter In the Hall by the Treasurer and Comptroller of the Houshold in the great Chamber by the Captain of the Guard and in the presence Chamber by the Lord Chamberlain from whence he went into the Privy Chamber where the King and Queen met him the Saturday after was taken up with the usual Ceremonies of making Knights of the Bath to attend his Highness at his Creation which were Five and twenty in number Upon Monday following these Knights of the Bath met in the Queens Closet where they put on long Purple Satten Robes lined with white Taffata and a Hood like a Batchelor of Law about their Necks and in a Barge prepared for them went before the Prince to Westminster Palace where his Highness landed and proceeded to his Creation thus First the Heralds Next the Knights of the Bath Then the Lords that were imployed in several Services Garter King at Arms bearing the Letters Patents The Earl of Sussex the Robes of Purple Velvet The Earl of Huntington the Train The Earl of Cumberland the Sword The Earl of Rutland the Ring The Earl of Derby the Rod. The Earl of Shrewsbury the Cap and Coronet The Earl of Nottingham and Privy Seal supported his Highness being in his Surcoat only and bareheaded to the Parliament Chamber The King was already set with all the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in their Robes of State all the Knights and Burgesses of the lower House present as also the Foreign Ambassadors the great Ladies of the Realm and the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of London seated upon Scaffolds The Procession entring in manner aforesaid made three several low Reverencies to his Majesty and when they came to the Throne Garter King at Arms kist the Letters Patents and gave them to the Lord Chamberlain who presented them to the King who delivered them to the Earl of Salisbury Principal Secretary of State who read them the Prince kneeling all the while before the King and at the words accustomed the King put on the Robe the Sword the Cap and Coronet the Rod and the Ring The Patent being read the King kist him on the Cheek and the Earl Marshal with the Lord Chamberlain placed him in his Parliament Seat viz. on the left hand of the King which Ceremony being ended they returned to the Palace Bridge in manner as followeth First the Masters of the Chancery the King's Council and others then the Officers of Arms the Knights of the Bath next twenty Trumpets before them then the Judges and after them all the Members of Parliament in order the Barons Viscounts Earls and Marquisses having Coronets on their Heads then Norroy and Clarenceaux King at Arms going next before the Lord Treasurer and the Lord Chancellor then Garter next before the Sword and then the Prince and King They took Barge at the Palace Stairs and landed at Whitehall Bridge where the Officers at Arms the Members of Parliament and the Lords being first landed attended the King and Prince and went before into the Hall and so into his Majestie 's Presence Chamber whence the Prince descended again into the Hall to Dinner himself seated at the upper end of a Table accompanied with the Lords that attended him at his Creation who sate on both sides of the Table with him At another Table on the left hand sate the Knights of the Bath in their Robes along one side attended by the King's Servants At the second Course Garter with the Heralds came to the Prince's Table and after due reverence proclaimed the King's Style with three Largesses viz. King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. And then proclaimed the Prince's Titles viz. Prince of Wales Duke of Cornwall and Rothsay Earl of Rothsay Earl of Chester and Knight of the Garter with two Largesses Then with Feasting Masques and all sort of Courtly Gallantry that joyful
Authority of Parliament made in the Eleventh of King Edward aforesaid and therefore to supply that defect in the Fifth of Edward the Third he was created Duke of Cornwall by special Charter Elizabeth eldest Daughter of King Edward the Fourth was not a Dutchess of Cornwall although she was the Firstbegotten Daughter of Edward the Fourth for the Limitation is to the First-begotten Son Henry the Eighth was not in the life of his Father King Henry the Seventh after the death of his eldest Brother Arthur Duke of Cornwall by force of the said Creation for although he was sole Heir apparent yet he was not his eldest begotten Son And the Opinion of Stamford a Learned Judge hath been That he shall have within his Dukedom of Cornwall the King's Prerogative because it is not severed from the Crown after the form as it is given for none shall be Inheritor thereof but the King 's of the Realm For example whereas by Common Law if a man hold divers Mannors or other Lands or Tenements of divers Lords all by Knights Service some part by Priority and ancient Feoffment and other Land by Posterity and a later Feoffment and the Tenant so seized dieth and his Son and Heir within Age in this case the custody and wardship of the Body and his marriage may not be divided amongst all the Lords but one of them only shall have right unto it because the Body of a man is intire And therefore the Law doth say That the Lord of whom some part of those Lands are holden by Priority and by the same Tenure of Chivalry shall have it except the King be any of the Lords for then though the Tenant did purchase that Land last yet after his death the King shall be preferred before any of the other Lords of whom the Tenant did hold the Priority And so shall the Duke of Cornwall in the same Case have the Prerogative if his Tenant die holding of him but by posterity of Feoffment for any Tenure of his Dutchy of Cornwall although the same Duke is not seized of any particular Estate whereof the Reversion remaineth in the King for the Prince is seized in Fee of his Dukedom as beforesaid Iohn of Gaunt the fourth Son of King Edward the Third took to Wife Blanch Daughter and Heir of Henry Duke of Lancaster who had Issue Henry King of England so that the said Dutchy of Lancaster did come unto the said Henry by descent from the party of his Mother and being a Subject he was to observe the Common Law of the Realm in all things concerning his Dutchy For if he would depart in Fee with any thereof he must have made Livery and Seisin or if he had made a Lease for life reserving Rent with a Re-entry for default of payment and the Rent happen to be behind the Duke might not enter without making his Demand or if he had alienated any part thereof whilst he was within Age he might defeat the Purchaser for that Cause and if he would grant a Reversion of an Estate for life or years in being there must also be Attornment or else the Grant doth not take effect But after that he had deposed King Richard the Second and did assume the Royal Estate and so had conjoyned his Natural Body in the Body Politick of the King of this Realm and so was become King then the possession of the Dutchy of Lancaster was in him as King but not as Duke which degree of Dignity was swallowed up in that of the King for the lesser must always give place to the greater And likewise the Name of the Dutchy and the Franchises Liberties and Jurisdictions thereof when in the King's Hands were by the Common Law extinct and after that time the possessions of the Dutchy of Lancaster could not pass from Henry the Fourth by Livery of Seisin but by his Letters Patents under the Great Seal without Livery of Seisin and with Attornment And if he make a Lease for Life being Duke reserving a Rent with a Re-entry for default of payment and after his Assumption of the Crown his Rent happen to be unpaid he might Re-enter without Demand for the King is not bound to such personal Ceremonies as his Subjects are Therefore to have the said Dutchy to be still a Dutchy with the Liberties to the same as it was be●ore and to alter the order and degree of the Lands of the Dutchy from the Crown the said King Henry the Fourth made a Charter by Authority of Parliament which is entituled Charta Regis Hen. 4. de separatione Lancastriae à corona authoritate Parliamenti Anno Regni sui primo as by the Tenor thereof may appear And so by Authority of that Parliament the said Dutchy with all the Franchises and Liberties was meerly resigned from the Crown and from the Ministers and Officers thereof and from the Order to pass by such Conveyance which the Law did require in the possessions of the Crown But now the possessions of the Dutchy by force of the said Statute stood divided from the Crown and ought to be demeaned and ordered and pass as they did before Henry the Fourth was King yet there is no Clause in the Charter which doth make the person of the King who hath the Dutchy in any other Degree than it was before But things concerning his pleasure shall be in the same estate as they were before such separation insomuch as if the Law before the Charter by Authority of Parliament adjudged the person of the King always of full Age having regard unto his Gifts as well of the Lands which he doth inherit in the right of his Crown or Body Politick it shall be so adjudged for the Dutchy Land after the said Statute for the Statute doth go and reach unto the Estate Order and Condition of the Lands of the Dutchy but doth not extend unto the person of the King who hath the Lands in points touching his person Neither doth that distinguish or alter the preheminences which the Law doth give to the person of the King For if King Henry the Fourth after the said Act had made a Lease or other Grant of parcel of the Dutchy by the Name of Henry Duke of Lancaster only it had been void for it should have been made in the Name of Henry the Fourth King of England And thus stood the Dutchy of Lancaster severed from the Crown all the Reign of Henry the Fourth Henry the Fifth and Henry the Sixth being politickly made for the upholding of the Dutchy of Lancaster their true and ancient Inheritance however the right Heir to the Crown might in future time obtain his right thereunto as it happened in King Edward the Fourth's time but after the said King Edward obtained his right unto the Crown in Parliament he attainted Henry the Sixth and appropriated and annexed the said Dutchy again to the Crown as by the Statute thereof made in the first of the King's Reign
it doth appear By which Statute three things were ordained First The County Palatine of Lancaster was again established Secondly He did invest it in the Body Politick of the King 's of this Realm And thirdly He did divide it from the order of the Crown Land And in this form it continued until Henry the Seventh who forthwith being descended from the House of Lancaster did separate it only in Order and Government from the Crown and so it continueth at this day Ceremonies to be observed in the Creation of a Duke AT the Creation of a Duke he must have on him his Surcoat and Hood and should be led between two Dukes if there be any present if not a Marquiss or two and for want of either an Earl somewhat before him on the right hand shall go on Earl which shall bear a Cap of Estate with the Coronet in it and on the other side shall also go an Earl which shall bear the Golden Rod and before the Duke that is to be created should go a Marquiss or one of the greatest Estate to bear the Sword and before him an Earl to bear the Mantle or Robe of Estate lying on his Arms. And all these Nobles that do Service must be in their Robes of Estate His Title is proclaimed twice and the Largess thrice The Effigies of the most Noble CHARLES PAULET MARQUESS of WINCHESTER EARLE of Wiltsh And BARON St. IOHN of Basing ct. R. White Sculp The most honble Charles Paulet Mar●quess of Minchester Earle of Miltshire Baron St Iohn of Basing ● The most honble Henry Somerset● Marquess Earle of Worcest●●● Ld. Her●ert Baron of Chipstom Raglan Gomer Ld. President ● Ld● Leivtenant of Wales and the Marches L d Leivtenant of 〈◊〉 Countyes of Glocester Hereford Monmouth of the 〈◊〉 County of Bristoll Knight of the most noble order of the G●●te● one of the Lords of his matys most honble privy Counc●ll● The most hono rble Henry Rerrepont Marqu●ss of Dorchester Earle of Kingston upon Hull● Viscount Nemarke Ld. Rerrepont Maunvers Herris one of the Lords of his matys most honorble● Priuy Councel c● OF MARQUISSES CHAP. V. A Marquiss which by the Saxons is called Marken-Reue and signifieth a Governor or Ruler of the Marches hath the next place of Honour to a Duke This Title came to us but of late days for the first was Robert Vere who was created Marquiss of Dublin by King Richard the Second and from that time it became to be a Title of Honour for in former time those that Governed the Marches were commonly called Lord Marchers and not Marquisses After the Normans had conquered this Land it was by them carefully observed as a matter of great moment to place upon the Confines and Borders of the Britains and those not then subdued men of much Valour such that were not only sufficient to encounter the Inrodes and Invasions of the Enemy but also ready upon all Occasions to make onset upon them for the enlarging their Conquest These men thus placed were of high Blood and Reputation amongst their Countrey-men the Normans and in whose Faith the Conqueror reposed special Trust and Confidence And therefore in their Territories given unto them to hold their Tenures were devised to be very special and of great importance and honour enriched with Name and Priviledges of Earl of Chester and so the North-border of Wales created to a County Palatine and the Barons of the middle part of the South Marches were adorned in a manner with a Palatine Jurisdiction having a Court of Chancery and Writs only amongst themselves pleadable to the intent that their Attendance might not thence be drawn for the prosecuting of Controversies or Quarrels in the Law And as for the other part of the South Marches they seemed to be sufficiently fenced with the River Severn and the Sea A Marquiss is created per gladii cincturam circuli aurei suo capiti positionem He is honoured with a Coronet of Gold which is part flowered and part pyramidal with the points and flowers or leaves of an equal height His Mantle is doubled Ermin which is of three doublings and an half whereas the Mantle of an Earl is but of three and the doublings of a Viscount's Mantle is but two and a half which are only plain white Furr without Ermins as are the Barons which are but of two doublings The form of their Patent which at their Creation is delivered into their hands was various but of late ●tis regulated to the method of those of other Degrees and the Ceremonies the same This Honour is hereditary and the eldest Son by the Courtesie of the Land is called Earl or Lord of a place and the younger Sons only Lord Iohn Lord Thomas or the like He hath the Title of most Noble most Honourable and Potent Prince and may have his Cloth of Estate reaching within a yard of the Ground the King or a Duke not being present and his Marchioness may have her Train born up by a Knight's Lady in her own House but not in a Dutchesses presence A Marquisses eldest Son is born an Earl and shall go as an Earl and have his Essay in an Earl's presence and wear as many powdrings as an Earl but shall give place to an Earl and his Wife shall go beneath a Countess and abov● all Marquisses Daughters who are born Ladies and the eldest a Countess but shall go beneath a Countess At the Creation of a Marquiss he must have on him his Surcoat and Hood and be led by a Duke or Marquiss the Sword and Cap to be born by Earls He must go after his Creation not after his Marquisite and the Marchioness his Wife according to the same The Effigies of the Right honble CHARLES BEAUCLAIRE Baron of Heddington Earle of BURFORD And of ye. Rt. honble IAMES Ld. BEAUCLAIRE Brother and heir to ye. Right honble Charles Earle of Burford The Rt. honble Aubrey Vere Earle of Oxford● Baron Bulbeck Sandford Badlefinere Kt. of the Garter L Leiutenant wth his grace the Duke of ●●●●marle of Essex one of his Ma●ys● most Hon. privy Councell c a. The Right Honourable Charles Talbot Earle of Shrewsbury Baron Talbot Strange of Blackmere Gifford of Brimshel● Purnivull● Verdon Loveto● The Right Honourable Anthony Grey Earle of Kent Baron Grey of Ruthin Hasting and Valance 〈◊〉 Right honble William Stanley Earle● of Der●● Lord Stanley c Strange of Knocking Viscount Kint●● Baron of We●●on L ● Mob●n Burnet Basset Lacy. L ● Leivt●nant of Lanc●shire ● Cheshire and Admirall of the Seas their● belonging C●amberlaine of Ch●ster ● L ● of Man as of the Isles c a. The Right honble Iohn Mannors Earle of Rutland Baron Ross of Hamlack Trushut and Belvior and Lord Leivetenant of Leicestershire The Right honble Theophilus Earle of Huntington L d Hastings of Hastings Hungerford Homet Botreaux Moules Moulins Pe●erell
all true Wisdom And therefore our wise and religious Ancestors called to their General Council or Wittengemote or Court of Wisemen as they called it those chief and principal persons of the Clergy which by their places and professions by their Gravities Learning and Wisdom might best advise them what was the Law of God's acceptable will and pleasure that they might frame Laws answerable or at least wise not contrary and repugnant thereunto And touching the Temporal Barons by Tenure mention is made of them in the Books of Law Records and ancient Monuments of the Realm and these Baronies were anciently uncertain and rentable at the pleasure of the King But such incertainty was brought to certainty by the Statute of Magna Charta chap. 2. Bracton doth make express mention of Barons Temporal by Tenure it shall be needful here again to remember the former assertion of Bracton That the head of a Barony descending to Daughters should not be divided by partition which argueth likewise the Tenure of Barony But let us descend to other Authority viz. the Book-Case in the 48 Edw. 3. fol. 30. Sir Ralph Everdon's Case by which Case of Law 't is most evidently proved that there are Barons by Tenure which in regard of such their Tenure ought to be summoned to Parliament And furthermore That there were or are Barons by Tenure read the Statute of Westminster 2. cap. 41. where the Fees of the Earl-Marshal and the Lord Chamberlain are expressed which are to be taken by them upon the Homage done of every Baron by Tenure whether the Baron holdeth by a whole Barony or by a less But here ariseth a Question If a Baron by Tenure alien and grant away the Honour Castle and Mannor holden by Barony whether shall such Alien or Grauntee take upon him the State Title and Dignity of a Baron or not Or what shall become of such Dignity of Baronage after such Alienation and Grant made They which do deny that there are any such Baronies by Tenure do use these as their principal Motives or Reasons First If there be any Baronies by Tenure then the Alience or Grantee of such Honour Castle and Mannor so holden must hold by the same Tenure that his Grantor or Feoffer before held but that was by Barony therefore such Grantee must hold by Barony And if such Grant or Alienation be made to persons Vulgar or Ignoble then should such Tenure be made Noble which were very absurd and full of inconveniency for Ornanda potius est dignitate domus quam ex domo dignitas utcunque quibus quaerenda est ab iis honestanda Milles peroration 3. Secondly It is very evident and manife stthat many ancient Mannors which in old time were holden by Baronage and were the head of Baronies are now in the Tenures of mean Gentlemen and others who neither may nor do challenge unto themselves in any respect hereof any Nobility without the great favour of the King 's most Excellent Majesty who is the Fountain of all Honour within his Dominions Thirdly Some ancient Barons there are that have aliened and sold many of those Castles and Mannors which did bear the Name and Dignity of Baronage and yet themselves do still retain and lawfully keep their Estate Dignity and Degree of Baron and have been and usually are such Alienations notwithstanding summoned nevertheless to the Parliament and there do take and hold their ancient place accordingly To these Objections it shall be convenient for the more easie unfolding the s●ate of this Question to exhibit certain necessary distinctions and upon them to draw true and infallible Conclusions and then to prove them by authority of Law consent of Time and manifold Presidents which done the Answer will be presently made as I conceive to every of the aforesaid Objections First therefore If a Baron by Tenure which holdeth any Castle Honour or Mannor by Baronage do Alien o● give the same away he doth it either with or without a Licence obtained from his Majesty for the same If he doth it without a Licence then the Conclusion is certain But by the Laws of this Realm the Barony Honour Castle or Mannor so aliened without licence or consent is for●eited and the same Honour Castle and Mannor ●o ●olden by Barony and so aliened is to ●e seized in the King's hands and the ●aid Forfeiture and such Dignity and Estate no longer to be born and continue but to be resumed and extinguished in the Crown from whence it was derived The reason therefore is notable if we call to remembrance that which was formerly alledged out of Bracton That Baronies are the strength of the Realm and suffer no division they suffer also no alienation without the consent or licence of the Sovereign Monarch for so should the Realm be infeebled and base persons ennobled without desert of Vertue or Prowess For where the thing so aliened is an Honour or Head of a Barony it differeth much from the ordinary Tenure in Capite whereof if the Tenant make Alienation without Licence he is only to pay a Fine by the Statute of 1 Edw. 3. cap. 12. whereof also before the making of the Statute there was diversity of Opinions at the Common Law after the Statute of Magna Charta cap. 31. And for further proof see Glanvile In Edward the Third certain Lands being parcel of the Barony of Bremberway were aliened by William de Browse the Baron thereof without the King's Licence and in the Argument of the Case concerning the same Judge Green delivered this for Law First That parcel of a Barony or Earldom of the King in chief cannot be aliened or dismembred without his Licence and if it be it shall be seized into the King's hands as forfeited and the King shall be seized thereof in his own right again In 43 Edw. 3. it was found by an Office that William Bishop of Chester had leased unto one Iohn Preston for his Life a Mannor which was parcel of the Mannor of the said Bishoprick without Licence and it was resolved by the Judges and others of the King's Council That the same was forfeited but by mediation of the said Council the Bishop submitted himself to the King and made a Fine and several Scire Facias's issued out against them that had received the many pro●its to answer unto the King thereof And thus much concerning Alienations of Baronies without Licence But on the other part if a Baron by Tenure who holds any Honour Castle or Mannor by Barony do grant or alien the same by Licence I must again distinguish for either such Alienation is made for the continuance of his Barony Honour Lands and Tenements in his own Name Blood and Issue Male or else the same Alienation is made for Money or other Recompence or otherwise to a meer Stranger and hereof ensueth this second Conclusion or Assertion That if such Alienation be made for the continuance of his Barony in his Name and Blood or Issue Male
Nobleman and his Progenitors have for a long time been called to Parliament and be a Baron either by Tenure or Writ and have had in regard thereof a place certain in Parliament if afterwards the said Nobleman should be created a Baron of that Barony and by the same name by Letters Patents whether shall he and his Heirs retain his old place in Parliament which he had according to his former Dignity or whether shall he lose his old place and take a new one according to the time of his Creation Answer The Case of the Lord Delaware lately erected a Resolution somewhat answerable to this Question Thomas Delaware in the third of Edward the Sixth being in some displeasure with William West his Heir and Nephew who was Father to Thomas late Lord Delaware and Grandfather to Henry Lord Delaware that Nevis procured by Act of Parliament by which the said William West was during his natural life only clearly disabled to claim demand or have any manner of Right Title or Interest by Descent Remainder or otherwise in or to the Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments Title and Dignity of Thomas Lord Delaware his Uncle c. After the said Thomas Delaware died and the said William West was in the time of Queen Mary attainted of Treason by Verdict but pardoned by the said Queen and afterwards by Parliament in the time of Queen Elixabeth was restored and in the fourth year of her Reign was created Lord Delaware by Patent and took place in Parliament accordingly for that by the said Act of Parliament of Edward the Sixth he was excluded to challenge the former ancient Barony and after he died Now whether Thomas Delaware should take his place according to the ancient Barony by Writ or according to his Father's Creation by Patent was the Question The Opinions of the late Queens Council being his Majestie 's Attorney General and Solicitor were That the acceptance of the new Creation by the said William West could not extinguish the ancient Dignity for that he had not the ancient Dignity in him at that time of his Creation but the Dignity was by the Act of Parliament 3 Edw. 6. in the ballance of suspence or consideration of Law and he thereby utterly disabled to have the same during his life only so as other acceptance could not extinguish that Dignity which he then had not nor could not conclude his Heir who was not disabled by the Parliament 3 Edw. 6. to claim the ancient Barony which Opinion of theirs was seen and allowed by the then Chief Justice of England and Lord Chief Baron and so signified to the Lord Keeper But this to be noted by the Reasons made for the said Resolution though if the said Sir William West had been Baron and entituled and in possession of the ancient Dignity when he accepted the ancient Creation the Law perchance might have been otherwise but that remains as yet unresolved Nevertheless the Rule is Eodem modo quo quid constituitur dissolvitur But by a Grant which is but a matter of Fact a man cannot transfer his Title of Honour And thus much concerning the Degrees of Barons within this Realm upon this occasion for the better understanding and direction of that which followeth to be handled And in this place I think it not impertinent to mention one Case which I met with in our Books of Common Law concerning the Descent of a Title of Honour whereof the Ancestor had Estate in Feesimple there is a Maxim in the Law Possessio fratris in feodo facit sororemesse haeredem But if a man by any of the three means aforesaid be created into a Title of Dignity to him and his Heirs for ever and so have Issue by one wife a Son and a Daughter and hath also a Son by a second wife afterwards the Father dieth and his eldest Son entreth into all his Father's Inheritances and also enjoyeth the Titles and Dignities which his Father had but dieth without Issue In this Case the Dignity shall descend upon the younger Son though he be but of the half blood to him that last enjoyed that Name and Title of descent and shall not descend to his Sister of the whole blood And yet in this case he shall only be her Brother's Heir of all his Feesimple Lands and the reason thereof is because possessio fratris is the name and sole cause which may give Title to her his Sister which faileth in this case of Dignity for it cannot be said that her elder brother was in possession of his Title of Honour no more than of his blood so as neither by his own act nor any act to be done by any other did gain more actual possession if so it may be termed then by the Law did descend to him and therefore the younger brother may well by the Law make himself Heir unto his Father of the Honour that he cannot be heir unto his brother So that this word Possession which is no other than pedis positio extendeth only unto such things of which a man may by h●s entry or other act be possessed and doth require actual possession Coke's third part 92. Having thus much treated concerning the Creations and other things incident to the degrees of Nobility I cannot omit some things concerning the sufficiency and ability of Estate which the Law doth require to be in every of them according to their several Dignities The Common Law which always will decorum and conveniency be observed considering the Charges and Dignities appertaining to these Degrees and Dignities being Offices of principal Service to the King and Realm both in War and Peace hath ordered that each of them ought to have a convenient Portion and Inheritance in Land to support the said Dignity which Supplies are as Sinews conjoyned in the same For in Vertue and Riches as Aristotle confesseth all the old Nobility consisted and which two Properties maketh a good Complement for utilior est sapientia cum divitiis conjuncta Therefore a Knight's Fee which he ought to have is Twenty pounds Land by the year a Baron's thirteen Knights Fees and a quarter and an Earl's twenty Knights Fees For always the fourth part of each Revenues which is by the Law held requisite for the Dignity shall be paid to the King for the Relief As for Example the Relief of a Knight is five pounds which is the one fourth of his Revenue according to the Statute of the first of Edward the Second The Relief of a Baron is One hundred Marks which is also the fourth part of his Revenue And the Relief of an Earl is One hundred pounds al●o the fourth part of his Revenue And it appears by the Records of the Exchequer that the Relief of a Duke amounteth unto Three hundred pounds And this is the reason in our Books that every of the Nobility is presumed in the Law to have sufficient Freehold ad sustinendum nomen onus And to what value
There is none of the Nobility but have sufficient Freehold which the Plaintiffs may extend for their payment or satisfaction But a Capias or Exigit lieth against a Knight for the Law hath not that Opinion of his Freehold And if any of the Nobility happen to be so wilful and not to appear the Court will compel the Sheriff to return great Issues against him and so at every default to encrease the issues as lately against the Earl of Lincoln hath been in practice By the ancient Laws of this Realm before the coming of William the Conqueror many good Laws were made for keeping the Peace and amongst others That all above the age of twelve years should be sworn to the King which we in remembrance thereof do keep at this day in the view of Frank Pledge or the Court Leet But Noblemen of all sorts are neither bound to attend the Court Leet nor to take the Oath as appeareth by Britan. c. 29. treating of the Court called the Sheriffs Tourn out of which the Leet to be extracted And agreeable thereunto is the Statute of Marlbridge cap. 10. See the Lord Chancellor's Speech in the case of Postnati fol. 78. If a Writ of Error be brought in Parliament upon a Judgment given in the King's Bench the Lords of the higher House alone without the Commons are to examine the Errors ibid. fol. 22. In the 11 th of Henry the Fourth fol. 26. in a Case concerning a Distress taken for Expences and Fees the Knights of the Parliament are not contributary for such Lands as are parcel of their ancient Lordships and Baronies but for other Lands they are But there is a Question made If one which is no Baron but ignoble do purchase any ancient Barony whether he shall be discharged of such Expences and Fees or not Which is not worthy the questioning For as Land holden by Villainous Service doth not make him a Villain or Bondman which being free doth purchase the same although by his Tenure he shall be bound to do such Villainous Service So on the other side Land that is holden by Barony doth not make the Villain or Ignoble which purchaseth the same to be Noble although the charge of such Tenure do lye upon him in respect of the Service of the Realm It is said in our Books That a day of Grace or by the favour of the Court is not to be granted to the Plaintiff in any Suit or Action whereby a Nobleman is Defendant because thereby a Nobleman should be longer delayed than the ordinary course of the Court is and such a Lord is to have expedition of Justice in respect that he is to attend the person of the King and the Service of the Commonwealth But if there be no Noble person to the Suit the Judges do and may at their discretion upon a motion grant a day more of Grace otherwise than by the strict course of the Law the Plaintiff may challenge Cambden f. 169. writing upon this Subject saith Where a Nobleman is Demandant the Defendant may not be assoyned for the delay and cause aforesaid To which I could also subscribe but that the Book in the fifth of Hen. 4. 15. b. is otherwise adjudged There the King brought a Quare Impedit against a common person and the Defendant was essoyned by a Rule of Court If any Peer of the Realm be Plaintiff or Defendant in any Action real or personal a-against any other whereupon any Issue is to be tryed by a Jury the Sheriff must return one Knight at the least to be of the Inquest otherwise upon challenge made the whole pannel shall be quashed Which by order of the Law is appointed to be done for honour and reverence due to the person of that degree For when a Peer of the Realm is party it is otherwise than when the Suit is between private persons F. N. B. Title Challenge 115. 13. Edward the Third in a Quare Impedit against a Bishop adjudged But the Earl of Kent in the fourteenth year of the late Queen's Reign and the parties did plead to an Issue the Venire Facias is awarded which the Sheriff did return ●●rved and a pannel returned accordingly in which is no Knight named The truth of which Case was that after the return made the Demand is published and demanded by the Queen and the Heralds to be Earl of Kent in right and discent although he had not been so reputed or named before and also after that time that is to say at the then last Parliament the Tenant is made a Baron by Writ of Parliament and then the Jury doth appear in the Court of Common Pleas and the Earl of Kent did challenge the Array because no Knight was returned but it was not allowed him by the Court for the admittance of both parties is to the contrary and no default can be laid to the Sheriff for he had no notice of the honourable Es●ate of either of the parties the Demandant not being then known or reputed to be an Earl by descent or of the Tenant then also being no Baron How much the Common Law hath always prohibited perpetuity in Lands and Tenements you may see in Corbet's Case in the first part of Coke's Book fol. 48. and in many other Cases in the rest of his Books As also Littleton fol. 145. saith it is a principle in the Law that every Land in Feesimple may be charged with a Rent But if the King's Majesty upon a Creation of any Peer of the Realm of what degree soever do as the manner is by Letters Patent give unto any such new created Nobleman an Annuity or Rent for the support of his degree which they call Creation-money this is so annexed to the dignity that by no Grant Assurance or any manner of Alienation it can be given from the Lord but is still incident and a support of the same Creation In all Cases wherein is any Suit a Baron or Peer of the Realm is to be amerced no less than five pounds but the amercement of a Duke is One hundred pounds Although the Statute of Magna Charta chap. 14. be in the Negative viz. Comites Barones non amercientur nisi per pares suos non nisi secundum modum delicti yet use hath reduced it into a certainty As also by the same Statute it appeareth that such Amercements should be assessed per pares suos but that it were troublesome to assemble Barons for so small a matter such Amercements in times past have been assessed by the Barons of the Exchequer who sometime were Barons of the Realm as is already taken notice of and so writeth Bracton lib. 3. tract cap. 1. fol. 116.8 Whereas by Statute 32 Hen. 8. cap. 16. it is enacted That the Subjects of this Realm shall not keep in their Houses or Families above the number of four Strangers born nevertheless by a Proviso in the same Act every Lord of the Parliament hath this
to prejudice him touching his Mothers Inheritance who also did not offend or contrariwise especially in case where the Mother was seized of an Estate in Feesimple either in Lands or Tenements or Title of Honour And this was the case if I be not mistaken of Philip late Earl of Arundel notwithstanding the Attainder of Thomas Duke of Norfolk his Father for he had that Earldom in right of his Mother But they do agree That if the Lands or Tenements or a Title of Honour be given to a man and to his wife in tayl who hath Issue The Father is attainted of Treason and executed though this forfeiture of the Husband shall be no barr to the Wife concerning her interest by Survivorship yet their Issue is barred by the Statute 26 Hen. 8. cap. 13. and his Blood corrupted For in that case the Heir must necessarily make himself Heir as well of the Body of the one as of the other And yet the words of the Statute 32 Hen. 8. cap. 28. are That no Fine Feof●ment or other Act or Acts hereafter to be made or suffered by the Husband only of any Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments being the Inheritance or Freehold of his Wife during the Coverture between them shall in any wise be or make any discontinuance or be prejudicial to the said Wife or to her Heirs or to such as shall have right title or interest to the same by the death of such Wife or Wives but the same Wife or her Heirs and such other to whom such right shall appertain after her decease shall or may then lawfully enter into all such Mannors Lands Tenements and Hereditaments according to their Rights and Titles therein For there is Adversity taken and agreed for Law between a discontinuance which doth imply a wrong and a lawful Baron which doth imply a right And therefore if Land be given to the Husband and the Wife and to the Heirs of their Bodies begotten and the Husband levies a Fine with Proclamation or do commit High Treason and dieth and the Wife before or after Entry dieth the Issue is barred and the Comisee for the King hath right unto the Lands because the Issue cannot claim as Heir unto both And with this doth agree Dyer 351. b. adjudged vide 5 Hen. 7. 32. Cott's Assize Coke's eighth part 27. where it is resolved That the Statute 32 Hen. 8. doth extend only unto Discontinuances although the Act hath general words or be prejudicial to the Wife or her Heirs c. but the conclusion if she shall lawfully enter c. according to their right and title therein which they cannot do when they be barred and have no right title and interest And this Statute doth give advantage unto the Wife c. so long as she hath right but it doth not extend to take away a future barr Although the Statute doth give Entry without limitation of any time nevertheless the Entry must attend upon the right and therefore if the Wife be seized in Feesimple and her Husband levy a Fine with Proclamation unto another and dieth now the Wife may enter by force of the Statute for as yet that Fine is not any barr unto her but her right doth remain which she may continue by Entry but if she do surcease her time and the five years do pass without Entry c. now by force of the Fine with Proclamation and five years past after the death of her Husband she is barred of her right and by consequence she cannot enter And the Statute doth speak of Fine only and not of Fine with Proclamation If there be Father and Son and the Father be seized of Lands holden in Capite or otherwise by Knight's Service the King doth create the Son Duke Earl or other Degree of Nobility and afterwards the Father dieth his Son being within the Age of One and twenty years he shall be no Ward but if the King had made him Knight in the life of his Father he should not have been in Ward after the death of his Father neither for the Lands descended nor for his Marriage though he be within Age. NOBILITY AND LORDS IN REPUTATION ONLY CHAP. XIV THERE are also other Lords in Reputation and Appellation who nevertheless are not de jure neither can they enjoy the priviledges of those of the Nobility that are Lords of the Parliament The Son and Heir of a Duke during his Father's life is only in courtesie of Speech and Honour called an Earl and the eldest Son of a Marquiss or an Earl a Lord but not so in legal proceedings or in the King's Courts of Judicature But the King may at his pleasure create them in the life of their Ancestors into any Degree of Lords of the Parliament And according to the German Custom all the younger Sons of Dukes and Marquisses are called Lords but by courtesie only which Title descends not to their Heirs A Duke or other of the Nobility of a Foreign Nation doth come into this Land by the King 's safe Conduct in which said Letters of safe Conduct he is named a Duke according to his Creation yet that Appellation maketh him not a Duke c. to sue or be sued by that name within this Realm but is only so by Reputation But if the King of Denmark or other Sovereign King come into England under safe Conduct he during his abode here ought to be styled by the name of King and to retain his Honour although not his Regal Command and Power And in this case may be observed by the way That no Sovereign King may enter into this Realm without licence though he be in League All the younger Sons of the Kings of England are of the Nobility of England and Earls by their Birth without any other Creation And if an Englishman be created Earl of the Empire or some other Title of Honour by the Emperor or other Monarch he shall not bear that Dignity in England but is only an Earl in Reputation A Lord or Peer of Scotland or Ireland is not of the Nobility or Peerage of England in all Courts of Justice although he is commonly reputed a Lord and hath priviledge as a Peer OF THE QUEEN CONSORT AND OF NOBLE WOMEN CHAP. XV. A QUEEN so called from the S●xon word Cuningine as the King from Cuning by variation of Gender only as was their manner signifieth Power and Knowledge and thereby denotes the Sovereignty due unto them which they enjoyed in those days and do now in most Nations being capable of the Royal Diadem by the common right of Inheritance for want of Heirs Male But in France by the Salique Law the Sex is excluded from their Inheritance by which they debarred the English Title to their Crown There are three kinds of persons capable of the Title and Dignity of Queen amongst us and each of them different in Power and Priviledge The first is a Queen Sovereign to whom the Crown descends by Birth-right
and is equal in power to a King as before noted She is her Husband 's Sovereign and he her Subject in England although he were an Emperor So was King Philip of Spain to Queen Mary and her Authority is included in the foregoing Chapter of Monarchy and therefore need not to be here repeated The second in Honour is the Queen Consort and the third the Queen Dowager or Queen Mother As from the benign influence of the glorious Planet the Sun all Creatures by God's decree in the order of Nature receive life and motion so from the King God's Vicegerent on earth all degrees of Nobility take their advance and dignity 'T is therefore requisite the King should as far excel his Subjects in Majesty and Splendor as doth the Sun the other Planets And as the Moon is the mirror of the Sun representing his Glory by Night so the Queen Consort the Counterpart of the Royal Majesty shines amongst us for whom and for whose Posterity the Nation is bound to send up their Prayers to God The Queen of England during the life of the King hath as high prerogatives and priviledges and liveth in as great state as any Queen in Europe She is reputed the second person in the Kingdom and the Law setteth so high a value upon her as to make it High Treason to conspire her death or to violate her Chastity She is allowed Regal Robes Ornaments and a Crown of the same form as an absolute Queen weareth and may be as formerly they were crowned with Royal Solemnity the performance of which Office properly belongeth to the Archbishop of York And although their Coronations of late have been disused yet they have as much honour and enjoy the same priviledges as if that Ceremony had been done And the manner and solemnity at the Coronation of a Queen is at large set down in most of our Chronicles and in particular in Holinshead and Stow upon the splendid Coronation of Anna Bulloign in the Reign of King Henry the Eighth to which I refer the Reader The Queen is permitted to sit in state by the King and to keep a distinct Court from the King 's although she be the Daughter of a Nobless and hath her Courtiers in every Office as hath the King though not altogether so many and hath her Yeomen of her Guard to attend her on foot and within doors and her Lifeguard of Horse for her state and security when she goeth abroad She hath her Attorney Solicitor and Counsel for the management of her Law concerns who have great respect shewed them being placed within the Barr with the King's Counsel in all Courts of Judicature Although she be an Alien and a Feme covert during the King's Life yet without any Act of Parliament for Naturalization or Letters Patents for her Denization she may purchase Lands in Feesimple make Leases in her own Name without the King hath power to give to sue and to contract Debts which by the Law is denied any other Feme Covert she may not be impleaded till first petitioned nor is the formality of fifteen days Summons to the Defendant needful if she be Plaintiff nor can she be amerced if she be Nonsuited in any Action she may present by her self to a Spiritual Benefice Anciently the Queens had a Revenue called Aurum Reginae that is the Queen's Gold which was the tenth part of what came to the King by the name of Oblata upon Pardons Gifts c. but of late they keep to their Dowry viz. Forty thousand pounds per Annum besides fines upon the renewing of Leases which said Dowry is as large as any Queens in Christendome The like honour and respect that is due to the King is exhibited to the Queen as well by Foreigners as by the King's Subjects as is also to the Queen Dowager who looseth not her Dignity or Reverence although she should marry a private Gentleman as did Queen Kath●rine Widow to King Henry the Fifth who after she was married to Owen Teudor Esquire maintained her Action at Law as Queen of England The present Queen Consort is the thrice Illustrious Donna Katherina Infanta Portuguesa whose vertue and true piety ought to be taken notice of in all Histories ●or succeeding Queens to trace her Noble footsteps whom God preserve The Queen Dowager takes place next to the Queen Consort and in the absence of the King her Son or in his minority is sometimes made Queen Regent or Protectress but this trust is usually by the King 's own command or at the request of the three States assembled in Parliament to prevent the danger of an usurpation of the Crown the like trust is sometimes imposed upon the Queen Consort in her Husband's absence as by King Henry the Eighth twice during his Wars in France Note That during the minority of the King of England whatsoever Laws are enacted in Parliament under a Queen Regent or a Protectress are no longer binding than till the King attains to full age after which he may revoke and make void by his Letters Patents under the Great Seal The Daughters of the Kings of England are all styled Prince●●es The eldest is called the Princess Royal and hath an aid or certain rate of money paid by every Tenant in Capite Knights Service and Soccage towards her marriage Portion as was levied by K. Iames when he married the Princess Elizabeth and to violate her Cha●●ity is by the Law adjudged High Treason Of Noble VVomen WOmen in England according to their Husbands Qualities are either Honourable and Noble or Ignoble Their Honourable Dignities are Princesses Dutchesses Marchionesses Countesses Viscountesses and Baronesses The Nobless as the French call them are all Knights Ladies who in all writings are styled Dames all Esquires and Gentlemens wives only Gentlewomen The third sort comprehends the Plebeans and are commonly called Goodwives Noble women are so by Creation Descent or Marriage Of women honourable by Creation are divers Examples of which the first as I remember that we read of was Margaret Countess of Norfolk created by Richard the Second Dutchess of Norfolk And many of them had their Honours granted by Patents to themselves and the Heirs Males of their Bodies to be begotten with special Clauses that their Heirs Male shall have voices in Parliament Creation money their Mothers Titles as if a Dutchess he a Duke and if a Countess he an Earl with the Ceremony of Mantle Surcoat Coronet c. The like Grant was to Anna Bulloign when she was created Marchioness of Pembroke by Henry the Eighth Of a later date was the Lady Finch made Countess of Winchelsey who had all the said priviledges granted to her and her Heirs Male The Dutchess of Buckingham also in the time of King Iames. And in our Age we have divers Noble Ladies advanced to degrees of Honour viz. the Countess of Guilford Groom of the Stool to the Queen Mother and a faithful Servant to her in her banishment being
Heraldry written by Iohn Guillim about fol. 18. That Sisters are allowed no differences of Badges in their Coat-Armour by reason that by them the name of the House cannot be preserved but are admitted to the Inheritance equally and are adjudged but one Heir to all intents and purposes whatsoever And the knowledge of this point in these days is worthy to be enquired into for this is to be observed out of Presidents and to be acknowledged of every dutiful Subject that the King can advance to Honour whom he pleaseth And therefore whereas Radulph Cromwell being a Baron by Writ died without Issue having two Sisters and Coheirs Elizabeth the eldest married unto Sir Thomas Nevill Knight and Ioan the younger married to Sir Humphrey Bowcher who was called to Parliament as Lord Cromwell and not the said Sir Thomas Nevill who married the eldest Sister And Hugh Lupus the first and greatest Earl of Chester Habendum sibi haeredibus adeo libere per gladium sicut iple Rex tenuit Angliam per tenorem Hugh died without Issue and the Inheritance of his Earldom was divided amongst his four Sisters and the eldest had not the Seigniory entire unto herself If a Woman be Noble by Birth or Descent with whomsoever she doth marry although her Husband be under her Degree yet she doth remain Noble for Birth-right est Character indelebilis Other Women are enobled by Marriage and the Text saith thus viz. Women ennobled with the Honour of their Husbands and with the Kindred of their Husbands we worship them in the Court we decree matters to pass in the Names of their Husbands and into the House and Surname of their Husbands do we translate them But if afterwards a Woman do marry with a Man of a baser Degree then she loseth her former Dignity and followeth the condition of her latter Husband And concerning the second disparaged Marriage as aforesaid many other Books of the Law do agree for these be Rules conceived in those Cases Si mulier nobilis nupserit ignobili desinit esse nobilis eodem modo quo quid constituitur dissolvitur It was the Case of Ralph Howard Esq who took to Wife Anne the widow of the Lord Powes they brought an Action against the Duke of Suffolk by the Name of Ralph Howard Esq and the Lady Anne Powes his Wife and exception was taken for mis-naming of her because she ought to have been named of her Husband's Name and not otherwise and the Exception was by the Court allowed For said they by the Law of God she is Sub potestate viri and by our Law her Name of Dignity shall be changed according to the Degrees of her Husband notwithstanding the Courtesie of the Ladies of Honour and Court Dyer 79. And the like is also in Queen Maries Reign when the Dutchess of Suffolk took to her Husband Adrian Brook Title Brief 54. 6. And many other Presidents have been of later times And herewith agreeth the Civil Law Digest lib. 1. title q. lege 1. In this Case of acquired Nobility by marriage if question in Law be whereupon an Issue is taken between the Parties that is to say Dutchesses are not Dutchesses Countesses are not Countesses and Baronesses are not Baronesses the Trial whereof shall not be by Record as in the former Case but by a Jury of Twelve men and the reason of the diversity is because in this Case the Dignity is accrued unto her by her Marriage which the Lawyers term Matter in Fact and not by any Record But a Noble Woman by marriage though she take to her second Husband a man of mean Degree yet she may keep two Chaplains according to the Proviso in the Statute of 11. Hen. 8. Case 13. for and in respect of the Honour which once she had viz. at the time of the Retainer And every such Chaplain may purchase Licence and Dispensation c. And Chaplains may not be Non-residents afterwards And forasmuch as the retaining of Chaplains by Ladies of great Estate is ordinary and nevertheless some questions in Law have been concerning the true understanding of the said Statute Law I think it not impertinent to set down subsequent Resolutions of the Judges touching such matters So long as the Wife of a Duke is called Dutchess or of an Earl a Countess and have the fruition of the Honour appertaining to their Estate with kneeling tasting serving so long shall a Baron's Widow be saluted Lady as is also a Knight's Wife by the courtesie of England quamdi● matrimonium aut viduitas uxoris durant except she happen to clope with an Adulterer for as the Laws of this Kingdom do adjudge that a Woman shall lose her Dowry in that as unto Lands Tenements and Justice so doth the Laws of Gentry and Nobleness give Sentence against such a Woman advanced to Titles of Dignity by the Husband to be unworthy to enjoy the same when she putting her Husband out of her mind subjects her self unto another If a Lady which is married come through the Forest she shall not take any thing but a Dutchess Marchioness or Countess shall have advantage of the Statute de Charta Forest. 12 Artic. during the time that she is unmarried This is a Rule in the Civil Law Si filia Regis nubat alicui Duci vel Comiti ducetur tamen semper regalis As amongst Noble Women there is a difference of Degrees so according to their distinct Excellencies the Law doth give special priviledges as followeth By the Statute 25 Edw. 3. cap. 1. it is High Treason to compass or imagine the death of the Queen or to violate the King's Companion The King's Response is a sole person except by the Common Law and she may purchase in Feesimple or make Leases or Grants with the King she may plead and be impleaded which no other married Woman can do without her Husband All Acts of Parliament for any cause which any way may concern the Queen are such Statutes whereof the Judges ought to take Recognizances as of general Statutes though the matter doth only concern the capacity of the Queen yet it doth also concern all the Subjects of the Realm for every Subject hath interest in the King and none of his Subjects within his Laws are divided from the King who is Head and Sovereign so that his business concerns all the Realm and as the Realm hath interest in the King so and for the same Reason is the Queen being his Wife A man seized of divers Lands in Fee holden by Knight's Service some by Priority that is by ancient Feoffment holden of others and some other part holden of the King in posteriority the King granteth his Seigniory to the Queen during her life and afterwards the Tenant dieth his Son within Age in this case he shall have the Wardship of the Body and have the Prerogative even as the King himself should have had The Queen Consort or Dowager shall not be amerced if she be Nonsuited
in any Action or otherwise in which case any other Subject of what degree soever shall be amerced for in that case the Queen shall participate of the King's Prerogative But the Queen shall not in all cases have the same prerogative as the King as for Example Petition is all the remedy the Subject hath when the King seizeth his Lands or taketh away his Goods from him having no Title by order of Law so to do contrary to the Opinion of some ancient Books as you may see Stamford's Prerogative Case 19. But no such Suit shall be made to the Queen but Actions as against other Lieges of the King according as the Case shall require For by the same Reason that the Queen may be Plaintiff or Demandant in Actions without the King by the same Reason she shall be Defendant without the part taking of such Prerogatives as do appertain to the King Against the King by his Prerogative nullum tempus occurrit but it is not so with the Queen 18 Edw. 3. 2. a. And plenarily by six months is a good Plea in a Quare Impedit brought by Philip Regina Anglia ibidem fol. 1. 13. b. Stamford's Prerogative Case 18. prope finem In the 22 Edw. 3. 6. it is thus to be read Note that a Protection was sued forth against the Queen in a Writ which she brought and it was allowed though she be a person exempt Nevertheless by this short Case following may be observed That the Justices do not easily suffer any proceedings in Law against the Queen Wife or Widow but will hold with their Immunities so much as by Law they may A Writ of Dower was brought against Isabel Queen of England and Mother to the then King and the Court said to the Plaintiff The Queen is a person of Dignity and Excellency and we are of Opinion that she shall not answer to the Writ but that she should be sued unto by Petition And thereupon the Demandant dixit gratis and she prayed the Court to grant a Continuance of Action until another day so that in the mean time she might speak with the Queen But the Court would not agree to make a Continuance but said That upon her request they might give day prae re pertin and so it was done for the Queen's Counsel would not agree to a Continuance for thereby the Queen shall be accepted as answerable Neither do I suppose that I have digressed from any former purpose for making mention in those Cases concerning the Queen Consort For notwithstanding the intermarriage with the Sovereign King yet she is no other than a King 's Subject whether she be of a Foreign Nation or a Native born and though she be by the favour of the King solemnly crowned Queen yet that is but a Royal Ceremony and no essential Exception whereby she may not from henceforth be accounted in the rank of Noble Women And this hath been proved by the effect in the Reign of King Henry the Sixth when some of the Wives crowned Queens have been Arraigned of High Treason and therefore put to Trial by the Nobles of the Realm as her Peers The Wife of the King 's eldest Son hath also some Prerogatives in regard of the Excellency of her Husband which the Wives of other Noblemen have not For by the Statute of the Thrteenth of Edward the Third it is High Treason to violate the Wife of the King 's eldest Son and Heir Dutchesses and Countesses have special Honours appertaining to their Estates as Kneeling Tasting c. which things are more appertaining properly to the Heralds than to be here treated of Ladies in Reputation THE Wife or Widow of the Son and Heir of a Duke or Earl in the life time of his Father is a Lady by Courtesie of Speech and Honour and taketh place according as in ancient time hath been permitted by the Sovereign Prince and allowance of the Heralds but in legal proceedings they are not Priviledged nor to be named according to such Names of Dignity But the King may at his pleasure create such Men in the life of their Ancestors unto degrees of Lord's of his Parliament and then the Law is otherwise If a Noble Woman of Spain come into this Realm by safe Conduct or otherwise though in the Letters of safe Conduct by the King she be styled by such her Sovereign Title yet in the King's Courts of Justice she shall not be named by such Title though in common Speech she is styled a Lady An English Woman born doth taken to her Husband a French or Spanish Duke though he be made a Denizen yet she shall not bear his Title of Dignity in Legal Proceedings A German Woman is married to a Peer of the Realm and unless she be made a Denizen she cannot lawfully claim the Priviledges or Titles of her Husband no more than she can to have Dower or Joynture from him An English Woman doth take to her Husband an Irish Earl or if a Lord of Scotland though he be a Postnatus take an English Woman to his Wife their Wives shall not participate of their Husbands Titles of Dignity But if the King do create one of his Subjects of Scotland or Ireland a Peer of this Realm then shall he and his Wife enjoy all the Priviledges of a Nobleman But if an English man by the Emperor be made an Earl of the Empire his Wife shall not bear that Title of Honour All the Daughters of Dukes Marquisses and Earls are by the ancient Custome of the Realm styled Ladies and have precedency according to the Degrees of their Parents And of this Custome the Laws do take notice and give allowance for Honour and Decency But nevertheless in the King's Courts of Justice they bear not those Titles of Honour no more than the Sons of such Noble persons may do So in this point the Law is one way and the Honour and Courtesie of Ladies another And as a Civilian in like Case saith Aliud est jus aliud privilegium nevertheless the Books of our Law do make mention thereof and allow of it as a Courtesie though not as a Law Thus much of Women If I have been too large upon this Subject I crave their pardons and if too short I wish I had been more large for their Honour Yet let them compare their Conditions with that of their Neighbouring Nations and 't is believed they have reason to judge themselves the happiest Women in the World but Nemo sua sorte contentus None truly value what they do possess Birth Beauty Titles Riches in excess Are all a Plague if ought else we desire The loss of that makes all our joys on fire The Right Noble Frances Stewart dutchess dowager of Richmond and Lenox ● a. The Rt. honble Ann Stuart Baroness of Castle Stuart in ye. Kingdome of Ireland Relict of the Rt. honble Iosias Baron of Castle Stuart and Daughter of Iohn Maddē of Rousky Castle in ye. County of
again into the Hall where he shall sit at Table with the Knights and being risen and retired into his Chamber his Attire is taken off and again clothed with a blew Robe having on his left Shoulder a Lace of white Silk hanging to be worn upon all his Garments from that day forwards till he have gained some Honour and Renown for some Feats of Arms or some Prince or Lady of Quality cut that Lace from his Shoulder After Dinner the Knights must come to the Knight and conduct him into the King's presence to return him thanks for these Honours and so takes his leave of the King and the Governours craving his pardon for any miscarriage and claiming their Fees according to the Custom of the Court also take their leaves of the Knight I shall conclude this Chapter with giving an Account of the Knights made at the Coronation of his Majesty Knights of the Bath made at the Coronation of his Majesty King CHARLES the Second EDward Lord Clinton now Earl of Lincoln Iohn Egerton Viscount Brackley eldest Son to the Earl of Bridgwater Sir Philip Herbert then second Son to the Earl of Pembroke Sir William Egerton second Son to the Earl of Bridgwater Sir Vere Fane second Son to the Earl of Westmoreland Sir Charles Berkley eldest Son to George Lord Berkley Sir Henry Bellasis eldest Son to the Lord Bellasis Sir Henry Hyde now Earl of Clarendon Sir Rowland Bellasis Brother to Viscount Faulconberg Sir Henry Capell Sir Iohn Vaughan now eldest Son to the Earl of Carbery Sir Charles Stanley Grandchild to the late Earl of Derby Sir Francis Fane Sir Henry Fane Grandchildren to the Earl of Westmoreland Sir William Portman Baronet Sir Richard Temple Baronet Sir William Ducy Baronet Sir Thomas Trevor Baronet Sir Iohn Scudamore Baronet Sir William Gardiner Baronet Sir Charles Cornwallis afterwards Lord Cornwallis Sir Iohn Nicholas Sir Iohn Monson Sir Bourcher VVray Sir Iohn Coventry Sir Edward Hungerford Sir Iohn Knevett Sir Philip Boteler Sir Adrian Scroop Sir Richard Knightley Sir Henry Heron. Sir Iohn Lewkenor Sir George Brown Sir William Tyrringhum Sir Francis Godolphin Sir Edward Baynton Sir Greville Verney Sir Edward Harley Sir Edward VValpool Sir Francis Popham Sir Edward VVise. Sir Christopher Calthrop Sir Richard Edgcombe Sir William Bromley Sir Thomas Bridges Sir Thomas Fanshaw Sir Iohn Denham Sir Nicholas Bacon Sir Iames Altham Sir Thomas VVendy Sir Iohn Bramston Sir George Freeman Sir Nicholas Slaning Sir Richard Ingoldsby Sir Iohn Rolle Sir Edward Heath Sir William Morley Sir Iohn Bennet Sir Hugh Smith Sir Simon Leech Sir Henry Chester Sir Robert Atkyns now one of the Justices of the Common Pleas. Sir Robert Gayre Sir Richard Powle Sir Hugh Ducy Sir Stephen Hales Sir Ralph Bash. Sir Thomas VVhitmore OF Knights Batchelors With what is incident to that Degree of KNIGHTHOOD According to the Laws of England CHAP. XXI THE particular kinds of Services by which Lands of Inheritance are distinguished are two viz. Knights of Service and Knights of Soccage And in ancient time Tenure by Knights Service was called Regale serviti●m because it was done to and for the King and Realm and forinsecum servitium as appeareth in the 19 Edw. 2. Avowry 224. 26. Ass. p. 66. 7. Hen. 4. 19. Coke's seventh Part 8. a. Calvin's case because they who hold by Escuage ought to do and perform their Services out of the Realm Litt. 35. ideo forinsecum dici potest sit quia capitur foris hujusmodi servitia persolvuntur ratione Tenementorum non Personarum And as knights-service-Knights-Service-Land requireth the service of the Tenant in Warfare and Battel abroad so Soccage-Tenure commandeth the attendance at the Plough the one by Manhood defending the King or his Lord's life and person the other by industry maintaining with Rents Corn and Victuals his Estate and Family For Kings did thus order their own Lands and Tenements one part they kept and detained in their own hands and in them stately Houses and Castles were erected and made for their habitations and defence of their Persons and of the Realm also Forests and Parks were there made for their Majesties Recreation One other part thereof was given to the Nobles and others of their Chivalry reserving Tenure by Knights Service The third part was bestowed upon men of meaner condition and quality with reservation of Soccage-Tenure And in this manner the Dukes and Nobles amongst their Menials and Followers dissipated a great part of their Lands viz. to their Gentlemen of quality to hold by Knights Service and to other of meaner condition by Soccage-Tenure The Right Honourable S. Ioseph Williams on of Milbeck hall in Cumberland Knight one of his Majestys principall Secretarys of State c a. The Honourable Sr. Robert Atkins of Totteridge in Hertford shire and of Sapperton in Glocester shire Knight of the Bath and one of his matys Iustices of the Com̄on pleas c a. Sr. Iohn Bennet of Dawly in Midd sx Kt. of the honble order of the Bath Leivtenant to his maties Band of Gentlemen Pentioners and eldest brother to the Rt. honble Henry Earle of Arlington who was first maried to Elizabeth Countess of Mulgrave daughter to the Earle of Midd sx and now to Bridget Howe of the Family of Sr. Grubham Howe Sr. Robert Southwell Knight one of the Clerkes attending his Majesty King Charles the Second in his most Honourable privy Councell c●t Sr. Hugh Wyndham of Silton in Dorsetshire Kt. one of the Iustices of his matys Court of Comon pleas at Westminster eighth sonn of S. Iohn Wyndham of Orchard-Wyndham in Somersetshire Kt who was lineally descended from the antient Family of the Wyndhams of Felbrigg in Norfolk ●own●r ther●of Sr. Thomas Daniell of Beswick in the East Rideing of Yorkshire Kt. Major to his matys Regiment of Foot Guards and Captaine of his matys Archchiffe Fort in Dover Sr. Thomas Mompesson● antiently Montpintson● of Bathampton in Wiltshire Knight a person of eminent Loyalty and suffering in the late trouble whose Family have been of greate antiquity in the said County Sr. Thomas Lynch of Great Sonkey in Lancashire Kt. one of the Gentlemen of his maty● privy Chamber in ordinary and late Governour of his Ma ●●● Island of Jamaica decended of the Linc●●s of Groves in Kent and is now maried to Vere Herbert 2● daughter of Sr. Edw Herbert sometyme Lord Keeper of the gro●t sea●e Sr. William Pelham of Brocklesby in Lincolnshire Kt. whose Grandfat●er Sr. William Pelham of the said place Kt. who was descended of the antient family of the Pelhams of Langhtoni●● sussex was employed under Queen Eliz in the offices of L d cheife Justice of Ireland Marshall of the English forces sentinto the Low Countrys Mast●● of her ordnance● and one of her privy Councell Sr Thomas Davi●s of the Citty of London Knight Ld. Maior thereof Anno 1677. Sr. William Prichard of the Citty of London Kt. and Alderman now maried to Sarah daughter of Francis
Cooke of Kingsthorp in Northampton shire Gent ● Sr. Thomas Player of Hackney in Middlesex Knight Chamberlaine of the Citty of London Sr. Iohn Berkenhead Knight Master of Requests to his Majesty and Master of the Faculties and one of the members of the Honourable house of Comons Sr William Drake of Amersham in the County of Bucks Knight now maried to Elizabeth daughter of the honble ● ● Mount●gu Lord cheife Baron of his matys Court of Exchequer Sr William Pargiter of Greetworth in Northampton shire Knight a samily of good Antiquity whose Ancestors have been their Seated for many Generations Sr. William Waller of Winchester in Hantshire K descended from Richard Waller of Groombridg in Kent Esqr. who at the battle of Agencourt took Io● Duke of Orleanse Prisoner and brought him to Groombridg wh●re he remained a Prisoner 24 yeares and in memory of the Action it hath bin ever since allowed to the family to beare hanging on their Antient Crest the Armes of the said Duke Sr William Hustler of Acklam in Cleaveland in The County of York Kt Sr. Joseph Sheldon of the Citty o● London Kt. Alderman Lord M●j therof Anno 〈◊〉 Sr. Robt. Hanson of the Citty of Londo● Knight and Alderman Lord Major thereof Anno 1673 Sr. Iohn Maynard of Gunnersbury in the Parish of Ealing in the County of Midlesex Knight sergeant at Law to his Majesty King Charles the second S ● Iohn Short●r of the Citty of London Kt. and Alderman now maried to Ezabe● daughter of Iohn Birkhead of Ristwhait 〈◊〉 y● parish of Crostwhait in Cumberland Gen ● Robert Peyton of East Barnet in ye. County of 〈◊〉 Kt. descended of ye. Antient Family of ye. Peyton● Cambridgshire no● Maried to Iane Daughter and 〈◊〉 heyrs of Lionell Robison of Couton in York shire Esq. Sr. Edward Lowe of new Sarum in Wiltshire Kt. one of the Masters of the High Honourable Court of Chancery Sr. Iohn Iames of Wi●●borow in K●nt Kt. d●scended of ye. ●nti●●● And S●r●ading Family of ye. Iam●●is Who Transpl●nted Themselu●s out of Cle●● in Germa●y into England About ye● 〈◊〉 of y●●●igne of K. 〈…〉 Family S●● 〈◊〉 in T●● Body of y● Book S●ction Chap 1 Th● S●S Io●n is ●●w Maried to M●●y d●ught●r of Sr. Robert Ki●●e●r●w of Ha●worth in Middle●●● Kt. des●●ed 〈◊〉 C●●m●er●●n to y● Late Queen Mother 〈◊〉 Hon Sr. Robert B●oth of Salford in L●●c●shire K ● ● chife Iustice of 〈◊〉 Mat●s Court of Com●n pleas in Ireland one of his Ma ●●● most Hon pri●●●●●ncell for y● S d Kingdome Grandchild heyre of Humfry ●ooth of Salford 〈◊〉 G●n whose Ch●ritable works 〈…〉 his name of w ● see more in ●●●dy of y● Bocke s●e 3 chapt. 1● The Sd. S●r. Robert was first maried to mary ●●●ghter heyre of Spencer Po●ts of Chalgraye in Bedfordshire Esq 〈…〉 to Susanna Daughter of Sr. 〈…〉 of Dean in East Kent Kt. A●●so● D●ceased Sr. Charles Pitfeild of H●xton in the Parish of St. Leonard ●horditch in Middlesex Kt. Descended of the Antient family of the Pitfeilds of ●um●n●s●ry in D●rs●tshire● is now maried to Winefrid one of the Daughters and coeheyrs of Iohn Adderley of Cotton in Stafordshire Es● Sr. Thomas Middleton of Stansted Mount Fichit in ye. County of Essex Kt. now maried to Mary ye. Relict of Thomas Style Esq Eldest Son of Sr. Thomas Style of Wa●ering bury in ye● County of Kent Bar ● and only Daughter of Sr. Stephen Langham of the Citty of London Kt. Sr. Francis Theobald of Barking hall in Suffolk Kt. a great Lover of Lerning fautor of Lerned men in Soemuch that Dr. Castle in his Polyg●o● Lexicon makes This mention of him yt. he is harum Linguarum Callentissimus Sr. Robt. Hardinge late of Kings-Newton in the Parish of Melborne in Darby-shire N●w of Grais Inn in Middle ● Kt. his matys Attorney of all his Forests c. from Trent Northward's a great sufferer for there matys King Charles the first second Hee Maried Anna eldest daughr. of Sr. Richard Sprignell of H●gate in Middlesex Bar ● Deceased Sr. Io. Kirke of East Ham in Esex Kt. one of the Band of Gentleman Pentioners to his maty● King Charles the 2d. which sd. Sr. Io. and his family hath been very actiue for the Servi c ● of there King and Country in particular at Canade in America Sr. Thomas Marshe of Darkes in the Parish of South Mimms in Com Middlesex Knight Sr. William Beversham of Holbrookhall in Suffolk Knight one of the Masters o● the High and Honourable Court of Chancery And it was anciently ordained That all Knights Fees should come unto the eldest Son by succession of Heritage whereby he succeeding his Ancestor in the whole Inheritance might be the better able to maintain War against the King's Enemies or his Lords and that the Soccage of Freehold be partable between the Male Children to enable them to encrease into many Families for the better encrease of Husbandry But as nothing is more unconstant than the Estates we have in Lands and Livings even so long since these Tenures have been so indifferently mixt and confounded in the hands of each sort that there is not now any note of difference to be gathered by them Lambert Peramb of Kent 10. Et quia tale servitium forinsecum non semper manet sub eadem quantitate sed quandoque praestatur ad plus quandoque ad minus ideo eo quantitate Regalis servitii qualitate fiat mentio in charta ut tenens certum tenere possit quid quantum persolvere teneatur And therefore the certainty of the Law in this case is That he that holdeth by a whole and entire Knight's Fee must serve the King or his other Lord forty days in the Wars well and sufficiently arrayed and furnished at all points and by twenty days if he hold by a moiety of a Knights Fee and so proportionable And in the Seventh of Edw. 3. 246. it was demurred in Judgment Whether Forty days shall be accounted from the first day that the King did first enter into Scotland but it seemeth that the days shall be accompted from the first day that the King doth enter into Scotland because the Service is to be done out of the Realm And they that hold per Regale servitium are not to perform that Service unless the King do also go himself into the Wars in proper Person by the Opinion of Sir VVilliam Earle Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Irium Sept. Edw. 3. 246. but vide 3 Hen. 6. tit Protection 2. in which Case it was observed That seeing the Protector who was Prorex went the same was adjudged a Voyage Royal. Also before the Statute de quia emptores terrarum which was made decimo octavo Edw. 1. the King or other Lord had given Lands to a Knight to hold of him by Service and Chivalry scil to go with the King or with his Lord when the King doth make a Voyage Royal to subdue
Scots have ever since bore in their Ensigns and Banners the Figure of the said Cross which is in fashion of a Saltier And from hence 't is believed that this Order took its rise which was about the year of our Lord 810. For King Hungus and Achains Confederates against Athalstan went bare-footed in a devote way to the Kirk of St. Andrew to return thanks to God and his Apostles for their Victory vowing for themselves and their posterity ever to use the said Cross in their Ensigns in any warlike Expedition The principal Ensign of this Order is a golden Collar composed of Thistles intermixed with Annulets of Gold to which hangs the figure of St. Andrew with his Cross and this Epigraph Nemo me impune lacessit But for their common Ensign they wore a green Ribon to which hung a golden Thistle crowned with an Imperial Crown within a Circle of Gold with the said Epigraph Their grand meeting was annually on St. Andrews day in the Church of the Town so called and during the Solemnity of the Feast these Knights which were in number Thirteen in allusion to our Saviour and the Twelve Apostles were richly apparelled and in their Parliament Robes having embroidered on their left Shoulders St. Andrews Cross within a blew Rundle and in the Center of the said Cross was a Crown composed of Golden Flower de lis Having thus treated of the several Degrees of Knighthood which are or have been used amongst us In the next place I shall give the Reader an account of divers Degrees of Knighthood in other Kingdoms although many of them are now Extinct ORDERS OF KNIGHTHOOD Which are or were Instituted in PALESTINE AND OTHER Parts of ASIA CHAP. XXIV Knights of the Holy Sepulchre in Ierusalem THIS Order of Knighthood is held to be the most ancient of all those Orders that took their beginning in the Holy Land and is said to be instituted about the time that the Temple of Ierusalem was regained from the Sarazens which was in Anno 1099. Some Authors say That Philip King of France was the first Instituter of this Order but Favin saith that it was Baldwin the first King of Ierusalem who made the Regular Canons which then resided in a Convent near adjoyning to the said Sepulchre Knights of the said Order whose chief Duty was to guard the Holy Sepulchre to relieve and protect Pilgrims to fight against the Sarazens and Infidels and to hear Mass every day The Armorial Ensign belonging unto them was two red Crosses united into one When the Christians were expelled the Holy Land these Knights settled themselves at Perugia in Italy But by the Bulls of Pope Innocent the Eighth Anno 1484. they and all their Goods were annexed and joyned to the Knights Hospitallers then residing at Rhodes Knights Hospitallers of St. John Baptist in Jerusalem called Knights of the Rhodes now of Malta SOmewhat before the Christians took the City of Ierusalem from the Sarazens certain Christian Merchants of Naples who traded to these parts obtained leave from the Caliph of Egypt who had then the Government thereof to dwell near the Sepulchre of Christ and to erect a small House for the entertainment of themselves and Pilgrims and called it The Hospital of Christians together with a small Oratory dedicated to the blessed Virgin Mary After that the number of Christians increasing they built another House for Women and dedicated it to St. Mary Magdalen and at length they built a more large House which they dedicated to St. Iohn Baptist the others being too small for the entertainment of Strangers that thither came for Devotion and here they entertained and cured the diseased amongst them And for their Religion Charity and Hospitality they began to become eminent and having took St. Iohn Baptist for their Patron they obtained the title or name of Brethren Hospitallers of St. John Baptist of Jerusalem Then received they the regular Habit of black with a white Cross on the Garment near their left Shoulder and vowed Obedience Poverty and Chastity This Order is said to be first instituted in Anno 1099. by one Gerard of the Province of Tholouse a man of a holy life and had large priviledges conferred upon them by King Baldwin the first who created them Knights and permitted them to use Arms and to fight against the Sarazens and Infidels for the Defence of the Christian Faith and to be Guardians of the Holy Sepulchre At this time they acknowledged their Obedience to the Patriarch of Ierusalem but growing in wealth they obtained the favour of the Pope to be absolved from their Obedience and was by Pope Adrian the fourth received under the protection of the Papal See Gerard being dead they elected one Raimond for their Rector or great Master to whom authority was given that he should govern and command all Knights of this Order wheresoever dispersed This Gerard after he had digested and enlarged their Laws and Institutions divided that whole Body into three Classes to wit Knights Ecclesiasticks and Servants And since which time the succeeding Great Masters have much added to their Priviledges and Dignities and his Title is now The Illustrious Prince of Malta and Goza Saladine having made himself Master of Ierusalem these Knights retired to the City of Acres which being also taken they seized upon the Isle of Rhodes where they continued as Masters until forced thence by Solyman the Great in Anno 1522. After which they betook themselves to the Isle of Malta which with Tripoli and Goza were granted to them by the Emperour Charles the ●ifth Anno 1530. and the same year was confirmed to them by Pope Clement the Seventh and in this Isle they yet continue and are as a Bulwark to that part of Christendom Knights Templars ABout the year 1118. Hugo de Paganes Godfrey de St. Omer with seven other Gentlemen out of Devotion went into the Holy Land where they determined to erect and enter into a Brotherhood and being come to Ierusalem they consulted what they should do though to the hazard of their Lives that should be a service acceptable to God and praiseworthy of men And being informed that in the Town of Zaffo there resided many Thieves that used to rob the Pilgrims that resorted to the Holy Sepulchre they resolved to make the passage more free by destroying or dispersing these Robbers And for the encouragement of these Gentlemen in so good an undertaking the King assigned them lodgings in his Palace adjoyning to Solomon's Temple from which place they were called Knights Templars And the King and Patriarch finding their Actions very successful furnished them with many necessary Provisions And although their charitable Service made them acceptable unto all yet for the first Nine years they were in so great a strait that they were forced to take the Charity of well disposed people however there resorted unto them many Christians so that their number was much encreased And there being all this while no
certain Lands in Escuage like as the Knight himself did of the King by Knights Service The beginning of giving Arms in Europe amongst Christians is supposed from the Holy Wars for the Turks paint them not And so with us about Henry the Third's time they became here more firmly established And when the Prince enobled any he usually gave them the particular of his bearing in Blazon Iohn Selden in his Preface fol. 5. where you may also see an Example in King Richard the Second But now there are five distinct sorts of Esquires observed and those that have been already spoken of are now in no request Of these sorts the principal at this day are the eldest Sons of Viscounts and Lord next are all Noblemens younger Sons then are accounted those that are select Esquires for the King's Body the next are Knights eldest Sons successively in a fourth rank are reckoned those unto whom the King himself together with the Title giveth Arms or createth Esquires by putting about their Necks a Silver Collar of SS and in former times upon their Heels a pair of white silvered Spurs whereupon at this day in the Western part of the Kingdom they be called White-spurs for distinction from Knights who were wont to wear gilt Spurs and to the first begotten Sons only of these doth this Title belong In the fifth and last place be those that have any superiour publick Office in the Kingdom as high Sheriffs Justices of the Peace c. or serve the King in any worshipful Calling At the Coronation of Kings and Queens Knights of the Bath are made men of worth and honourable blood to the end that their Majesties may be accompanied in their own Honours every of which Knights having two Gentlemen to attend them in that Ceremony who are ever after by that Service enabled to be Esquires during their lives But the name of Esquire in ancient time was a name of Charge and Office and first crept in amongst other Titles of Dignity and Worship so far as ever I could observe in the Reign of King Richard the Second vide Sir Thomas Smith de Republica Anglorum fol. 26. where he saith That the Esquire is no distinct Order of the Commonwealth A Serjeant of the King's Kitchin may bear the Name and Addition of Cook or Esquire according to the Opinion of Newton But Ienne saith Such Officers of his Majestie 's Houshold would be much grieved if they should be named by their Trade or Office Peradventure in that case the Writ may be good because of the Statute viz. 1 Hen. 5. ch 5. For the Statute is That he should be named of the Town Degree State Condition or Mystery and when he was named Cook he observed the Statute for he hath named him by his own name of Mystery and yet he may be in that case an Esquire and a Cook If a man be an Esquire or Gentleman only by Office and loseth the same he loseth also that title of Gentility Note That an Esquire or Gentleman is but an Addition to satisfie the said Statute but names of Dignity are parcel of the name And thereupon if a Praecipe quod reddat be against Iohn a Stiles Yeoman and recovery is had whereas the Tenant was a Gentleman yet the Recovery is good The same Law where a Release is made to Iohn a Stiles Yeoman who is a Gentleman and where addition is given by the party where it needeth not by the Law being no Dignity it is void So if a deed be made to a Gentleman by the name of a Yeoman for there is a great difference between Deeds and Writs If an Esquire be to be Arraigned of High Treason he may and ought to be tried per probos Legales homines that may expend Forty shillings of Freehold or be worth One hundred pounds in the value of Goods And so the Statute that doth speak of men of his condition hath always been put in ure Dyer 99. b. Note a Knight hath no other priviledge by Statute or Common Law The King may make an Esquire by Patent viz. Creamus te Armigerum c. Note the Preface to the printed Book of Titles of Honour 5. b. 318. By the statute 21. Hen. 8. chap. 13. amongst other things it is enacted that the Brethren and Sons born in Wedlock of every Knight being Spiritual men may every of them purchase License or Dispensation and receive take and keep two Parsonages or Benefices with cure of souls The Son or Sons of any Knight and heir apparent of an Esquire is priviledge to keep Greyhounds setting Doggs or Nets to take Pheasants or Partridges though he cannot dispend ten pounds in his own right or in his Wives right of Estate of Inheritance or of the value of thirty pounds of Estate for life By the precedent discourse of Knights Batchelors we understand that all persons by the common Law are compellable to take the degree of Knighthood or to fine if they are possest of such an Estate as the King and his Council shall judge fit to maintain that Port in their Country And his annual Revenue deemed fit for that Dignity and the fines imposed upon such as refused we find in our Histories and Statutes to vary with the times and certainly the best Esquires or at least none under the Reputation of Gentlemen were compelled although 't was at the King's pleasure And therefore 1 Edw. 2. Stat. de Militibus the Parliament saith Sanderson more for ease of the Subject than profit of the King limited it to such as had Twenty pounds per Annum and better and afterwards 't was raised to Thirty pounds and a plentiful Revenue in those times when a Dowry of Three thousand pounds per Annum to a Queen was deemed a great impoverishment to the Crown and Kingdom but the East and Western part of the World being laid open to the Merchants money began to be more common and by consequence Land to its value so that in the reign of King Charles the First Forty pounds per Annum being the rate set for such as ought to be made Knights or to fine many Farmers Leaseholders Merchants Inholders and others were called in whereby above 100 thousand pounds was brought into the Exchequer Notwithstanding which divers persons made Friends and took the Degree of Knighthood which occasioned the extinguishment of the ancient Tax For many Esquires by birth wealth and education who bore the chiefest Offices of Honour and Trust in the Commonwealth disdained to stoop or give place to those new dubbed Knights countenanced the Complaints of the common people against the Law it self as a grievance and prevailed so far in the following Parliament to get it repeal'd as you may see 17 Car. chap. 20. Since which time the difference between the Degree of Knighthood and Dignity of an Esquire consists only in Title a double rate in the Pole Tax and priority of place which as I before noted is often
merely for their livelyhoods may not be taken against their Wills or the consent of their Parents and Friends And so it was resolved by the two Chief Justices and all the Court of Star-Chamber Anno 43 Eliz. in the Case of one Evans who had by colour of such Letters Patents taken the Son of one Clifton a Gentlemen of quality in Norfolk who was taught to sing for his Recreation which Evans for the same offence was grievously punished And to the end it may withal appear what Degrees of Nobility and Gentry were in the Realm before the coming of the Normans and by what merits men might ascend and be promoted to the same I will here set down the Copy of an English or Saxon Antiquity which you may read in Lambert's Perambulation of Kent fol. 364. and Englished thus It was sometimes in the English Laws That the People and Laws were in Reputation and then were the wisest of the People worship-worthy each in his degree Earl and Churle Theyne and Undertheyne And if a Churle so thrived that he had fully five Hides of Land of his own a Church and a Kitchin a Bell-house and a Gate a Seat and a several Office in the King's Hall then was he thenceforth the Theynes right-worthy And if a Theyne so thrived that he served the King on his Journey rode in his Houshold if he then had a Theyne which him followed who to the King's Expectation five Hides had and in the King's Palace his Lord served and thrice with his Errand had gone to the King he might afterwards with his fore-oath his Lord's part play at any need and of a Theyne that he became an Earl then was thenceforth an Earl rightworthy And if a Merchant-man so thrived that he passed over the wide Sea thrice of his own Craft he was thenceforth the Theynes right-worthy And if a Scholar so thrived through Learning that he had degree and served Christ he was thenceforth of Dignity and Peace so much worthy as thereunto belonged unless he forfeit so that he the use of his Degree remit It is observed That the Saxons out of all those Trades of life which be conversant in gain admit to the Estate of Gentry such only as encreased by honest Husbandry or plentiful Merchandize Of the first of which Cicero affirmeth that there is nothing meeter for a freeborn man nor no man fitter to make braver Souldier And of the other that 't is prize-worthy also if at the length being satisfied with gain as it hath often come from the Sea to the Haven so it changeth from the Haven into Lands and Possessions And therefore whereas Gervasius Tilburiensis in his Observations of the Exchequer accounted it an abusing of a Gentleman to occupy publicum mercimonium common buying and selling it ought to be referred to the other two parts of Merchandize that is to a Negotiation which is retailing and keeping of an open shop and to a Function which is to exercise Mercery or as some call it to play the Chapman and not to Navigation which as you see is the only laudable part of all buying and selling And again whereas by the Statute of Magna Charta chap. 6. and Merton chap. 7. it was a discouragement for a Ward in Chivalry which in old time was as much as to say a Gentleman to be married to the Daughter of a Burgess I think that it ought to be restrained to such only as professed Handycrafts or those baser Arts of buying and selling to get their living by But to shew how much the case is now altered for the honour of Tradesmen it may be remembred that Henry the Eighth thought it no disparagement to him when he quitted his Queen to take Anne the Daughter of Thomas Bullen sometime Mayor of London to his Wife The Statute of Westminster 2. chap. 1. which was made in the Thirteenth of King Edward the First was procured especially at the desire of Gentlemen for the preservation of their Lands and Hereditaments together with their Surnames and Families and therefore one calleth this Statute Gentilitium municipale and the Lawyers call it Ius Taliatum Taliabile The Children only of Gentlemen were wont to be admitted into the Inns of Court and thereby it came to pass that there was scant any man found in former ages within the Realm skilful and cunning in the Law except he were a Gentleman born and came of a good House for they more than any other have a special care of their Nobility and to the preservation of their Honour and Fame For in these Inns of Court are or at leastwise should be Vertues studied and Vices exiled so that for the endowment of Vertue and abandoning of Vice Knights and Barons with other States and Noblemen of the Realm place their Children in those Inns though they desire not to have them learned in the Laws nor to have them live by the practise thereof but only upon their Parents allowance You have heard how cheap Gentility is purchased by the Common Law but if you look more strictly unto the perfection thereof you will find it more honourable for Gentlemen well descended and qualified have always been of such repute in England that none of the higher Nobility no nor the King himself have thought it any disparagement to make them their Companions Therefore I shall set down the priviledges due unto them according to the Laws of Honour as I find them collected out of Sir Iohn Ferne Sir William Segar Mr. Carter in his Analysis of Honour and other good Authors It is thus found The Priviledges of the Gentry 1. PRo honore sustinendo If a Churle or Peasant do detract from the honour of Gentleman he hath a remedy in Law actione injuriarum but if by one Gentleman to another the Combat was anciently allowed 2. In equal Crimes a Gentleman shall be punishable with more favour than the Churle provided the Crime be not Heresie Treason or excessive Contumacy 3. The many Observances and Ceremonial Respects that a Gentleman is and ought to be honoured with by the Churle or Ungentle 4. In giving Evidence the Testimony of a Gentleman is more authentick than a Clowns 5. In Election of Magistrates and Officers by Vote the Suffrage of a Gentleman should take place of an Ignoble Person 6. A Gentleman should be excused from base Services Impositions and Duties both Real and Personal 7. A ●●ntleman condemned to death ought not to be ●anged but beheaded and his Examination taken without Torture 8. To take down the Coat-Armour of any Gentleman to deface his Monument or offer Violence to any Ensign of the de●eased Noble is as to lay buffets on the face of him if alive and punishment is due accordingly 9. A Clown may not Challenge a Gentleman to Combat quia conditiones ●mpares Many other are the Priviledges due to Gentlemen which I forbear to repeat referring the Reader to the Books before cited For the protection and defence of
this Civil Dignity they have three Laws The first Ius agnitionis the right or law of descent for the kindred of the Father's side The second Ius Stirpis for the Family in general The third Ius Gentilitatis a law for the descent in Noble Families which Tully esteemed most excellent by which Law a Gentleman of Blood and Coat-Armour perfectly possessing Vertue was only priviledged To make that perfection in Blood a Lineal Descent from Atavus Proavus Avus and Pater on the Fathers side was required and as much on his Mothers line than he is not only a Gentleman of perfect Blood but of his Ancestors too The neglect of which Laws hath introduced other sorts of Gentleman viz. men that assume that Dignity but are neither so by Blood nor Coat-Armour which style only hurries them to an unruly pride which indeed is but rude and false honour termed by Sir Iohn Ferne Apocriphate and debarred of all priviledge of Gentility These Gentlemen nomine non re saith he are the Students of Law Grooms of his Majesties Palace Sons of Churls made Priests or Canons c. or such as have received Degrees in Schools or born Office in the City by which they are styled Gentlemen yet have they no right to Coat-Armour by reason thereof As to the Student of the Law Sir I. Ferne allows him the best a●●urance of his title of Gentleman of all these irregular Gentlemen as he terms them because he is named in some Acts of Parliament yet he saith he is also debarred of all honour and priviledge by the Law of Arms. And anciently none were admitted into the Inns o● Court as before noted but such as were Gentlem●● 〈◊〉 Blood be their merits never so great ●or were the Church Dignities and Preferments bestowed indifferently amongst the Vulgar The Jews confined their Prie●●hood to a Family but Ieroboam debased it in his Kingdom by preferring the basest of his people to the best of duties The Russians and some other Nations admit none to the study of the Law but Gentlemens younger Sons The decayed Families in France are supported and receive new life from the Court Camp Law and Ecclesiastical Preferments take the most solemn and serious who contemn the World if such are wanting to fill up their Vacancies the Ingeniouser sort of the Plebeans are admitted by which means their Church and State is in e●●eem and reverence being filled most commonly with the best Blood and Noblest by Birth amongst them whereas with us every Clown that can spare but mony to bring up his Son ●or any of those Studies bereaves the Gentry of those Benefices and robs them of their support which grand abuse is the cause of the general Corruption in the State Civil and Ecclesiastick whereas were this preferment made peculiar to the Gentry they would stand more upon their Honour and live without being a Burthen to their Relations The Atchievement of a Gentleman hath no difference with that of an Esquire both their Helmets being close and sideways OF YEOMEN CHAP. XXVII THE Yeomen or Common People for so are they called of the Saxon word Zemen which signifies Common who have some Lands of their own to live upon For a Carn of Land or a Plough Land was in ancient time of the yearly value of five Nobles and this was the Living of a Stokeman or Yeoman And in our Law they are called Legal● homines a word familiar in Writs and Inquests And by divers Statutes it hath been enacted That none shall pass in any Inquest unless they had forty shillings Free-hold in yearly Revenue which maketh if the most value were taken to the proportion of moneys above Sixteen pounds of currant money at this present And by the Statute of 27 Eliz. ch 6. every Juror must have Forty pounds Lands In the end of the Statute made 23 Hen. 6. c. 15. concerning the Election of Knights for the Parliament it is ordered and expresly provided That no man shall be such Knight which standeth in the degree of a Yeoman It appeareth in Lambert's Perambulation of Kent 367. that this Saxon word Telphioneman was given to the Theyne or Gentleman because his life was valued at One thousand two hundred shillings and in those days the lives of all men were rated at certain sums of Money To the Churle or Yeoman because the price of his head was taxed at Two hundred shillings Which things if it were not expresly set forth in sundry old Laws yet extant might well enough be found in the Etymology of the words themselves the one called a Twelve hundred man and the other a Twyhind for a man of Two hundred And in this Estate they pleased themselves insomuch that a man might and also now may find sundry Yeomen though otherwise comparable for wealth with many of the Gentile sort that will not yet for that change their condition nor desire to be appareled with the title of Gentry By the Common Law it may appear in 1 Ed. 2. de Militibus and 7 Hen. 6. 15. a. men that had Lands to the value of Twenty pounds per annum were compellable at the King's pleasure to take upon them the Order of Knighthood and upon Summons there came a Yeoman who might expend a hundred Marks per annum and the Court was in doubt how they might put him off and at last he was waved because he came the second day By this sort of men the trial of Causes in the Country proceedeth ordinarily for of them there are greater number in England than in any other place and they also of a more plentiful livelyhood and therefore it cometh to pass that men of this Country are more apt and fit to discern in doubtful Cases and Causes of great examination and trial than are men wholly given to moil in the ground to whom that Rural exercise engendreth rudeness of wit and mind And many Franklins and Yeomen there are so near adjoyning as you may make a Jury without difficulty for there be many of them that are able to expend One or two hundred pounds per Annum As in the ancient time the Senators of Rome were elected a Censu and as with us in conferring of Nobility respect is had to their Revenues by which their Dignity and Nobility may be supported and maintained So the Wisdom of this Realm hath of ancient time provided that none shall pass upon Juries for the trial of any matter real or personal or upon any criminal cause but such as besides their Moveables have Lands for estate of life at the least to a competent value lest for need or poverty such Jurors might easily be corrupted or suborned And in all Cases and Causes the Law hath conceived a better Opinion of those that have Lands and Tenements or otherwise are of worth in moveable Goods that such will commit or omit nothing that may any way be prejudicial to their estimation or which may endanger their Estates than it hath of
Artificers Retailers Labourers or such like of whom Tully saith Nihil proficiuntur nisi ad modum mentiuntur And by divers Statutes certain Immunities are given to men of Quality which are denied to the Vulgar sort of People Read hereof amongst other 1 Iac. cap. 127. By the Statute of 2 Hen. 4. chap. 27. amongst other things it is enacted That no Yeoman should take or wear any Livery of any Lord upon pain of imprisonment and to make Fine at the King's will and pleasure These Yeomen were famous in our Forefathers days for Archery and Manhood our Infantry which so often conquered the French and repuls'd the Scots were composed of them as are our Militia at present who through want of use and good discipline are much degenerated from their Ancestors valour and hardiness As the Nobility Gentry and Clergy have certain priviledges peculiar to themselves so have the Commonalty of England beyond the Subjects of other Monarchs No Freeman of England ought to be imprisoned outed of his possession dis●eised of his Freehold without Order of Law and just cause shewed To him that is imprisoned may not be denied a Habeas Corpus if it be desired and if no just cause be alledged and the same be returned upon a Habeas Corpus the Prisoner is to be set at liberty By Magna Charta 9 Hen. 3. no Souldier can be quartered in any House except Inns and other publick Victualling-houses in time of peace without the Owners consent by the Petition of Right 3 Car. 1. No Taxes Loans or Benevolences can be imposed but by Act of Parliament idem The Yeomanry are not to be prest to serve as a Souldier in the Wars unless bound by Tenure which is now abolished Nor are the Trained Bands compelled to march out of the Kingdom or be transported beyond Sea otherwise than by the Law of the Kingdom ought to be done Nor is any one to be compelled to bear his own Arms finding one sufficient man qualified according to the Act aforementioned No Freeman is to be tried but by his equals nor condemned but by the Laws of the Land These and many other Freedoms make them most happy did they but know it and should oblige them to their Alegiance to their Prince under whose power and government themselves their Rights and Priviledges are preserved and quietly enjoyed yet such is the inconstancy of mens nature not to be contented with the bliss they enjoy THE SECOND PART OF Honour Civil Treating of the CUSTOMS GOVERNMENT PRIVILEDGES ARMORIAL ENSIGNS of HONOUR OF THE City of London With the like Account of the CITIES of ENGLAND Together with the Chief Town Corporate in each COUNTY of ENGLAND LONDON Printed by Samuel Roycroft Anno Dom. MDCLXXVIII To the Right Honourable and Honourable the Right Worshipfull and Worshipfull the Governors Deputy Governors Treasurers Consulls Assistants c a. of these severall Incorporated Companys of Merchants This Plate is humbly dedicated By your Honours and Worships most humble Servant Richard Blome The Atchivement of the Honourable Citty of LONDON with the Armes of the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor the Court of Aldermen and Sheriffs for the yeare of our Lord 1678. The Right Honourable Sr. Iames Edwards Knight Lord Mayor of the honble Citty of London for the yeare 1678 THE SECOND PART OF Honour Civil CHAP. I. ALL Chronologers and Antiquaries do agree that in the Infancy of the Worlds Creation men had no habitation other than Woods Groves bushy Thickets Caves and Concavities in Rocks and Sandy Grounds to shelter themselves from the wind and weather which places they fenced about with sticks heaps of stones or the like to preserve them from ravenous Beasts which otherwise would annoy them Then by degrees as the World increased and Inconvenience being the Mother of Invention they made themselves small Hutts from Hutts they came to build Houses and to cohabit in Hamlets or Villages and from thence sprang up Towns Cities Castles and Fortified Places Then the Inhabitants of one City or Place waged warr against those of another and the Victorious enlarged their Territories and made them their Tributaries and thus increasing in number of Inhabitants formed to themselves a Civil Government and growing in Riches some studied one Art and some another some addicted themselves to Traffick whilst others imployed their time in Martial Affairs And what are Cities in these our days but the nursery habitation and receptacle of worthy ingenious wealthy and munificent brave men which made Charles the Quint much to glory that he was a Citizen of Ghent And Henry the Great in answer to a Letter of the King of Spains wherein he declared his many Titles styled himself only Henry King of France and Burgess of Paris Since then that Cities are of such renown and the Inhabitants thereof so signal in Coat-Armour as having such a mixture and affinity with the Gentry it will be necessary that in this Treatise we take notice of our Cities and chief Towns Corporate being places of such concern to the Nation as to their Priviledges Governments Courts of Judicature Magistrates their Armorial Badges belonging as well to the said Cities and Towns as to their several Incorporated Companies in London And first with London LONDON the Metropolis Mistress and bravery of all England the King's Chamber and Epitomy of the whole Kingdom of so great Antiquity and Fame in other Countreys that it wanteth no mans commendation As to its rise various are the Opinions of Writers Ptolomy Tacitus and Antoninus calls her Londinium or Longidinium others Augusta Troja nova or Troynovant others Caer-Lud and others Dinas Belin. It is seated no less pleasantly than commodiously on the Banks of the Thames which in its hasty but not rapid course towards the Sea saluteth its walls and payeth its duty to her dividing it into two but unequal parts which are again joyned together by a most stately Stone-Bridge sustained by nineteen great Arches and so furnished with Houses that it seemeth rather a Street than a Bridge And beyond the said Bridge the Thames with a deep and safe Channel gives entertainment to Ships of very considerable Burthen which daily bring in their rich Ladings from the known parts of the traded World And if we consider its great Riches and Traffick with other Nations its Jurisdiction and Bounds being about twelve or fifteen miles in Circuit its populousness and strength in Men and Ammunition both for Sea and Land Service it s well Government both Civil and Ecclesiastical the civility ingenuity and experience of its Inhabitants in Letters Arts Sciences Manufactures and Martial Affairs its stately Buildings both publick and private as the Palaces of his Majesty Whitehall St. Iames's and Somerse●-houses the several Houses of the Nobility its Courts of Judicature and Houses of Parliament its Collegiate and other Churches for Divine Service its Inns of Court and Chancery its Royal Exchange built by Sir Thomas Gresham its Custome-house its Tower which contains a
Palace a Prison Mint Armory Wardrobe and Artillery its Guild-hall where the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen meet about the concerns of the City and where their Courts of Judicature are kept its Halls for the several Companies its Colledges and Free-Schools its Hospitals and Alms-houses its Theatres Tennis-Courts and places of Recreation and its great plenty of all sorts of Provision which its Shambles and Markets are stored with it may be deservedly styled the Mistress of the World It s Government This famous City when under the Government of the Britains Romans and Saxons was destroyed by the Danes but AElfred King of the West-Saxons having reduced the whole Land to one Monarchy repaired and re-peopled it and committed the custody thereof to his Son in Law Alhered Earl of Mercia after whose decease it returned to King Edward sirnamed the Elder who had it governed under him by Port-Graves or Port-Reves which in divers Records are styled Vicecomites Viscounties or Sheriffs In the first of King Richard the first the Citizens obtained to be governed by two Bailiffs or Sheriffs and afterwards obtained to have a Mayor for their principal Magistrate the first of which was Henry Fitz-Alwyn a Draper who was constituted and so continued four and twenty years The City within the Walls and Freedom thereof is divided into six and twenty Wards and the government thereof committed to the care of as many grave Citizens of good repute and quality which are Aldermen each of which having the overseeing of his respective Ward And besides these Aldermen there are two Sheriffs which are annually chosen as also a Lord Mayor who according to his degree and seigniority of being Alderman after Sheriff is by the consent of the Citizens that is the Livery-men of each Company yearly elected and these are clothed in Scarlet Gowns and wear Gold Chains and as Coadjutors every Alderman hath his Deputy of the Ward as also Common-Councel-men This City by their Charter hath ample and large Priviledges and Immunities granted unto it which hath been confirmed and enlarged by most of our Kings and Queens as the making of Acts and Ordinances for the regulation and better government of the several Incorporated Companies and the Members thereof so as they are not repugnant to the Law of the Nation and detriment of the King they have also the power of keeping of Courts holding Pleas Assizes and Goal Delivery with the punishment of Offenders by Fine Imprisonment or Death as occasion requireth The Citizens are not constrained to go out of the said City to warr without an emergent occasion to suppress a Foreign Invasion they may pass Toll-free throughout all England they have a Common Seal and Armorial Ensigns of Honour and for Recreation have Free-warren or Liberty to hunt about the said City with many other Immunities too tedious to set down Courts appropriate to the City The Hustings is a Court of great Antiquity and Concern being to preserve the Rights Laws Franchises Customs and Dignities of the said City and is kept by the Lord Mayor and Aldermen every Tuesday The Court of Requests or Conscience the Judges whereof are some of the Common-Councel-men who are monthly chosen by the Lord Mayor and Aldermen and sit twice every week to hear and determine all matters brought before them betwixt Freemen where the just Debt or Dammage doth not exceed forty shillings for the proof of which the Plaintiffs Oath is sufficient for them to award the Defendant to pay the same either by present or weekly payment as the said Judges shall think fit which sentence cannot be avoided for it is to be presum'd that no man especially of some repute which is to be considered of will forswear himself for so small a sum of money The Lord Mayor's Court being an ancient Court of Record held every Tuesday and Thursday by the Mayor and Aldermen and is to redress and correct the errors and defaults which happen in the Government of the City and indeed taketh cognizance of all matters wich concern the City for Receipts and Payments of money the granting Leases purchasing of Lands building and repairing of Houses and the like and appointing their several Officers to look after the same The two Sheriffs Courts ● one for each Compter is on Wednesdays and Fridays for Trials for Woodstreet Compter and on Thursdays and Saturdays for the Poultrey Compter and each Court hath its Judge which is a Lawyer of good repute for the hearing and trial of all Actions brought before them but if the Action brought be above 5 l. it may be by the Defendant removed to a higher Court. And to these Courts belong four Counsellors eight Attorneys besides Secondaries Clerks Keepers of the Compters sixteen Sergeants and their Yeomen with other Sub-Officers The Court of Orphans which medleth with the Estates of deceased Citizens to provide for the Orphans until they come to Age and to see that an equal division of the Estate be made the City being their Guardians The Court of Common-Councel much resembling the High Court of Parliament consisting of the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen which may be termed the Higher House and the Common-Councel the Lower House and these make and constitute Laws and Acts as aforesaid which are binding to the Inhabitants The Court of the Chamberlain for the binding and making free Apprentices and for the reforming grievances betwixt the Master and the Apprentice and this is an Office of great Trust and of such Power that no Apprentice if not sworn by him can set up and open Shop and those that disobey his Summons he hath power to Imprison or Fine This Office is at present committed to the care of Sir Thomas Player Kt. a Person every way fit for so great a Trust. The Courts of the Coroner and Escheater which doth belong to the Lord Mayor The Court of Policies and Assurances for Merchants The Court of Halmote which is kept by the Master Wardens and Court of Assistance of every Company generally every month The Court of Wardmote or Wardmote Inquest for the whole City being divided into six and twenty Wards every Ward having such an Inquest consisting of about twelve or sixteen of the Inhabitants thereof who meet at every Christmass time and enquire after the Disorders and Abuses of Tradesmen in their Weights Measures and the like and according to their Misdemeanours they make their Presentments The Sessions of Oyer and Terminer and Goal Delivery of Newgate for the City of London and County of Middlesex holden every month at Iustice-hall in the Old Baily for the trial of Felons the Lord Mayor being cheif Judge and hath power of Reprieving The Court for the conservation of the Water and Rivers of Thames and Medway The Court of the Tower held within the Verge of the City before the Steward by Prescription of Debt Trespass and other Actions There is no Magistrate in Europe that liveth in greater state and hath more power than the
Lord Mayor of this City which is evident by the noble Entertainment given to Strangers and by his great attendance both at home and abroad for besides the abundance of inferiour Officers he hath his Sword-Bearer Common Hunt Common Cryer and four Water Bailiffs which by their places are Esquires then the Coroner three Sergeant-Carvers three Sergeants of the Chamber a Sergeant of the Channel four Yeoman of the Water-side the Under-water-Bailiff two Yeoman of the Chamber with divers others The publick Officers belonging to this City are the two Sheriffs the Recorder the Chamberlain the Common Sergeant the Town Clerk and the Remembrancer who by their places are Esquires The Sheriffs who are persons of repute and ability are annually by the Commons that is the Livery-men of each Company in formality chosen on Midsomer-day and the day after Michaelmass the Lord Mayor and Aldermen go with them to the Exchequer-Chamber at Westminster where they are presented and sworn and the two old Sheriffs also sworn to their Accounts On Simon and Iudes day the old Lord Mayor being attended with the Aldermen and Sheriffs in their formalities go to the Hustings Court where the Lord Mayor elect taketh his Oath and receiveth from the Chamberlain the Scepter the Keys of the Common Seal and the Seal of the Majoralty and from the Sword-Bearer the Sword all which according to custom he delivereth to them again On the day following in the morning the old Lord Mayor with the Aldermen and Sheriffs attend the Mayor elect from his House to Guild-hall from whence in their formalities they go to the Vintrey and take Barge to Westminster being attended by the Livery-men of divers of the Companies in their Barges which are bedecked with Banners Pennons and Streamers of their Arms c. which with their Musick makes a pleasing show Being come to Westminster-hall having saluted the Judges they go up to the Exchequer Barr where the Lord Mayor t●keth his Oath and after some usual Ceremonies in the Hall and at the Abby in seeing the Tombs they return to their Barges and are rowed back to London being landed go to the Guild-hall in great pomp where a most stately Dinner is prepared as well for the Lord Mayor Aldermen Sheriffs and the several Companies as for the Nobility Judges and Gentry that are invited to the said Feast which oft-times is graced with the Royal Presence of their Majesties the King and Queen and the Duke of York c. The Ceremony of the day being ended the Lord Mayor is attended to his House where he liveth in great grandure during his Majoralty looking after the Affairs of the City to whose fatherly care the Government thereof is committed These with other Ceremonies in the electing and swearing the Lord Mayor and Sheriffs being largely treated of in Stow's Survey and Howel's Londinensis I forbear to speak further of them here but referr the Reader A List of the Names of the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Sheriffs that for this present year 1678 have the government of this Honourable City with the Names of the six and twenty Wards to which the said Aldermen do belong viz. THe Right Honourable Sir Iames Edwards Kt. Lord Mayor and Alderman of Candlewick Ward Sir Richard Chiverton of the Ward of Bridge without Kt. Sir Thomas Allen of Aldgate Ward Knight and Baronet Sir Iohn Frederick of Coleman-street Ward Kt. Sir Iohn Robinson of Tower-street Ward Knight Baronet and Lieutenant of the Tower of London Sir Iohn Laurence of Queen-hith Ward Kt. Sir Thomas Bludworth of Aldersgate-street Ward Kt. Sir William Turner of Castle-Baynards Ward Kt. Sir George Waterman of Brides Ward within Kt. Sir Robert Hanson of Basingshaw Ward Kt. Sir William Hooker of Cornhill Ward Kt. Sir Robert Vyner of Langborn ward Knight and Baronet Sir Ioseph Sheldon of Bishops-gate ward Kt. Sir Thomas Davies of Farendon ward without Kt. Sir Francis Chaplin of the Vintrey ward Kt. Sir Robert Clayton of Cheap ward Kt. Sir Patience Ward of Farendon ward within Kt. Sir Iohn Moore of Walbrook ward Kt. Sir William Prichard of Bread-street ward Kt. Sir Henry Tulse of Bread-street ward Kt. Sir Iames Smith of Portsoken ward Kt. Sir Nathaniel Herne of Billingsgate ward Kt. Sir Robert Ieffreys of Cordwainer ward Kt. Sir Iohn Shorter of Cripple-gate ward Kt. Sir Thomas Gold of Dowgate ward Kt. and Sir William Rawstorne of Limestreet ward Kt. The Sheriffs for this year are Sir Richard How and Sir Iohn Chapman Knights Having thus in brief treated of the Government of the City with their Immunities Priviledges Courts of Judicature c. in general in the next place we will treat of each particular Incorporated Company as Stems thereof And first with the several Companies of Merchants next with the twelve chief Companies out of which the Lord Mayor is to be Annually chosen and so end with the other Companies as Stars of a less magnitude The East-India Company though not the ancientest yet the most honourable and eminent was first Incorporated in the year of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth and since confirmed with divers other Priviledges added to their Charter by succeeding Kings having now power of making Acts and Ordinances so as not repugnant to the Law of the Land or detriment of the King for the good and well government of the said Trade and Company likewise power to hear and decide Causes and to implead fine and punish Offenders as they please to raise and maintain Souldiers in their Factories and to man out Ships of warr for their further security for warr offensive as well as defensive as occasion requireth also the using of a Seal and the bearing of a Coat of Arms as it is depicted in the Escocheon of Arms of the several Companies of Merchants This Company is managed by a joynt stock which makes them potent eminent and rich and is found several ways to be very advantageous to the Kingdom as in their building of Ships in the imploying and maintaining of thousands not only in their Ships but in their Plantations and Factories as at Surat Cambaya Bambay Curwar Baticale Calicut Fort St. George Pentapoli Musulipatan Ougely Gonro Bantam in the Indies Ormus in Persia ● with some other places of less concern And to their Presidents Factors and other Servants they allow good Salaries and are raised to higher preferments with greater Salaries as their merits deserve And the great Trade that they drive to these places exporting such vast quantities of our Manufactures and Commodities and importing so many sundry and rich Commodities cannot but make them to be very beneficial to the Nation This worthy Company for the better negotiation of their Affairs is governed by a Governour Deputy-Governour and Committ●e consisting of four and twenty who about the midst of April are Annually elected by the Adventurers of the said Company of which there must be eight new ones always chosen and these meet at their House in Leaden-hall-street London called the East-India