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A62166 Anglorum speculum, or, The worthies of England in church and state alphabetically digested into the several shires and counties therein contained : wherein are illustrated the lives and characters of the most eminent persons since the conquest to this present age : also an account of the commodities and trade of each respective county and the most flourishing cities and towns therein. Sandys, George, 1578-1644. 1684 (1684) Wing S672; ESTC R7882 366,503 734

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Wye which cutteth overthwart the West corner of this Shire where meeting with some stones which impede its motion on a sudden for want of ground to glide on hath a violent downfal which place is termed Raihader Gowy that is the Fall of Wye Hereupon he supposeth it not improbable that the Englishmen forged that word for the name of this Shire terming it Radnor-shire Prelates Elias and Guilielmus de Radnor were both born in Old Radnor both Bishops of Landaff and both eminent being eminent for nothing the former dying May 6. 1240. the latter June 30. 1256. Note when Owen Glyndower-dwy inveigled by some skilled in Merlin's Prophesies that the time was come wherein the Britains through his assistance should recover their ancient Liberty raised a Rebellion making War against the Earl of March Heir apparent to the Crown of England and Principality of Wales King Henry 4. enraged at his proceedings Enacted these rigorous Lawes ensuing First That no Welshman should purchase Lands nor be chosen into any Office in City or Town c. or bear Armour within any City Besides if a Welshman should sue an Englishman it was ordained that he should be tryed and judged by Englishmen That all English Burgesses who Married Welshwomen should forfeit their Liberties No Congregation or Council was to be permitted to the Welsh but in presence of the Officers of the Seigniory That no Victuals should be brought into Wales unless by the License of the King and Council That no Welshman should have any Castle c. That no Welshman should be capable of any Office of State or in any Court of Judicature and that no Englishman Marrying a Welsh woman should enjoy any Office in Wales FINIS A TABLE of the most remarkable persons and things contained in this work THE end and matter of the Work Page 1 2 Legend●… non semper Credenda Page 3 Canonization costly ibid. And best after mature deliberation Page 4 The Office of the Ancient Cardinals of St. Pauls ibid. The Constitution of Pope Paul II. concerning the Cardinals Hat Page 5 Cardinal Norfolk a rare if not single President ibid. The Clergy of Brittain the Glory of the World Page 6 The Antiquity of the Office of Lord Chancellour of England Page 7 The value of that great Office Page 8 The Etymology and office of Lord High Admiral of England Page 9 King Henry VIII first assumed the Title of King of Ireland ibid. Sir Ed. Montague's choice Page 10 The first Circumnavigators of the World ibid. King Henry VIII his great skill in Musick Page 12 The Heads of Charity Visito Poto Cibo c. Page 13 A perswasive to Charity ibid. The dates and degrees of the English Reformation Page 14 Younger Sons are raised by their Vertue to the dignity of Lord Mayors of London Page 15 The first division of England into Shirec Page 16 The Office of Sheriff ibid. Causes of the alteration of Sirnames Page 19 Bark-shire had no Earl till an 1607. Page 20 Popish Cavil some for Martin some for Luther Page 21 Instances of fortunate and eminent Sons of Clergy-men Page 22 Of the English Gentry by Nation and Profession Page 25 26 c. Of the Queens Majesty Page 28 Of the Kings Majesty Page 29 BARK-SHIRE Commodities Oaks Bark Trouts Page 31 The Beggars reason for going naked viz. all my Body is Face Page 32 Exposition of the Proverb When our Lady falls into our Lord's lap let England beware of a sad mi shap Page 33 An observable Proverb relating to Ireland Page 37 The Lives of four Children of King Edward I. Page 37 38 The life of King Edward III. King Henry VI. Page 38 39 The life of St. Edmund Page 40 The early dawning of the Gospel in Barkshire Page 41 King Henry VIII his pity towards 3 Martyrs Page 42 Humanum est errare Answer to a great Cavil Page 43 Arch-Bishop Laud refused to be made Cardinal ibid. The life of Bishop God win Page 44 The life of Arch-Bishop Laud Page 45 The life of Sir John Mason who saw 5 Princes ibid. Of Sir Hen. Umpton Ambassadour His publick Challenge Page 46 47. The life of King Alfrede Page 50 Of Jo. Kendrick who gave above 20000 l. to the poor Page 51 Of Tho. Cole the rich Clothier of Reading ibid. Of Jack of Newbury Page 52 The life of Sir Jo Howard Page 54 The lives of Sir Rob. Harcourt and Will. Essex Page 55 The lives of Sir Humphrey Foster Sir Francis Inglefield Sir John Williams and Henry Lord Nottice Page 56 The life of Richard Lord Lovelace Page 57 The Qualifications c. of Baronets ibid. Of the Battle of Newbury Page 58 BEDFORD-SHIRE Proverbs Page 60 The life of Margaret Beaufort Countess of Richmond and Darby Page 61 King Henry III. his smart reply to Sylvester of Carlile 62 The life of Henry Grey Earl of Kent Page 64 The life of John Mordant first Baron of Turvey Page 65 The life of Sir Francis Russel afterwards Earl of Bedford Page 68 BUCKINGHAM-SHIRE Proverbs Page 69 The life of St. Edburg ibid. A great Fiction about Sir Rumbald as I am a Christian Page 70 The life of Sir George Crook Lord Chief Justice of England Page 74 The lives of Sir William Windsor and Arthur Gray Bar. of Wilton ibid. Of the Noble and Antient name of the Cheneys Page 82 CAMBRIDGE-SHIRE Proverbs Page 83 The life of Thomas Westfield Bishop of Bristol Page 87 The life of Jo. Tiptoft Earl of Worcester ibid. The life of Matthew Paris Page 89 Will. Collet was Caterer to Selden c. Page 95 The life of Sir Edward North Baron of Catlidge The life of Sir Jo. Huddlestone CHESHIRE The Antiquity of that County Palatine Page 98 The Life of W. Booth Bishop of York and Lawrence and John his Brothers Page 100 101 The life of Bishop Chaderton Page 102 The life of Bishop James ibid. The life of Sir Tho. Egerton Lord Chancellour of England Page 103 The life of the Lord Chief Justice Crew Page 104 The life of Sir Hugh Calveley Page 105 The life of Sir Robert Knowles ibid. The life of John Speed first Taylor then Historian Page 108 The life of Sir Jo. Brereton Page 110 The life of Sir Hugh Cholmley The Battle of Rowton-Heath Page 118 CHESTER The life of Bishop Dounham Page 114 The lives of David and Sir Henry Middleton Page 115 The life of Tho. Offley Who three dishes had of daily Roast An Egg an Apple and the third a toast Page 117 CORNWAL Commodities Diamonds Ambergrease Pilchards Tin Page 120 The wonders ibid. The life of Will de Greenvil Lord Chancellour of England Page 122 The life of Jo. Arundel Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield Page 123 The life of W. Noy ibid. The life of King Arthur ibid. The Enterprize of Jo. Arundel of Trerice Page 124 Richard D. of Cornwal was High Sheriff of the County for term of his Life Page 128 The Battles of Liskerd and Stratton Page 130
vindication of Musick in Churches Page 422 The Life of Simon Langton ibid. LANCASHIRE The Inhabitants generally devout Page 424 Fishing with Spades ibid. The life and death of John Rogers Page 425 The life and death of John Bradford ibid The life of Cardinal Alan Page 426 The life of Bishop Barnes Page 428 The life of Arch-Bishop Bancroft Page 429 The 6 Properties of a good Scholar Page 432 The trance of George Walker an infant Page 433 Mr. Chetham's Benefactions Page 434 The Battle of Preston Page 435 LEICESTER-SHIRE Where the inhabitants of a certain Village have a ratling kind of speech Page 437 The life of Jane Katharine and Mary Grey ibid. The life and death of Latimer Page 439 The life of Bishop Langton Page 440 The life of Roger de Martival ibid. The life of Dr. Hall Page 441 The life of the Duke of Buckingham ibid. The life of Judge Belknap Page 442 The life of the Lord Chief Justice Cateline Page 443 The life of W. Burton Page 445 The life of Richard Vines ibid. The life of John Cleaveland Page 446 Sir John Poultney's Benefactions ibid. The Pectoral Bird of Thomas Burdet and the occasion of his death Page 448 LINCOLN-SHIRE Foolish Fowls have fine flesh Page 450 The life of King Henry IV Page 453 The Lives of Gilb. de Sempringham and Cardinal Somercote Page 454 A Remark on the imprisonment of Pope Urb. 8 Page 455 The life and cruel death of W. Ascough D. L. Page 456 The life of Bishop Fox ibid. Arch-Bishop Whitgifts Anagram Page 457 The life of Edward Fines Earl of Lincoln Page 458 The life of Thomas Lord Bury ibid. The life of the Lord Treasurer Cecil Page 459 The life of Judge Skipwith Page 460 The life of the Lord Chief Justice Husee ibid. The life of J. Anderson ibid. The life of Peregrine Berty Lord Willoughby Page 461 The Trie of Food Raiment and Harbour Page 463 The life of Sir W. Mounson ibid. The Benefactions of R. Sutton Esq Page 467 The Blacksmiths Book of Herauldry Page 468 MIDDLESEX Commodities and Manufactures Page 470 Proverbs Page 471 The life of King Edward VI. ibid. A custom of the Jewes Page 472 The benefactions of Alice Wilkes Page 475 The benefactions of Sir Julius Caesar ibid. Branford Fight Page 477 LONDON The Millers Riddle applyed to the Thames Page 479 The Fire that happened on the Bridge ibid. Proverb Page 481 The Life and death of W. Sautre Page 486 The life of Arch-Bishop Heath Page 487 The life of Bishop Cotton Page 488 The life of Dr. Davenant Bishop of Sarum Page 489 The life of Bishop Wren The life of Sir Thomas More Page 490 Sir W. Paget Chancellour to 4 successive Princes Page 491 The life of the Earl of Strafford ibid. A politick Cordial Page 493 The life of Sir Thomas Roper Page 494 The life of Edmund Spencer Page 497 Campian's Life Page 499 An Innocent She-Pope Page 500 The Founder of Dulwich Colledge Page 501 WESTMINSTER Eastminster what Page 503 The Life of King Edward I. c. Page 505 The Birth and Character of the King's Majesty Charles II. Page 506 The Birth and Character of His Royal Highness James Duke of York Page 507 The life of Mary Princess of Orange ibid. The life of Princess Elizabeth Page 508 The life of Princess Anne Page 509 The life of Princess Katharine ibid. The life of Prince Charles ibid. The life of Bishop Warner Page 510 The life of Sir Francis Bacon ibid. The life of Benjamin Johnson Page 512 NORFOLK Mr. Aylmer took Sanctuary in a Wine-Butt Page 516 The life of Sir Edward Coke Page 518 The life of Sir Clement Paston Page 522 Dr. Thorp's Life Page 524 The life of John Skelton ibid. D. Perne a notorious Trimmer mortally wounded with a Jest Page 527 The benefactions of Henry Howard Earl of Northampton Page 528 The punishment of striking within the Verge Page 529 NORWICH Dr. Goslin's Life Page 531 NORTHAMPTON-SHIRE The chief Town stands on other Mens Legs Page 534 The County abounds with Nobility ibid. The life of Queen Elizabeth Wife to Edward II. Page 355 The life of King Richard Crookback Page 536 The life of St. Werburgh ibid. The life of W. lt Zouch Page 537 The life of Francis Godwin Bishop of Hereford Page 539 The life of Sir Christopher Hatton ibid. The life of Sir W. Fitz-Williams Page 540 The life of Sir Isaac Wake ibid. The life of Sir W. Catesbye Page 541 The life of Sir Richard Empson ibid. The life of Lord Chief Justice Montague Page 542 The life of Sir Augustine Nicols Page 543 The life of Sir Robert Dallington ibid. The life of John Fletcher Page 549 The life of Sir Henry Montague ibid. The life of Dr. Preston Page 546 The benefactions of Henry Chichley Page 547 The life of Ed. Montague Baron of Baughton Page 548 An instance of Gratitude Page 550 NORTHUMBERLAND Charity reversed inflanced in St. Ebba Many are chast that they may preserve their Noses She parted with her Nose that she might preserve her Chastity One breeds Teeth at 110 years of Age Page 557 NOTTINGHAM-SHIRE Where is the best Liquorish Page 558 The life and death of Arch-Bishop Cranmer Page 559 The life of Sir John Markham Page 560 The life of Robin Hood Page 561 OXFORD-SHIRE A description of the University Page 573 The life of King Richard Caeur de Lion Page 576 The life of Prince Edmund Page 577 The life of Edward the Black Prince Page 578 The life of Thomas of Woodstock Duke of Glocester Page 578 The life of Anne Beauchamp Countess of Sarisbury ibid. The life of St. Frideswide Page 579 The life of St. Edwold ibid. The life of St. Edw. the Confessor Page 550 The life of Cardinal Pullen ibid. The life of Cardinal Joyce ibid. The life of Bishop Bancroft Page 582 The life of Sir Dudley Carleton ibid. The life of Sir John Norris ibid. The life of Sir Francis Knowls Page 584 The life of Thomas Lydgate Page 586 Anne Green hang'd and recovered Page 579 RUTLAND-SHIRE A large description of a small Gentleman Page 582 SHROP-SHIRE The life of Richard Plantagenet Duke of York Page 584 The life of St. Oswald Page 585 The life of Thomas Gataker Page 586 The life of Robert of Shrewsbury Bishop of Bangor ibid. The life of Robert Burnel Chancellour of England Page 587 The life of Robert of Shrewsbury Bishop of Bath and Wells ibid. The life of Arch-Bishop Talbot Page 588 The life of Lord Chancellour Bromley Page 589 The life of Sir John Walter Page 590 The life of Edward Littleton Lord Keeper ibid. The life of the Martial Talbot Page 591 The life of Old Parr Page 594 The life of Sir Roger Owen Page 596 SOMMERSET-SHIRE Lapis Calaminaris found here Page 797 The best Mastiffs bred here Page 740 The Parable of Jotham misapplyed Page 741 The properties of the waters of Bath Page 742 St. Dunstan's Life Page 743 The life of Bishop
ENGLISH WORTHIES IN CHURCH AND STATE Anglorum Speculum WORTHIES OF ENGLAND In Church and State Alphabetically digested into the several SHIRES and COUNTIES therein contained WHEREIN Are Illustrated the Lives and Characters of the most Eminent Persons since the Conquest to this present Age. ALSO An account of the Commodities and Trade of each Respective County and the most flourishing Cities and Towns therein LONDON Printed for John Wright at the Crown on Ludgate-Hill Thomas Passinger at the three Bibles on London-Bridge and William Thackary at the Angel in Duck-lane 1684. THE PREFACE TO THE READER Courteous Reader I Here present you with an abstract of the Lives and Memoir's of the most famous and Illustrious Personages of this Realm since the Conquest to this present time for order sake I have digested it Alphabetically into the several Shires and Counties contained in this Kingdom which I hope will find a kind acceptance there being nothing of the same method now Extant Dr. Fuller in his large History in Folio did go a great way in this matter but here is included the Lives of many more eminent Heroes and generous Patrons which I hope their memory may survive in succeeding Ages this being done with that brevity which may be more beneficial to the Reader Here you have the Original or rise of most of the Eminent Families in this Kingdom Also an Epitome of the most material matters in Church and State containing the Lives of the most Eminent Fathers in the English Church and the most Flourishing Statesmen in the latter times Also the most famous Authors as well Divine as Historical together with the Lives of the most Memorable Persons in the Law Mathematicks Geographers Astronomers Poets c. which have made this Kingdom known throughtout the World I need not inlarge or give any further Incomium upon this subject but referr you to the Table first and then to the Book it self which I hope will find that kind acceptance that may ingage me in some further procedure that may please my Countrymen which I shall alwayes endeavour to do in plainness and brevity to the Readers satisfaction and in the mean time am Yours to command G. S. An Abstract OF THE WORTHIES OF ENGLAND CHAP. I. The Design of the Work THE Rooms of the House being described by others 't is my intention to describe the Furniture viz. the Commodities with the Persons of Quality c. of the several Shires of England But it may be asked Cui bono To what ●od end I Answer 1. To gain some Glory to God 2. To reserve the Memories of the Dead 3. To present examples to the Living 4. To entertain the Reader with delight 5. To procure some honest profit to my self The matter is either Real viz. The Commodities and Observables of every County or Personal the Characters of those worthy Men who were Natives thereof CHAP. II. The Real Topicks insisted on in the Respective Counties 1. THE Native Commodities Of which if any be general to all England it is entered in that County where there was the first or else the most and best of that kind 2 The Manufactures Admirable for Rarity and Variety Of which such as are not properly Natural but Mixed are promisouously placed 3 Medicinal Waters Wonderful for Colour Tast Odour Sound Heat Weight Motion and Effects The last is proper for my Pen. 4. The Wonders or Rarities which are Transiem or Permanent The Wonders of England are as considerable for kind as those of other Countries 5. The Buildings of which the Churches are most admirable 6. Local Proverbs and there are Six essentials of a Proverb that it be Short Plain Common Figurative Ancient and True I have only insisted upon the most considerable Local Proverbs that suggest to us some Historical Hint and have declined all such as are Narrow Frivolous Scurrillous and Scandalous 7. Medicinal herbs which if rare and very useful are placed next the Medicinal Waters in the respective Counties CHAP. III. Of the first Quaternion of Persons Viz. 1. Princes since the Conquest 2. Saints who generally may be divided into those of Fiction Faction Superstition or Real existence 3. Martyrs 4. Confessors FOr the First I take notice of the Legitimate Issue as to Saints I am sorry that the Lives of some of them are so darkened with Needless if not false Illustrations to their Dishonour and the Detriment of Church History which has arisen from the Ignorance or Disingenuity of the Writers of their Lives or for want of true matter or for hope of gain or lastly for this that they saw it pleased the People Whence it is true what Melchior Canus says I speak it to my grief that the Lives of the Philosophers are more gravely Written by Laertius than Saints are by Christians Our Catalogue contains only English Saints wherefore Anselm is left out as being a French-Man since whom the Pope has been very sparing to confer the Honour of Saintship because the multitude of Saints abates Veneration and would overcharge the Calender that already labours with the Sacred burden besides the charge of Canonization is great and his Holiness unwilling to bestow it gratis and lastly Protestants shrewdly suspect that some unworthy Persons have been served with the Dignity by that Servant of the Servants of God therefore none are Canonized while their Memories are on the Must immediately after their Deaths before the same be fined in the Cask with some competent time As to the third viz. Martyrs who have lost their Lives for the Testimony of a fundamental Truth those our Land hath produced are either Brittains who suffered under Dioclesian or Saxons Massacred by the Danes or lastly English Martyred by the Papists since the year 1400. I shall tre●● of the last the two former being done already For the last viz. Confessors they are such who have lost all but Life for the truth and escaped Martyrdom very narrowly who were as Wax ready for the Signature of Death But Threatned folks Live long yea threatned Elijah by Gods Miraculous Providence never died CHAP. IV. Of Popes Cardinals and Prelates before the Reformation THere have been four Popes Englishmen and but six Germans tho Germany be five times bigger then England which boasts of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury formerly accounted Pope of England As for Cardinals they were anciently no more then Curats made by Bishops as well as by the Pope For there were founded anciently in the Church of St. Pauls two Cardinals chosen by Dean and Chapter out of the twelve petty Cannons whose Office was to look to those of the Quire to give the Eucharist to the Minister of that Church and his Servants to hear Confessions appoint Penance and to commit the Dead to convenient Sepulture and two of them lie buried in the Church of St. Faiths This Custom of Cardinal-making was in many other Countries but afterwards was appropriated to Rome where they are divided into Bishops who are
consist XIV England a good Land and a bad People A ●…rench Proverb 't is well they being such Admirers ●…f their own will allow any goodness to another Country XV. The High Dutch Pilgrims when they beg they ●…ing the French whine and cry the Spaniards curse wear and blaspheme the Irish and English steal This is Spanish The Italians are not mentioned because they seldom go out of their Country There was occasion to make Felony highly Penal in England to restrain the Pezantry somewhat addicted ●…hereunto but may Honesty in themselves and Charity in others hinder the Progress and prevent the Consequences of that Sneaking Trade Princes John Eldest Son of King E. 1. and Queen Eleanor born at Windsor dyed in his Infancy 1273. in ult H. 3. and was buried August 8. in West min●●er under a Marble Tomb inlaid with his Picture ●…n an Arch over it Eleanor Eldest Daughter to King Ed. 1. and Queen Eleanor born at Windsor An. Dom. 1266. Afterwards was Married by Proxy a Naked Sword interposed between her and his Body to Alphon●… King of Arragon who dyed An. 1292 before the Consummation of Marriage This Princess was afterwards Married to Hen. 3. Earl of Berry in France from whom the Dukes of Anjou and Kings of Sicil are descended She died in 27th year of her Fathers Reign Anno Dom. 1298. Margaret third Daughter of E. 1. and Queen Eleanor born at Windsor An. 3. E. 1. 1275. At fifteen she was Marryed at Westminster July 9. 1290. to John II. Duke of Brabant by whom she had John Issue III. Duke of Brabant from whom the Dukes of Burgundy are descended Mary sixth Daughter of King Ed. and Queen El. born at Windsor April 12. 1279. at 10 years of Age was made a Nun at Amesbury in Wiltshire meerly to gratifie Queen Eleanor her Grand-mother The other Children of this King probably born in this Castle viz. Henry Alphonse Blanche dyed in their Infancy who Cleansed at Font did draw untainted Breath Not yet made bad by Life made good by Death The two former were buried with their Brothe●… John at Westminster in the same Tomb but where Blanche was interr'd is unknown Edward III Son to E. 2. and Queen Isab born a●… Windsor Oct. 13. 1312. a Pious and Fortunate Prince was Passive in the deposing of his Father Practised ●● in his Minority by his Mother and Mortimer H●… French Victories speak both of his Wisdom and Valour And tho the Conquests by H. 5. were thicker his were broader in France and Scotland th●… both in length alike as lost by their immediate Successors He was the first English King which Coy●● ●● Gold He first stamped the Rorse●…obles having on one side Iesus autem ●●nsiens per medium illorum ibat and ●● the Reverse his own Image with Sword and Shield siting in a Ship Waving on the ●●a Hereupon was made the English Rhym in the ●…eign of H. 6. For four things our Noble sheweth to me King Ship and Swerd and Power of the Sea ●…e had a Numerous and Happy Issue by Phillippa ●●s Queen after whose Death being almost 70 years ●●d he cast his Affection on Alice Pierce his Para●…our to his Dishonour it being true what Epictetus ●…eturned to Adrian the Emperour asking of him ●…hat Love was In Puero Pudor in Virgine Ru●…r in faeminâ Furor in juvene Ardor in Sene ●…isus In a Boy bashfulness in a Maid blushing ●● a Woman fury in a young-Man fire in an ●●d Man folly However this King had few Equals one Superiors for Wisdom Clemency and Courage ●…e died An. Dom. 1378. William Sixth Son to E. 1. and Queen Phil. born ●● Windsor He had a Brother born at Hatfield of ●…he same Name who died in his Infancy as this ●…illiam also did As for King Edwards Female Chil●…ren Isabel Joan Blanch Mary and Margar●…t ●…is believed they were born in France Henry VI Son to H. 5. born at Windsor was 〈◊〉 for a Coul than Crown of so easie a Nature that ●…e might well have Exchanged a pound of 〈◊〉 ●…r an ounce of Valour He Marryed Margaret Daugh●…er of Reinier King of Jerusalem Sicily and Arrag●● ●…uissant only in Titles Through Home-bred Dis●…entions he not only lost the Forreign Acquisstions of the Father in France but also his own Inheritance in England to the House of York Her Death or Murder rather happened 1471. This Henry wa●… twice Crowned twice Deposed and twice Burie●… first at Chestry then at Windsor and once hal●… Sainted Our Hen. VII cheapned the price of hi●… Canonization but would not come up to the Su●… demanded However this Henry was a Saint with the People repairing to his Monument from th●… farthest part of the Land He was the last Prince whom I find expresly born at Windsor It seem●… that afterwards our English Queens grew out o●… Conceit with that place as unfortunate for Roya●… Nativities Saints Margaret Alice Rich born at Abbington in this County and were successively Prioress of Catesby in Northamptonshir●… They were Sisters to St. Edmund The former dying An. 1257. the latter 1270. Both were Honoured for Saints and many Miracle●… were reported done at their Shrine St. Edmund Son to Edw. Rich and Mabel his Wife born at Abbington and bred in Oxford Edmunds-Hall in that University which probably was not built by but Named i●… Memory of him He was Canon of Salisbury and afterwards Arch-bishop of Canterbury but after 10 years deserted this Function being offended at the Ambition and Extortion of the Popes Legate i●… England he therefore going into France sighed ou●… the Remainder of his Life at Pontiniack some say at Soiffons where he dyed An. 1240. Pope Innocen●● IV Canonized him 6 years after his Death that as some affirm he might not be tormented with his ●…host Lewis King of France a year after tran●●ated his Corps and three years after that be●●owed a most Sumptuous Shrine of Gold Silver and ●…hrystal upon it And the 16 of Nov. is the Festival ●…ppointed for his Memorial Martyrs At Newbury in this County there were 6 or 7 score Persons being ●…etrayed by a Lewd Person whom they ●…dmitted into their Society Abjured and besides ●…here were three or four burnt whose Names tho ●…ot known are no doubt written in the Book of Life The day of the Gospel dawned as soon in this Coun●●y as in any place of England The Honour of the ●…eniority in this kind belongs to Newbury the Mo●…ive used by Doctor Will. Twit to quicken the pace of his Parishoners there that Town as he said ●…eing the first Fruits of the Gospel in England At Windsor of a Company of Godly Persons there ●…our were Arraigned and Condemned by Commis●…ioners whereof three were put to Death viz. Anth. Parsons Priest being fast'ned to ●…he Stake he laid a good deal of Straw ●…n his Head saying This is God's Hat ●… am now Arm'd like a Souldier of Christ Rob. Testwood a
Epitaph in English is thus He saw five Princes which the Scepter bore Of them was Privy-Councellor to four Sir Th. Smith Knight born in Abbington bred in th●… University of Oxf. God and himself raised him to the Eminency he attained unto unbefriended with any Extraction Emulating Sir Th. Smith Senior Secretary of State he had equalled him in Preferment if not prevented by Death This Sir Thomas was Master of the Requests and Secretary to King James He died Nov. 28. 1609. and was buried in the Church of Fulham in Middlesex under a Monument erected by his Lady Frances Daughter to William Lord Chandes and since the Countess of Exeter Souldiers Henry Umpton Knight born at Wadley in this County was Son to Sir Edward Umpton by Anne the Relick of Jo. Dudley Earl of Warwick and eldest Daughter of Edward Seymor D. of Somerset He was employed by Queen Elizabeth Ambassadour into France where in the Month of May An. 1592. being sensible of some injury offered by the D●… of Guise to the Honour of the Queen of England h●… sent him this Challenge Forasmuch as lately in the ●…dging of my Lord Du Mayne and in Publick elsewhere pudently indiscreetly and over boldly you spoke boldly my Soveraign whose sacred Person here in this ●…unty I represent To maintain both by Word and ●…eapon her Honour which never was called in Question people of Honesty and Vertue I say you have wickly lyed by speaking so basely of my Soveraign and you all do nothing else but lye whensoever you shall dare to 〈◊〉 her Honour Moreover that her Sacred Person ●…eing one of the most Complete and Vertuous Princess at lives in this World ought not to be evil spoken of the Tongue of such a persidious Traitor to her Law and ●…ountry as you are And hereupon I desie you and Chal●●ge your Person to mine with such manner of Arms you shall like or choose be it either on Horse-back or on ●…ot Nor would I have you to think any inequality of ●…erson between us I being issued of as great a Race and ●…oble House every way as your self So assigning me 〈◊〉 indifferent place I will there maintain my Words and ●…e Lie which I gave you and which you should not en●●re if you have any Courage at all in you If you con●●nt not to meet me hereupon I will hold you and cause ●…u to be generally held for the arrantest Coward and most ●…anderous Slave that lives in all France I expect your Answer I find not what Answer was returned This ●…r Henry dying in the French Kings Camp before Lo●…ar and his Corps brought over was buried in Far●…ngton Church July 8. 1596. He had allowed him Barrons Heirs because dying Ambassadour Leigier Writers Hugh of Reading quitted his Ex●…ectances of a fair Estate and embra●…ed a Monastical life till at last he became Abbot of Reading He is highly commende●… by the Learned and writ a Book of Questions fetch from the Scripture Roger of Windsor Chanter of the Convent of ●● Albans was the Kings Historian He flourished A●… Dom. 1235. Robert Rich Son to Edward and Mabel his Wife Brother of S. Edmund Arch-Bishop of Canterbury wa●… born at Abbington in this County He wrote a Bo●● of the Life Death and Miracles of his Brother a●● died about the year of our Lord 1250. Richard of Wallingford a Black-Smith's Son wa●… bred at Merton-Colledge in Oxford a Monk at last A●…bot of S. Albans where being a good Mathematici●… especially as to the Mechanick part thereof he ma●● a Clock with much Pain more Cost an●… most Art Being a Calender as well ●… Clock shewing the Fixed Stars and Pl●…nets the Ebbing and Flowing of the Se●… c. but my Author did not inform ●● if the Canonical hours were mark't on the Clock H●… died An. Dom. 1326. Since the Reformation Henry Bullock probably born in th●● County where his Name appears in Worshipful Estate He was bred Fellow and Doctor of Divinity in Queens-Colledge ●… Cambridge a general Scholar familiar with Erasmi●… calling him Bovillum in his Epistles to him At Cardinal Wolsey's instance he wrote against Luther the otherwise his Affections were biased to the Protesta●● Party When he died is unknown Will. Twis born at Spene an ancient Roman City bred at New-Colledge in Oxford and there became general Scholar Good at plain Preaching better ●…t Disputing and best in Living He became ●…reacher in Spinhamlands Towards his Death he was ●…ighted by Sectaries it being usual for New-lights ●…o neglect those who have born the heat of the Day ●…is Latin Works speak him able in Controversie He was Moderate Prolocutor in the Assembly of Di●…ines And dying in Holborn he was buried at West●…inster An. Dom. 164. Will. Lyford born at Peysiner and bred at Magdalen●…oll in Oxf. Proceeded there Batchelour of Divinity ●…631 He was also Fellow of that Foundation He ●…as troubled in Conscience for having Resigned his ●…lace for Money to his Successour but before his Death he made Restitution He had a comely Coun●…enance and modest Mind a Courteous Carriage and ●…eek Spirit He was afterwards Preacher at Shir●…urn in Dorsetshire and tho both Pious and Painful ●…e had his share of Obloquie from such factious Per●…ons as could not abide the wholsome Words of ●…ound Doctrine He dyed about 1652 tho his Memory lives in his Learned Works Romish Exile Writers Th. Hyde born at Newbury bred Master of Art ●… New-Coll in Oxf. was made Canon of Winchester ●…nd chief Master of the School there He with ●…o Martial about the beginning of the Reign of Queen Eliz. went beyond the Seas This Hyde is ●…haractered by one of his own profession to be A Man of upright Life of great Gravity and Severity ●…e wrote a Book of Consolation to his Fellow Ex●…e and dyed An. Dom. 1597. Benefactors to the Publick Alfrede the fourth Son to King Athelwolf born at Wantage An excellent Scholar tho he was past 12 years of Age before he knew one Letter He was a Curious Poet an Excellent Musician a valiant and successful Souldier sighting seven Battles against the Danes in one year at last Conquered them and reduced them to the Profession of Christianity He gave the first Institution or according to others the best Instauration to the University of Oxford A Prince who cannot be Painted to the Life without his Loss no Words reaching his Worth He divided 1. every natural day as to himself into 3 parts viz. 8 hours for his Devotion and 8 for Business and the remainder for Sleep and Refection 2. His Revenues into 3 parts one for War a second for his Court and the third for Pious uses 3. His Land into 32 Shires 4. His Subjects into Hundreds and Tithings consisting of 10 Persons mutually Pledges for their Good Behaviour He left Learning where he found Ignorance Justice where he found Oppression and Peace where he found Destraction And having Reigned 34 years he dyed
Scholar and Exquisite Linguist his Modesty setting the greater Lustre on his Learning His Notes on Doctor Redleys Book of Civil-Law gave the first Testimony of the Pregnancy of his Parts He was first Chapl. of Christ-Church then Prebendary of Chichester and Sarum He dyed 1646. and was buried at Christ-Church in Oxf. His Posthume Works are set out by Jo. Gurgam dedicated to Edw. Bishop Esquire who relieved Gregory in his greatest Distress Sam. Collins Son to Baldwin Preacher Prodigiously Bountiful to the Poor whom Queen Eliz. called constantly Father Collins born and bred at Eaton Hence successively chosen Fellow Provost and Regius Professor of K. Coll. in Camb. Of admirable Wit and Memory and a most fluent Latinist Of his Lectures which he constantly read twice a Week for 40 years together there were not two which did not Critically differ He used all his Friends to decline his Election to the Bishoprick of Bristol as being in profit inferiour to the place he enjoyed In these troublesome times he lost his Church but kept his Choir wherein he dyed about 1651. Will. Oughtred branch'd from a right Ancient Family in the North born and bred in Eaton became Fell. of K. Coll. and at last Beneficed by Th. Earl Arundel at Albury in Surrey Prince of Mathematicians in our Age and Nation This Aged Simeon had a strong Persuasion that he should behold Christs anointed restored to his Throne which he did to his incredible Joy and then had his Dimittis out of this mortal life June 10. 1660. Romish Exile Writers Th. Dorman born at Amersham Nephew to Th. Dorman a Confessor in the Reign of H. 8. and Cordial Protestant tho through weakness he did abjure the Realm This Th. junior was bred at Barkhamsted-School founded by Doctor Incent in Hartfordshire under Mr. Reeve a Prot. School-master but this Dorman turn'd tail and becoming a great Romanist fled beyond the Seas where he wrote Against Alex. Nowel the English Calvanist He flourished An. 1560. Memorable Persons Jo. Mathew Mercer Son to Th. Mathew was born at Sherington Lord Mayor of London An. Dom. 1490. the first Batchelor that ever was chosen into that Office a singular Example for above 120 years when Sir Jo. Leman also Batchelor enjoyed the same Dignity 1616. Dame Hester Temple Daughter to Miles Sands Esq was born at Latmos and Married to Sir Th. Temple of Stow Baronet She had four Sons and nine Daughters who Married and Multiplyed exceedingly insomuch that she saw 700 Extracted from her Body Which Off-spring if contracted into one place had been enough to have peopled a City of Competent Proportion Noted Sheriffs Jo. Croke Ar. afterwards Knighted Son of Sir Jo. Croke one of the six Clerks in Chanc. The Name was assumed by their Ancestors for that of Le Blount which they concealed in the Civil Wars between York and Lanc. As for this Sir John Sher. of Buck he was fortunate in an Issue happy in the knowledge of our Municipal-Law Of whom Sir Jo. Croke his eldest Son Speaker of the House of Commons in the Parl. 43. Eliz. ●… received this Elogium from her Majesty That he had proceeded therein with such Wisdom and Discretion that none before him had deserved better Rob. Dormer Ar. Jun. 10. 1615. made Baronet by King Ja. and 30 of the same Month Baron Dormer of Wing in this County His Grand-child Robert was An. 4. King Ch. I. created Viscount Ascot and Earl of Carnarvan and lost his Life fighting for him who gave him his Honour in the first Battle of Newbury Being a little before his Death desired to make a Suit to the King he replyed I will not dye with a Suit in my Mouth to any King save to the King of Heaven By Anne Daughter to Philip Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery he had Charles now Earl of Canavan Edw. Bulstrod Ar. Whose Arms are Ancient 〈◊〉 S. a Buckhead Ar. attired O. shot the Nose with and Arrow of the 3. headed and featherd of the 2. a Cross p●…tee fitchee betwixt the attire O. Hen. Longvile Ar. Had to his 4th Son Sir Mich. Longvile who Married Susan sole Daughter to H. Earl of Kent Now when the Issue in a direct line of that Earldom failed in our memory Mr. Selden proved that the Barony of Ruthyn parcel of the Earldom ought to descend to the Son of the said Sir Michael and thereupon he sat as Baron Ruthyn in the late long Parl. His sole Daughter and Heir was Married to Sir Henry Yelverton of Earton in the County of Northampton Baronet a worthy Gent. of fair Estate Benedict Winchcombe whose Arms I represent in gratitude to the Memory of his Ancestor so well deserving of Newbury viz. Az. on a Chev. engrail'd between 3 Birds O. as many Cinqfoiles of the 1. on a chief of the 2. a fl de luce between 2. Spears-heads of the 1. Edward Coke Knight the English Trebonianus famous for his Comments on the Common-Law The Court-party to prevent his Election as a Member of Parliament got him prickt Sheriff whose Oath he scrupled to take because amongst other things the Sheriff is bound thereby to prosecute the Lollards wherein the best Christians may be included but no excuse could serve so that his Friends must behold him who had been Lord Chief Justice attend on the Judges of the Assises Francis Cheney Knight A noble Ancient Name There was a Family of the Cheneys flourishing in Kent giving for their Arms Az. 6. Lyons Ramp Arg. a Canton Ermin Of this House was Hen. Cheney High-Sheriff of this County and Bedf. An. 7. Eliz. and not long after created by her Baron of Tuddington in Bedf. tho in his Youth wild and venturous witness his playing at Dice with Hen. 2. King of France from whom he won a Diamond of great worth at a cast and being demanded what shift he would have made to repair himself in case he had lost the cast I have said the young Cheney in an Hyperbolical Brave Sheeps-tails enough in Kent with their Wool to buy a better Diamond then this His reduced Age afforded the befitting fruits of Gravity and Wisdom And this Lord deceased without Issue As for Sir Fr. Cheney Sher. he was Father to Charles Cheney Esquire who by his Exquisite Travelling hath Naturalized Forreign Perfection to himself and is Exemplarily happy in a Vertuous Lady Jane Daughter to the truly Noble Will Marquess of New-Castle and by her of hopeful Posterity Cambridgeshire CAmbridgeshire hath Lincolnshire on the North and Suffolk on the East Essex and Hartfordshire on the South Huntington and Redfordshire on the West in length 35 in breadth not full 20 Miles Plentiful in Provision the South part of Bread and Beer and the North of Cattle The Grain here is so good that it outselleth others in 6 pence in the Bushel The late draining of the North part of the County was not very grateful to the poor knowing that it is Felony to take another
fail●…ng him he used to walk a long time with a swift pace on the Exchange there every Morning and Evening A civil Monsieur observing him told him That if Will. would convert his Reciprocal into a Progressive Motion directed to his own Country he would provide him a light Habit and competent Money for a Footman To which Proposal consenting he footed it through France being more than 500 English Miles and returned safely into England Where he was generally employed to make the Initial Letters in the Patents ●● Peers c. He was an Excellent Herauld by the Title of and which was the Crown of all very Honest Man Exemplary his Patience in Sickness tho a Complication of Diseases seized on hi●… He dyed at the Herauld Office 1649. Noted Sheriffs Th. Eliot Mil. born some say in Su●● had his Habitation in this County being well skilled in Greek and Latine he was the Author among other excellent Books of Defens●●um Bonarum Mulierum or the defence of good Women an excellent Latine and English Dictionary the Stock on which B. Cooper grafted his Dictionary He dyed 1546. and was buried at Carlton in the County Th. Cromwel Ar. made Baron of Okeham was Chancellour of the University Edward North Mil. skilled in the Law and an 〈◊〉 Manager of Publick Affairs was employed in the 〈◊〉 of Augmentation Made by Queen Ma. Baron of C●…tlidge in this County A considerable Benefactor ●● Peter-house in Camb. where under his Picture there ●● this Distich Nobilis hic vere fuerat si Nobilis ullus Qui sibi principium Nobilitatis erat He was Father to Roger Lord North and 〈◊〉 Grand-Father to Dudley Lord North now surviving Jo. Huddleston Mil. To whom Que●● Mary came privately when Jane Gr●…y was proclaimed Queen to Saltston and rid thence behind his Servant the better to disguise her self to Framlingham-Castle She afterwards made him her Privy-Councellor and among other Great Boones bestowed the bigger part of Cambridge-Castle then much ruined upon him with the Stones whereof he built a fair House in this County I behold his Family as Branched from the Huddlestons in Cumb. Jo. Cuts Mil. A most Bountiful House-Keeper to whose House Queen Eliz. whilst there was Peace with Spain consigned the Spanish Ambassador in the Sickness at London This Spaniard being first Scandalized at the Knights short Surname was afterwards very well satisfyed with his large Entertainment Where note that the Spanish Gentlemen have generally long ●…ames tho short Commons Hen Cromwell Mil. Son to Rich. Cromwell Esquire ●…her 32 H. 8. to whom his Valour and Activity so endeared him as he bestowed on him so much Abbey-land in this County as at this day is worth 20000 Pounds a year He was not allied tho acquainted with Th. Lord Cromwell the Mau●●r of Monasteries Cromwell the pretended protected Grand-Child to this Sheriffhaving on a certain occasion owned that that Lord was not related to his Family in the least degree Jervase Clifton Knight By King Ja. created Ba●…on of Leighton had a fair Estate at Barrington in Som. whence he removed to Huntingtonshire on his match with the Sole Daughter and Heir of Sir Hen. ●●rcy of Leighton-bromswold Kath. sole Daughter to ●…ervase was married to Es●●e Steward D. of Lennox ●…o whom she bare the truly Illustrious James D. of ●…ichmond Sim. Steward Knight lived after he was knighted a Fellow-Commoner in Trinity-hall The sixth in lineal descent from John Steward who married Talmach a Maid of Honour to Queen Joa●… and Swore allegience to H. 4. Cheshire CHeshire lyeth in form of an Axe having L●…x on the North Darby and Staff on the East Shropshire on the South Denbigh Flintshire and the Irish Sea on the West the longest part 44 and th●… broadest 25 Miles The County was reputed a Pas●…tinate before the Conquest and it is much to Lanc in that honour being related to Che. as the copy to the original being Palatinated but by E. 3 Granting that the D. of Lanc. should have Regal Jurisdiction So fully and freely as the Earl of Chester And whereas Records are written in the Comon Law Contra Coronam Dignitatem Regis in this County they run thus Contra Dignitatem gladii Cestriae It aboundeth with all Necessaries for Mans life All the Rivers here either rise or through some Pool And of Lakes of this C●●shire abounds and therefore has great plenty of Carp●… Tenches Trouts Eels The Gentry are Remarable for their Numerous●…ess Antiquity many of their Ancestors being fix●…d here before the Conquest their Loyalty and Hos●…itality One said pleasantly that it appears then ●●e good House-keepers by the Wheaton-sheaves so ●…requently given in their Coats of Arms The Ori●…inal whereof was in Conformity to Hugh Kivelios ●●e fifth Earl who gave Az. 6. Garbs or Sheaves ●… Natural Commodities are Salt Cheese whence ●…ome say is the Word Cheshire 9. Chees-shire Where●…f the best of England is made here yet are not their ●…ows Housed in the Winter Milstones great and ●…ood in Mowcop-hill For Buildings Beestones-Castle ●●tuated on a steep Hill carried away the credit ●…rected by Raynulf the third Earl of Ghoster a beau●●ful structure levelled to the ground since the late Wars of which Leland Prophesies a Restauration ●…s for Wonders it is said there is a Pool adjoyning ●● Brereton wherein great Logs of Timber are seen ●● swim for certain days together before the Death ●…f any Heir of that House but I have heard this con●●adicted by the Right Honourable Lord Brereton ●…ow living who told me that lately some Persons con●●rned in the Event upon observation of the Critical time ●●uld not behold the prodigy and that the time of the ●…otion of those Logs is as uncertain as the Original cause 〈◊〉 loosness is Proverbs I. Cheshire chief of Men which Challenge the Men ●…f Cornwall or Kent are ready to Answer But ra●●er than any difference shall arise Wise-men will ●●ow of many Chiefs Indeed the Cestrians have in 〈◊〉 their Undertakings demeaned themselves Valiantly ●…ing Rich. II in dangerous times sent for 2000 of them to attend him and in time a suspicious Par●… the Number was doubled Pity it was their Valour was once wasted against themselves in the Terrible Battle beteen H. 4. and H. Piercy Sirnamed Hotsp●● Of which Drayton There Dutton D●●ton kills a Done doth kill a Done One side fought for Mortimer who should be King by Right the other for H. 4. who was Actually so The Loyalty of the first side is not so much impeached by the Voice of Fame as it is disprored by Voice of the Law which Supposes Treason may be committed against one that is only a King de facto which Limitation was more Applicable to R. 3. than it was to H. 4. II. Better Wed over the Mixon than over the Mo●● Over the Mixon that is at home Mixon being the Compost in the Yards of good Husbands The meaning is the Gentry in Cheshire
I mean a fair Estate particularly Crew-Hall in Cheshire He it was that brought the Model of excellent Building into these Remoter parts He had a Vertuous Lady very Essential to the Integrity of a Married Judge lest what Westminster-Hall doth conclude Westminster-Bed-chamber do revoke He had a Brother Sir Th. Crew a Learned ●…erjeant in the same Profession whose Son Geo. Crew ●…nstrumental in the Kings Restauration is designed for some Title of Honour Sir Humph. Davenport bred in the Temple a Studyed Lawyer and upright Person Quatities which commended him to be chosen Baron of the Exchequer Souldiers Sir Hugh Calvely born at Calvely of whom 't is said that he could feed as much as two and fight as much as ten men his quick and strong Appetite could digest any thing but an injury so that killing a Man ●…is reported the Cause of his quitting this Country and going for France where he became such an excellent Souldier that he converted the most difficult Atchievments into easie performances by his Martial Valour He was one of 30 English in France who in a Duel encountred as many Britains He revenged the Blood of the English who whilst his Hands were tied behind him were slain before his Face An. ult E. 3. 'T was he that after an unfortunate Voyage of the English Nobility An. 1. R. 2. took Barkbulloign and 25 other French Ships besides the Castle of Mark lately lost and by him recovered And in the next year he spoiled Estaples with the plunder of which he enriched the Calicians for many years after He Married the Queen of Arragon whose Arms are quartered on his Tomb. His Death may be Collected about 1388. After which time no mention of him and it was impossible for such a Spirit to be and not to be Active Sir Rob. Knowles Knight born of mean Parents in this County yet did not the Weight of his low Extraction depress the Wings of his Martial mind who by his Valour wrought his own Advancement He was another of the 30 English spoken of i●●diately before Afterwards he was a Command●● in the French War under King E. 3. where behaving himself like a true Son of Mars he drove ●● Enemies before him like Sheep overturning like another deluge Cities Towns c. so that ma●● years after the Sharp points and Gableends of overthrown houses were commonly called KNOWLES MITRES His last Service was the suppressing of Wat Tiler and his Rebels The Citizens of Land in expression of their Gratitude Enfranchised h●● a Member thereof His Charity was as great at his Valour and he rendred himself no less loved by the English than feared by the French He gave bountifully to the Building of Rochester-Bridge founding a Chappel and a Chantry at the East end thereof win a Colledge at Pontfract in Yorkshire where ●●stance his Lady was born endowing with it 180 pounds a year He dyed at his Mannor of Scone-Thorp i●… Norf. in Peace and Honour being about 90 years of Age and is buried in White Friers in London Jo. Smith Captain born in this County spent the most part of his life in Foreign parts First in Hungary under the Emperor fighting against the Turks three of which he himself killed in single Duels and therefore was Authorized by Sigismund King of Hung to bear three Turks heads as an Augmentation of his Arms. Here he gave intelligence to a besieged City in the Night by Significant Fire-Works formed in the Air in Legible Characters Thence he went into America about the end of the Reign of Queen Eliz. such his Perils and Preservations they seem to most Men above belief They are mentioned in a Treatise done by himself He was very Instrumental in setling the Plantation of Virginia whereof he was Governour as also Admiral of New-England When old ●…e lived in London where being High-minded and ●…oor he was exposed to the contempt of disingenu●●s persons Yet he efforted his Spirits with a Com●…emoration of the Days of Old He was buried in ●…epulcher-Church-Quire A Line of his Rauting Epi●…aph follows Here lies one Conquer'd that hath Conquered Kings Physicians If this County bred no Writers in that Faculty the Wonder is the less if it be true what I read that if any here be Sick They make him a Posset and ●…ye a Kerchief about his head and if that will not mend him then God be merciful to him This may be true of the Common People the Gentry having the help no doubt of the learned in that Profession Writers Th. Ecleston bred a Franciscan in Oxf. wrote a Book of the Succession of his Order in England c. and another de Impugnatione Ordinis sui per Dominicanos these two sort of Friers Whipping one another with their Cords to the mutual wounding of their Reputations He dyed An. 1340. Since the Reformation Ralph Radcliffe who converted a Demolished House of the Carmelites into a Grammer-School wrote a Treatise of the Burning of Sodome another of the Afflictions of Job and a third de Triplici Mentoriâ Of the Threefold Memory denoting probably such a difference as there is between Wax Water and Iron in receiving an impression He flourished under E. 6. 1551. and 't is likely he dyed before the Reign of Queen Mary Jo. Speed born at Farington first a Taylor did no more than cut his Coat according to his Cloath when being obedient to the Impulses of a Vigorous mind and assisted by Sir Fulk Grevil a great Favourer of Learning he designed the Maps and Composed the History of England and made the usual Geneaologies formerly prefixed to all English Bibles having a patent granted to him by King Ja. in reward of his great Labours Thus he Exchanged a Manual for a Manly Trade and made no greater hast than good Speed He dyed in London An. 1629 and was buried in St. Giles without Criple-Gate Jo. Dodd born at Shotliedge bred in Jesus-Col A witty Learned and Godly Divine Minister successively of Hanwell in Oxf. Fenny Compton in War●… Canons Ashby and Fausly in Northam tho for a time silenced in each of them yet even then he did instruct by his holy Demeanor and Pious Discourse A good Chymist to extract Gold out of other Me●● Lead and how loose soever the Premisses of other Mens discourse Piety was always his unforced conclusion thereupon When others meditated mischief in the Civil-Wars he confined himself to the Meditations of Sanctity and Innocency V. Clarks Lives Benefactors Sir Rich. Sutton born at Presbury of a Plentiful Estate and bountiful Hand It hap'ned that Will. Smith Bishop of Lincoln began Brason-Nose-Coll ●●● dyed before the finishing of one Nostril thereof 〈◊〉 being his Executor Compleated the Foundation ●…ith his own Liberal Additions thereunto He dy●● about the middle of the Reign of H. 8. Since the Reformation Rob. Brassy born at Bunbury i. e. Boniface-bury ●…ed D. D. in Kings Coll. in Camb. whereof he was ●…rovost Being Learned and Stout he Publickly
Tradition that a Giant with a Black●●●l in his Hand standeth at Polston-bridge ready to ●…ock down all the Lawyers that should offer to ●●ant themselves in Cornwall The truth is there ●●ve been but few here Eminent in that Faculty Yet ●●ve we Will. Noy born in this County bred in Lincolns●…n a most sedulous Student constantly conversant ●…ith Ancient Records verifying his Anagram W. Joy I Moyl in Law He was for many years the ●…outest Champion for the Subjects Liberty until ●●ing Ch. entertained him to be his Attorney 'T was ●…n ingenuous Expression he used when the Gold●…miths of Lond. at the Pixe or Weighing Gold in the ●…tar-Chamb pretended the Scales exact to the two ●…undreth part of a Grain I should be loath said ●●e that all my Actions should be weighed in those Scales Souldiers King Arthur Son to Uther Pendragon was born ●…t Tintagel in this County and proved afterwards Monarch of the Britains He may be termed the British Hercules 1. For his ●…llegetimate Birth 2. His painful life one painful for his 12 Labours the other for his ●…2 Victories against the Saxons 3. His Violent death as Lamentable tho more Honourable being Murd●● by Mordred As for his Round-Table there is ve●● little of Probability in it The Cornish men having a●…ways esteemed Men of Valour ever made up th●… Martial Kings Van-guard but afterwards in th●… time of Canutus they were appointed to make ●● the Rear of our Armies But it is to be pityed th●… these People misguided by their Leaders have ●● often abused their Valour in Rebellions and parti●●larly in the Reign of H. 7. at Black-Heath where they did the greatest Execution with their Arrows reported to be the length of a Taylors-yard However they have since plentifully repaired their Credit by their Exemplary Valour and Loyalty in the late Civil-Wars Souldiers Jo. Arundel of Trerice Esquire 14. H. 8. to●… Prisoner Duncan Camble a Scot accounted their Admiral by his Country-men a Pirat by the English and a Valiant man by all in a Sea-fight This Valia●● Enterprize represented with Advantage by the D. of Norfolk to the King was by him highly praised and rewarded Civilians Jo. Tregonnel born in this County and bred in Oxf. where he proceeded Dr. of the Laws He was employed to be Proctor for King H. 8. in the Cause of his Divorce from Queen Kath. Dowager and being Dextrous and Diligent in that Service he was rewarded by Knight-hood and a Pension of 40 Pound ●… year And afterwards resigning that and paying down 1000 pounds he got a Grant of the Demes●● and Site of Middleton a Mitred Abby in Dors pos●●sed at this day by his Posterity He dyed about 〈◊〉 year 1540 and is buried under a fair Monument Middleton-Church Physicians ●● Atwell Parson of St. Tue well seen in the Theorie ●●d happy in the Practice of Physick He mostly for 〈◊〉 Diseases Prescribed Milk and often Milk and Apples He bestowed his pains gratis on the ●oor and taking moderately from the Rich left ●he half of what he received in the Houses he vi●●ted As for the profits of his Benefice he poured out with both hands in Pious Uses He lived about ●he year 1602. Writers Hucarius the Levite lived at St. Germans in this county a Pious and Learned Man Eminent in his ●unction of Divine Service and wrote 110 Homilies ●esides other Books He flourished 1040. Jo. Cornwall Studied at Rome and was Familiar with Pope Alex. 3. He wrote against Pet. Lumbard ●hat Master of Sentences a Book called De homine Assumpto He also wrote a Book of Philosophy and Heresies He flourished under King Hen. 2. An. ●170 Sim. Thurway first bred in the English Universities ●hen in Paris admired for his Logick firm Memo●y and Fluent Expression yet most Profanely he advanced Aristotle above Moses and himself above both He lost at one instant both Reason and Speech a judgment adequate to his Crime 1201. Mich. Blaunpayn was bred in Oxf. and Paris A good Rhyming Poet as any of that Age. In d●…fence of Cornwall against Hen. of Normandy he 〈◊〉 this Verse Piscibus Stanno nusquam tam fertilis Ora. But his Vein lying more in Satyr he gives this Character of his foresaid Antagonist Est tibi Gamba Capri crus Passeris latus Api Os Leporis catuli Nasus dens gena Muli Frons Vetulae tauri Caput color undique 〈◊〉 His Argumentis quibus est Argutia Mentis Quod non à Monstro differs satis hic tibi monst●… He flourished An. 1350. Godfrey of Cornwall bred a Doctor in Paris and Oxf. and afterwards a Carmelite of no mean esteem He wrote a Book against the Constituting of two Provincials of that Order in England This Solem●… Doctor flourished An. 1310. Jo. Trevisa born at Caradock bred in Oxf. was Vicar of Berkley in Glouc. and Chaplain to Thomas Lord Berkley at whose instance he Translated the Bible into English without leave of his Holiness or Authority from a Publick Council whose Translation is as much better than Wicklifs as worse than Tyndals He dyed about the year 1400. Since the Reformation Jo. Skuish Secretary to Card. Woolsey wrote a Chronicle out of many several Authors He flourished An. 1530. Bartholomew Traheron well descended and bred it Oxf. and beyond Seas After which he became Library Keeper to E. 6. and Dean of Chichester In the of Queen Mary he passed unto Germany and there ●…d by his Pen 1556. Rich. Carew Esquire Son to Th. Carew and Eliz. gecombe was born at Anthony of right Worship●● Parentage and honoured his Extraction with Learning He was bred a Gentleman-Commoner of ●…f where being but 14 years old and yet three ●…rs standing he disputed Extempore before the ●…rls of Leicester and Warw. with the matchless Sir ●● Sidney He is celebrated by Cambden for his ju●…ious Description of Cornwall set forth 1602. He ●…ed about the middle of the Reign of King James ●● or his Son is said to have introduced the use of ●…mbadoes in the West which serve both for Boots and ●●rups Ch. Herle descended of a Worshipful Family and ●…ed in Exeter-Coll was at last Richly Beneficed in ●…nc A good Scholar and esteemed by his Party ●…eep Divine and after the Death of D. Twis ●●esident of the Assembly He dyed about 1655. Memorable Persons Jo. Bray Tenant to Mr. Rich. Carew carried up●● his Back An. 1608. at one time by the space ●…ell near of a Butt-length six Bushels of Wheaten●…al and upon them all the Miller a Lubber of 24 years of Age. Jo. Roman the Cornish Milo so used to Burdens in ●…s Child-hood that when a Man he would bear ●…e whole Carcase of an Ox and yet never tugged ●…ereat Veal an old Man of Bodmin was in ●…e Mechanical Arts what Georgias of ●…eontium vaunted of the Liberal Sciences ignorant in ●…one Edw. Bone of Ladock Servant to Mr. Court●●● tho Deaf and Dumb from his Cradle could le●… and express
to his Master any News that was 〈◊〉 ring in the Country Remarkable his attention Sermon looking the Minister stedfastly in the 〈◊〉 whilst it lasted to which his Zeal his honest life 〈◊〉 answerable Noted Sheriffs Roger de Prideaux an Ancient 〈◊〉 and Eminently flourishing in this 〈◊〉 Jo. Arundel Knight was forewared That he should be slain on the 〈◊〉 This made him shun his House at B●●ford as too near the Sea and rem●●● himself to Trerice But fataviam invenient for be●●● this year Sheriff and the Earl of Oxf. Surpris●● Mount Michael for the House of Lanc. he concerned by his Office to endeavour the reduci●● thereof and lost his Life in a skirmish on the S●● thereabouts Thom. Granvil whose Coat of Arms differs som●… what from that of the Greenvils The Merits of the Ancient Family are so many and great that ingross●… they would make one County proud which divide would make two happy I will therefore part wh●… I have to say thereof betwixt Cornwall and Dev●●shire Note Rich. D. of Cornwall was High Sheriff of this County for term of ●● Life a strange Precedent seeing f●● the last two years he was King of England and 〈◊〉 of Cornwall We account therefore the following Persons unto H. 7. to be his Deputies Ja. Tirrel Knight born in Ess Active in the Murder of the Sons of E. 4. keeping the Keys of the ●…ower and standing himself at the Foot of the Stairs ●…hilst Mr. Forrest and J. Dighton sti●…led them in their Beds King Rich. accounting Cornwall the Back●…or of Rebellion made this Knight the Porter thereof He was executed for Treason in the beg of ●● 7. 12. Jo. Basset in whose time was the Commotion at Bodmin headed by Fla●…ock a Lawyer and Mich. Joseph a Black●…mith and it was not the Work of Posse Comitatus ●…ut of Posse Regni to encounter them Yet march●●g to Kent they were at last suppressed at Black●…ath 4. Rich. Chamond Esquire a Justice of ●…eace almost 60 years saw above 50 ●…everal Judges of the Western circuit ●…as Uncle and Great-Uncle to at least 300 and ●●w his Youngest-Child above 40 years of Age. 19. Will. Mohun descended from the Ancient Lords ●…f Dunster and Earls of Som. was Grand-father to Jo. ●…ord Mohun of Oakehampton descended by a Coheir ●…rom the Courtneys Earls of Dev. and Great-Grand-●…ather to the Right Honourable Warwick Lord Mohun 2. Fr. Godolphin practised a saving way ●…f making Tinn of what was rejected ●…or refuse before He furnished Mr. Carew with his ●…urvey of Corn. His Abilities were intailed on Sid●…ey Godolphin Slain in at Dev. valiantly Fighting ●…or his Master 10. Will. Wrey direct Ancestor to Sir Chichester Wrey who tho scarce a Youth in Age was more than a Man ●● Valour in his Loyal Service He Married Ann Daughter of Bourchier Earl of Bath 12. Richard Roberts was afterwards created Baron and was Father unto the Right Honourable the Lord Robertes Earl of Radnor and Bar●● of Truro President of his Majesties most Honourable Privy Council and lately Deputy of Ireland a Person of great Learning singular Ability and Integrity The Battles The Battle of Liskerd or Bradock-down where on the Kings side Sir Ralph Hopton commanded i●… Chief was fought to the great loss of the Parliament-Party their whole Army being Routed The Kings Forces had the Execution of them which the performed very sparingly They took 1250. Prisoner's most of their Colours and all their Cannon Ammunition and most of their Arms. Stratton-Fight succeeds Tuesd 16 May 1643. The Kings Forces were in want of Ammunition and were to hew out their Way up a Steep Hill and were exposed to all disadvantages their Horse and Dragoons about 500 and Foot about 2400. The Parl side had plenty of all Provision and were advantagiously Brocadoed on the Top of the Hill Their Horse indeed not many having lately sent 1200 〈◊〉 surprise the Sheriffs and Commissioners at Bodmin but their Foot 5400. Yet notwithstanding the great inequality the Kings Forces by several Aven●… forcing their Passage after a doubtful Fight wherein Sir Jo. Berkeley relieving Sir Bevil Greenfield's Party took Maj G. Chudleigh Prisoner gained the Top ●● the Hill which the routed Enemy confusedly forsook The Assailants loosing but few Men and no considerable Officer killed of the Enemy about 300 〈◊〉 king 1700 Prisoners all their Cannon and Ammunition Sir Ralph Hopton for this good Service wa●… afterwards at Oxf. created Baron of Stratton by Let●…ers Patent But he dying Issuless in Flanders the Ho●…our has been conferred by King Ch. II. on Sir Jo. ●…erkeley younger Son of Sir Maurice Berkeley of ●…ruiton in Som. He had been one of the four Tetrachs ●…r joynt-Managers in Chief of Martial Matters in Cornwall and was highly Instrumental in reducing of Exeter Afterwards An. 1644. Essex with all his Forces followed the King into this County till he pen'd himself in a narrow place or rather large Pound so ●…hat being surrounded on all sides with the Sea and ●…he Kings Souldiers he with some Private Commanders Shipped himself for Plimouth thence for Lond. whither also their Horse forced their passage ●…nder the Conduct of Sir Will. Belfore The Foot left ●…ehind submitted to the King Cumberland CUmberland hath Scotland on the North Northum and Westm on the East Lanc. on the South and the Irish Sea on the West in Form not unlike a half-Moon which from its Tips may be about 40 Miles and not above 26 Miles in breadth A hard but pleasant Soyl producing these Natural Commodities Pearls found by the River Irt where Mussels Oysters c. gaping for the Dew are in a manner impregnated therewith so that some think that a Dew is a Liquid Pearl so a Pearl is Dew Consolida●● in these Fishes Black-lead digged up about Kes●● the only place as I am informed where it is fo●● in Europe Copper the Mines were renewed abo●… the beginning of Queen Eliz. in whose time L●… Calaminaris the other ingredient of Brass was fo●● in England Hence it is that She left more Brass th●… She found Iron-Ordnance in England In this Co●●ty the Copper Mines after a long neglect were refound by Th. Shurland and Dan. Hotchstabter of A●●purg in Germ. but they are since discontinued and probably the burying of so much Steel in the Bowel●… of Men during the late Civil-Wars hath hindred the digging of Copper out of the Entrails of the Ear●… As for the Buildings in this County they are rather for Strength than State by Reason of the Vicinity of the Scots The Cathedral of Carlile may pass for the Emblem of the Militant Church being Black 〈◊〉 Comely still bearing the Signs of its former Burning And of Rose-Castle the B. Seat the Prickles in the Ruins thereof only remain The Houses of the Nobility and Gentry are built Castle-wise and in the time of the Romans this County being a Limitary abounded with Fortifications Of strict Wonders this
Fish was again restored to him Noted Sheriffs An. 25. Jo. Coupeland An. 20 E 3 took Dav. Bruce King of Scotland prisoner in the Battle at Nevils-Cross for which he was rewarded with Knighthood and 500 l. per An. Note the Sheriffs of this County never accounted in the Exchequer untill 3. E. 6. An. 19. Fr. Russell Knight Son to Fr. and Father to Edward Earl of Bedford married Julian Daughter to Sir Jo. Foster He lost his life in a Tumult raised by the Scots on a Truce-day June 27 1585. Nottingham-shire NOttingham-shire hath York-shire on the N. Linc. on the E. Leic. on the S. and Derby-shire on the W. The pleasantness thereof may be collected from the plenty of Noblemen many having their Baronies and more their Residence therein This County affords the first and best Liquorish in England There were 2 Ayries of Lannards lately found in Sherwood Forrest These Hawks are the Natives of Saxony which coming hither and breeding with Lanerets proved as excellent in their Kind when managed as any which were brought out of Germany Proverbs I. Many talk of Robin Hood who never shot in his Bow That is many prate of Matters wherein they have no skill Robin Hood an excellent Archer and Arch-robber did chiefly reside in Sherwood Forrest in this County II. To sell Robin Hoods penny-worths That is stoln goods under half their value III. As wise as a man of Gotham The usual Periphrasis of a Fool yet Gotham a Village in this County breeds as wise people as any which causlessly laugh at their simplicity IV. The little Smith of Nottingham who doth the work that no man can This seems to be intended by circumlocution for no body and by way of Sarcasm is applied to such who being conceited of their own skill pretend to the atchieving of Impossibilities Martyr Th. Cranmer born at Arse-lackton in this County and bred in Jesus Colledg in Cambridge became Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and at last after some intermediate failings valiantly suffered for the Truth at Oxford March 22. An. 1556. After his whole body was reduced into Ashes his heart was found intire and untouched which is justly alleadged as an Argument of his cordial Integrity to the Truth see Fox and my Eccl. History Note that none suffered within this County in the Marian days which was imputed to the mild-temper of Nich. Heath Arch-Bishop of York and Diocesan thereof Prelate since the Reformation W. Chapell born at Lexington and bred in Chr. Colledge in Cambridge was a Man of strict Conservation an Excellent Tutor and a most subtil Disputant He was chosen Provost of Trin. Colledge in Dublin and afterwards B. of Cork and Rosse frighted with the Rebellion in Ireland he came over into England where he rather exchanged then eased his Condition such the wofulness of our Civil Wars He died 1649 and parted his Estate almost equally betwixt his own Kindred and distressed Ministers Capital Judges Sir Jo. Markham descended of an ancient Family was born at Markham He was Knighted by E. 4. and was made Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench in the place of Sir Jo. Fortescue of these one favoured the house of Lancaster the other of York both the House of Justice betwixt party and party being Men of signal Integrity I. Markham at the Triall of Sir Th. Cook late Lord Mayor of London for lending Money to Marg. Wife to Henry 6. directed the Jury to find it only Misprision of Treason tho Sir Th. had been cast at Court before The King highly displeased thereat vowed that Sir Jo. should never sit on the Bench any more and accordingly being outed of his Place he lived privately but plentifully the remainder of his Life having fair Lands by Marg. his Wife Daughter of Sir Sim. Leke of Cotham in this County besides his own Estate Seamen Edw. Fenton Brother to Sir Jeffery was Servant to Queen Elizabeth and a Valiant Commander in Ireland when O Neal and the Earl of Desmond troubled that Kingdom He was Ambitious to discover the Northen unknown Passages and after a long and dangerous Voyage he returned to England and being made Captain of one of her Majesties Men of War he signalized his Valour in his Sea-Service against the Spaniards in 88. He died An. 1603. Writers W. Mansfield a Dominican in Mansfield was a great Philosopher and defended Aquinas against H. Gandavensis He flourished 1320. William Nottingham Provincial of the Augustinian Order wrote a Concordance on the Evangelists with other Books He died 1336. Rob. Worsop born at Worsop was an Augustinian at Tickhill He wrote amongst others a Book entitled the Entrance of the Sentences Bale says he was a Bishop He died 1360. Since the Reformation Sir Jeffrey Fenton Knight for 20 years Privy Counseller in Ireland to Queen Elizabeth and King James translated the History of Guicciardine into English dedicating it to Queen Elizabeth He died at Dublin 1680. Jo. Plough a pious Minister fled to Basil in the Reign of Queen Mary He answered a Book against the Marriage of Ministers written by one Hoggard a silly Hosier He died in the beginning of Queen Elizabeth W. Brightman born in Nott. bred in Cambridge and beneficed at Haunes in Bedfordshire a Charitable Nonconformist wrote a Commentary on the Revelation He died dayly and died suddenly An. 16. Memorable Persons Rob. Hood a Gentle Thief robbed Peter to pay Paul plundring Clergymen but relieving the poor and distressed His principal residence was in Shirewood Forrest in this County tho his Bay is still remembred in York-shire He complemented Passengers out of their Purses tho he never asked the Keeper's leave for Killing of Deer and disposing of the Venison amongst the Vicinage He played his pranks in the Reign of R. 1. about 1100. So much for Robin Hood Th. Magnus an exposed child left by his Mother in the Parish of Newark was found and educated by a Company of York-shire Clothiers who gave him the name of Amang-us i. e. Amongst-us But he growing afterwards a famous Scholar and Statesman took upon him the Name of Dr. Magnus and was famous thereby both at home and abroad He was a great benefactor to the Town of his Nativity and founded a fair School there He flourished as I take it under Henry 8. Noted Sheriffs An. 15 W. Hollis Knight called the Good Sir W. for his Hospitality and other Virtues was Son to Sir W. Lord Mayer of London father to Jo. Hollis Lord Houghton of Houghton created Earl of Clare An. 22 Charles I and Grandfather to the Right Honourable Jo. the present Earl of Clare Rob. Pierpoint Arm. was afterwards created Baron Pierpoint and Earl of Kingston upon Hull An. 4 Car I. His Ancestors coming over with the Conquerour first fixed at Hurst Pierpoint in Sussex and thence removed into this County There was another Rob. who lived in great dignity under E. 3. Oxford-shire OXford-shire hath Bark-shire on the S. Glocestershire on the W. Buckingham-shire
born at Elmeseth bred in Cambridge was of the Quorum in Translating the Bible and whilst Chrysostome lives Mr. Boise shall not dye such his learned pains on him in the Edition of Sir H. Savil. He dyed about the beginning of the Civil Wars Remish Exile Writers Robert Southwell wrote many Books and was reputed a dangerous Enemy to the State for which he was Imprisoned and Executed March 3. 1595. Benefactors to the Publick Elizabeth third Daughter of Gilb. Earl of Clare and Wife to Jo. Burgh Earl of Ulster in Ireland had her greatest Honour from Clare in this County She Founded Clare-Hall in Cambridge an 1343. Sir Simon Eyre born at Brandon first an Upholster then a Draper in London whereof he was Lord Mayor 1445 on his own cost built Leaden-Hall for a common Garner of Corn to the City He left 5000 Marks to charitable uses He dyed Sept. 18. an 1459. and is buried in the Church of St. Mary Woolnoth in Lumbard-Street London Th. Spring the rich Clothier was born I believe at Laveham He built the Carved Chappel of Wainscot on the North side of the Chancel as also the Chappel at the South side of the Church Me dyed 1510 and lyeth buried in his own Chappel Since the Reformation W. Coppinger was born at Bucks-hall in this County where his Family flourisheth in good esteem He was bred a Fishmonger in London whereof he became Lord Mayor 1512. He gave the half of his great Estate to pious uses I am sorry to see this Gentleman's ancient Arms substracted in point of honour by the addition of a superfluous Bordure Sir W. Cordal Knight had a fair Estate in S. N. Long-Melford and was well descended He became a Barrister Speaker of the Parliament and Privy Counsellour and Master of the Rolls to Queen Mary He founded a fair Almshouse at Melford and left a large allowance to the poor for Diet and Cloaths He continued Master of the Rolls till the day of his death 23 Eliz. Sir Robert Hicham Knight and Serjeant at Law born at or near Nacton purchased the Mannor of Framlingham from the Earl of Suffolk and entered into the same after great and many intervening Obstacles He left a great part of his Estate to pious uses and principally to Pembrook-Hall in Cambridge He dyed a little before the beginning of the Civil Wars Memorable Persons Jo. Cavendish Esq born at Cavendish was servant to Richard 2. when Wat Tyler played Rex in London whom he in assistance of Sir W. Walworth Lord Mayor of London dispatched by giving two or three mortal wounds The beginning of the bustle was that Wat took it mightily in dudgeon that Sir Jo. Newton did not make a mannerly approach to him upon which the said Lord arrested Wat and wounded him with his Dagger Hence the Arms of London were augmented with a Dagger King Richards discretion appeared very much in appeasing the tumult which happened 1381. Sir Th. Cook Knight and Sir W. Capel Knight born the first at Lavenham the later at Stoke-Neyland were bred Drapers in London and were Lord Mayors of the City Sir Will. is reported after a large entertainment for King Henry 7. to have burnt many Bonds in which the King stood obliged to him and at another time to have drank a dissolved Pearl which cost him many hundreds in an Health to the King Sir Th. was in danger of his Life for lending Money in the Reign of K. Edw. 4. Both dyed in Age Honour and Riches these transmitted to their Posterity The Cooks flourishing at Giddy-hall and the Capels at Hadham in Hartford Note Elizabeth Daughter of Sir Will. Capel was Married to Sir W. Pawlet Marquess of VVinchester and Mildred descended from Sir Th. Cook to VV. Cecil Lord Burleigh both their Husbands being Lord Treasurers of England Sir Tho. lyeth buried in the Church of Augustine Friars in London Sir VV. Capel in St. Bartholomews behind the Exchange Noted Sheriffs Q. Eliz. An. 18. Jo. Higham Arm. the ancient Sirname of the Lords Montaign in France was descended from Sir Clem. a Potent Knight 20. Robert Jermin a pious Man and a great Benefactor to Emanuel Colledge and a potent man was Father to Sir Th. Privy Councellor and Lord Chamberlain to King Charles I. Grandfather to Tho. and Hen. Esq the younger of these being Lord Chamberlain to our present Queen Mary and sharing in her Majesties sufferings was by King Charles II. made Baron and Earl of St. Albans 23. Nich. Bacon Mil. was the first Baronet in England 36. Tho. Crofts Arm. was Grandfather to Crofts who was created Baron Crofts by K. Cha. II. Sir Simond Dewes was Grandfather to Adrian descended from the Lords of Kessel in Gelderland who came thence in the time of their Civil Wars in the Reign of Henry 8. He was bred in Cambridge and became a great Antiquary He observed that the Ordinances of the late long Parliament did in Bulk and Number exceed all the Statutes made since the Conquest He dyed about 1653. SURREY SUrrey hath Middlesex on the North Kent on the East Sussex on the South Hant and Bark-shire on the West It is very near a Square of 22 Miles the Skirts whereof are fruitful and the inward parts barren though generally the Air be clear and the ways clean Here is the most and best Fullers Earth digged up near Rygate It is worth four pence a Bushel at the Pit and the Transportation thereof is prohibited The County likewise affords good Trouts and VVall-nuts and the best Box growing about Darking In this Shire there is the best Gardening for Profit King James about the end of his Reign gave 2000 pounds to Sir Francis Crane to build a House at Morelack for setting up a Manufacture of Tapestry and one Francis Klein a German was the designer thereof and united the Italian and Dutch perfections in that Mystery This Klein afterwards setled in London where he had a gratuity of 100 pounds per An. until the beginning of the late Civil Wars The chief Buildings are Richmond built by King Henry 7. and most pleasantly seated on the Thames Non-such built by King Henry 8. answereth its Name for compleat Architecture though exceeded by Wimbleton in point of a neat Scituation This was built by Sir Th. Cecil in 88. Of Medicinal Waters those at Ebsham found out 1618 in a dry season the Water being first observed in a Horse or Neats-footing run through some Veins of Alume and are abstersive and sanative being outwardly and inwardly taken The wonder in this County is that there is a River termed Mole at a place called the Swallow that sinketh into the Earth and surgeth again some two miles off nigh Letherhead and 't is said a Goose was put in and came out again with Life if so there was a wonderful preservation of the Goose There is also a Vault nigh Rygate capable to receive 500 Men which was anciently the Receptacle of some great person a proper place it seems
and afterwards lived about the Court. Being an Elegant Poet he Translated Lucan into English some affirm that he took some disgust at Court because his Bays were not gilded enough nor his Verses rewarded by King Charles I. according to his Expectation He afterwards wrote on History of this State in the beginning of the Civil Wars He died suddenly in the night 1652. Jo. Selden born at Salvington within the Parish of East Terring was Son to Jo. by his Wife Margaret Daughter and Heir of Tho. Barker of Rushington descended from a Knightly Family in Kent He was bred in Hart hall in Oxford then in the Inner Temple in London where he attained great skill in the Law and all Antiquity He traced all the dimensions of Arts and Languages as appear by the many and various Works which he hath written whereof Lay-Gentlemen prefer his Titles of Honour Lawyers his Mare Clausum Antiquaries his Spicilegium ad Eadmerum Clergy-men like best his Book de Diis Syris and worst his History of Tithes For which Book having been called to an account before the High Commission 't is said that afterwards he was no Friend to Bishops never affecting the Men nor cordially approving their Calling But it is certain Mr. Selden did in a Letter to Arch-Bishop Laud express his unfeigned contrition for setting forth of the said Book of Tithes That which afterwards Entituled him to a general popularity was his pleading with Mr. Noy for an Habeas Corpus for such Gentlemen who were imprisoned for refusal of the Loan He had very many Ancient and Modern Coyns and dyed exceeding Wealthy His large and excellent Library is now reposited Bodly within a Bodly in the matchless Library of Oxford Romish Exil'd Writers George Martin born at Macfield bred in Oxford was Tutor to Phil. Earl of Arundel Son to Tho. Duke of Norfolk After he had Travelled to Rome he became Professor of Divinity in the English Colledge of Rhemes He wrote much in defence of the Romish Faith one of his Books being Entituled A Detection of Corruptions in the English Bible He dyed 1582. and was buried in St. Stephens Church in Rhemes Tho. Stapleton born at Henfield of a very good Family was observed by those of his own Perswasion to have been born in the same Year and Month wherein Sir Thomas More was beheaded as if Divine Providence had purposely drop'd from Heaven an Acorn in place of the Oak that was fell'd He was bred in New-Colledge in Oxford and became Canon of Chichester which place he quitted an 1. Eliz. and having fled beyond the Seas he became Catechist at Doway which Office he having discharged to his commendation he was preferred Kings Professor of Divinity in Lovain and was 40 years together undertaker General against all Protestants Dr. Whitaker Professor in Cambridge experimentally professed that Bellarmine was the fairer and Stapleton the shrewder Adversary He dyed and was buried in St. Peters in Lovain 1598. Benefactors to the Publick since the Reformation Richard Sackvil Eldest Son of Thomas Earl of Dorset had his Barony if not his Birth at Buckhurst A Learned Gentleman to whom the Greek and Latine were as familiar as his own Native Tongue Succeeding his Father in that Earldom he enjoyed his Dignity not a full year He erected a Colledge at East Greensted in this County for 31 poor people to serve Almighty God therein endowing the same with 330 pounds a year out of all his Lands in England By Margaret sole Daughter to Tho. Duke of Norfolk he left two surviving Sons Richard and Edward of admirable parts successively Earls after him and dying was buried in Withiham in this County Memorable Persons John Henry and Thomas Palmer were Sons to Edward Palmer Esquire of Angmarine by his Wife Daughter to one Clement of Wales who for his effectual assisting of King Henry 7. from his Landing at Milford Haven untill the Battle of Bosworth was brought by him into England and rewarded with good Lands in this and the next County It happened that their Mother being a full fourthnight inclusively in Labour was on Whitsunday delivered of John her eldest Son on the Sunday following of Henry her second Son and the Sunday next after of Thomas her third Son These three were Knighted for their Valour by King Henry 8. They have a Worshipful and numerous Posterity in Sussex and Kent amongst whom Sir Roger Palmer Aged 80 years lately deceased and Cofferer to the late King averred the Truth of the aforesaid Relation Leonard Mascal of Plumsted was the first who brought over into England from beyond the Seas Carps and Pippins about an 5. Henry 8. 1514. W. Withers being a Child of about 11 years of Age an 1581. lay in a Trance 10 dayes without any sustenance and at last coming to himself uttered to the standers by many strange Speeches inveighing against Pride Covetousness and other outragious sins Note that an 1378 in the Reign of Richard 2. the Sussexians of Rye and Winchelsey embarqued for Normandy and afterwards entered by night into a Town called Peters Port took all such Prisoners who were able to pay ransome and safely returned home with the Spoil amongst which were some Bells the French had formerly taken from the Towns in this County which they lately invaded It was a worthy advice which William Earl of Arundel gave to his Son Henry Fitz-Allen never to trust his Neighbours the French which I would recommend to the Inhabitants of this County WARWICK-SHIRE WArwick-shire hath Leicester and Northamptonshire on the East Oxford and Glocester-shire on the South Worcester on the West and Staffordshire on the North thereof It extends 33 Miles from North to South and 26 from East to West This County is the Heart but not the Core of England The Woodland thereof may want what the Fieldon affords As for the pleasure thereof an Author saith that from Edge hill one may behold it as the Garden of Eden The Sheep here are very large especially about Warm-Leighton There is a plentiful growth of Ashes in the Woodland of this County and much Coal digged up at Bedworth As for Buildings Coventry sheweth two fair Churches yet such their vicinity that the Arch-Angel eclipseth the Trinity Then St. Maries in Warwick a beautiful Structure owes its life to the Monuments of the dead therein most being Earls of Warwick So numerous is the Church with its Appendances that the Minister can accommodate one Clergy-man of all dignities and degrees to repose them in several Chappels and Vestries by themselves Kenelworth had the strength of a Castle and beauty of a Princes Court a vast and withal a comely Structure the Porch being proportionable to the rest of the Fabrick It was demolished since the end of the Wars The Castle of Warwick overlooketh the Town being pleasantly Scituated on a rising Hill affording a very fine Prospect mostly of the Lands of the present Owner Robert Lord Brook The Cross of Coventry all for Ornament
at this day composed an English and Welsh Dictionary Printed 1547. He dyed 1560. Benefactors to the Publick since the Reformation Sir Thomas Son of Sir Richard Exmew was born at Rithin and bred in London a Goldsmith and was Lord Mayor thereof 1517. Besides Benefactions in his own Country and to St. Mary Magdalens in Milk-street London where he lyes buried he made the VVater-Conduit by London VVall at Moor-Gate Gabriel Goodman Son of Edward Goodman Esq was born at Rithin afterwards D. D. in St. Johns-Colledge in Cambridge and Dean of VVestminster for forty years The Bible was Translated into VVelsh on his cost He founded a School-house in Rythin with a competent Salary and erected an Almshouse therein for 12 poor people He repaired the House for the Minster there called the VVarden of Rythin furnishing it with Plate c. which were to descend to his Successors He purchased a fair House thereunto at Cheswick in Middlesex where with his own hands he set a fair row of Elmes for a Retiring place to the Masters and Scholars at VVestminster He was made one of the Executors of the Will of our English Nestor the Lord Treasurer Cecil for the disposing of great sums to charitable uses He dyed 1601. and is buried in the Collegiate Church of VVestminster whereof he so well deserved as of all England Mr. Cambden performing his perambulation about it on his Expences Sir Hugh Middleton Son of Sir Richard Middleton was born at Denbigh and bred in London This is that worthy Knight who fetcht into London VVater on his own cost more then 24 Miles encountring all the way with an Army of Oppositions grapling with Hills strugling with Rocks fighting with Forests till in defiance of difficulties he had brought his Project to Perfection A potent person and an idle Spectator struck in and by his greatness possessed a Moiety of the profit whilst the Honour thereof will remain Eternally fixed to the Memory of Sir Hugh Middleton Note Robert Earl of Leicester by his bounty advanced the Building of a new Church in Denbigh FLINT-SHIRE FLint-shire named from Flint formerly an eminent place therein hath the Sea on the North Shrop-shire on the South Cheshire on the East and Denbigh-shire on the West The smallest Shire in VVales Flint the Shire-Town is no Market Town no nor St. Asaph a City and Bishops See till made so very late But it is near to Chester the Market General of these parts and besides every Village hath a Market in it self as affording all necessary Commodities This County was Parcel of the County Palatine paying 2000 Marks called a Mize at the Change of every Earl of Chester until the year 1568. For then upon the occasion of one Thomas Radford committed to Prison by the Chamberlain of Chester this County disjoyned it self from the Earldom of Chester and united it self to the Principality though I cannot see how the one or the other could be done without an Act of Parliament Proverbs I. Mwy nag un bwa yro Ynghaer That is More then on Yugh-Bow in Chester Cheshire men have been very famous for Archery It is applyed to such who take other folks Goods for their own being mistaken with the similitude and resemblance Princes Elizabeth the 7th Daughter of King Edward 1. and Queen Lleanor was born at Ruthland Castle where antiently a Parliament was kept an Edward 1. This Princess at 14 years of Age was Married to John first of that Name Earl of Holland Zealand c. and after his death to Humfrey Bohun Earl of Hereford and Essex High Constable of England by whom he had a numerous Issue She dyed 1316. and was buried in the Abby-Church of Saffron-Walden in Essex Saints Congellus or Comgallus is challenged by the Welsh for their Country-Man as being first Abbot of Banchor in this County though Arch-Bishop Usher makes him the first Abbot of Bangor in the North of Ireland He was one of a pious Life who wrote Learned Epistles and dyed an 600. Aet 85. St. Beno Instructor to St. Wenefride was it seems a good Chirurgeon to a Miracle who when VVenefride was beheaded by the Lustful Caradocus set her Head on again she living 15 years after Asaph born of Right Honourable Parentage was bred at Llan-Elvy under Mungo the Scotch Bishop of that place who had a Convent of 663 Monks almost the number of the Beast whereof 300 being more unlearned then the rest were employed in Husbandry Amongst the rest who attended Divine Service St. Asaph was eminently conspicuous for Piety and Learning insomuch that Mungo in Latine Quentigernus being called into his Country resigned both his Convent and Cathedral to him Here he demeaned himself with such Sanctity that Llan-Elvy was after his death called from him St. Asaph He was an assiduous Preacher having this Speech in his Mouth Such who are against the Preaching of Gods word envy Mans Salvation He is thought by some to have dyed about 569. After which his See was Vacant above 500 years until Jeffrey of Monmouth was placed there Prelates since the Reformation Richard Parry D. D. born at Ruthin was bred in Christs-Church in Oxford whence he was preferred Dean of Bangor and at last Bishop of St. Asaph consecrated December 30. 1604. Bishop Godwin being near to him in time and in his studies desireth to be his equal in other Episcopal Qualities Bishop Parry dyed 16. Souldiers Owen Glendower born in his ancient Patrimony of Glendower-Wye was bred in London a Student of the Common Law till he became a Courtier and Servant to King Richard 2. After whose death being in the wrong side of preferment he retired into Wales where there arose a difference between him and the Lord Gre of Ruthen about a Common which Owen by force recovered from Gre whom he killed Many spur'd his posting Ambition by telling him he was the true Heir to all North-Wales and now or never the time to regain it whereupon he brake into open Rebellion Being angry with the King his Revenge fell upon God burning down the fair Cathedrals of Bangor and St. Asaph Doing mischiefs to others he did no good to himself King Henry 4. found it more easie to depose King Richard then subdue this Owen who had taken Roger Earl of March and next Heir to the Crown Prisoner Writers Elvodugus Probus was Vir sui Nominis he lived at Bangor Monachorum in that Age the Cambridge and Oxford of all Britain He wrote many Books and particularly a Chronicle of his Nation which the Envy of Time hath denied to Posterity Amongst many eminent Men whom he had for his Scholars there was the Learned Nennius commonly called Nennius Elvodugi This Elvoduge flourished 950. Since the Reformation Meredith Hanmer D D. was born in this County where a good Family of his Name flourish at Han-meer at this day He was Treasurer of Trin-Colledge in Dublin He Translated the Eccles Histories of Euseb Socrates Evagrius c. into English wrote an
CUMBERLAND Commodities Pearls black Lead Copper Page 132 The Life of Arch-Bishop Grindal Page 135 The life of Sir Richard Hutton the honest Judge Page 136 The life of Sir Jo. Banks ibid. The life of Richard Crakenthorpe D. D. Page 136 The life of Maud Daughter to the Lord Lucy Page 139 Richard D. of Glocester Sheriff of this County Page 140 DERBY-SHIRE Commodities The best Lead Page 141 The punishment of stealing Oare twice ibid. The life of Cardinal Curson Page 142 The life of Phil. de Repingdon alias Rampington Page 143 The life of Bishop Cook ibid. The life of Sir Jo. Cook Secretary of State Page 144 The life of Sir Anthony Fitz-Herbert ibid. The life of Sir Hugh Willoughby Page 145 The life of Thomas Linacer Page 146 The life of Elizabeth Hardwick Countess of Shrewsbury Page 147 DEVON-SHIRE The high Character of the Gentry given by Q. Eliz. Page 148 The wonders of the Pit and Hanging-Stone Page 149 The life of Cardinal Courtney Page 151 Bishop Foliot's encounter with the Devil ibid. The Character of Bishop Jewel Page 153 The life of D. Prideaux Bishop of Worcester Page 153,154 The life of Sir Arthur Chichester Page 154 The life of Lord Chief Justice Herle Page 155 The life of Sir Jo. Cary ibid. The life of the unfortunate Judge Hankford ibid. The life of Sir Jo. Fortescue Page 156 The life of Sir Lewis Pollard and Sir Jo. Doderidge ibid. The life of Sir Richard Greenvil Page 157 The life of James Lord Audley ibid. The life of the ambitious Tho. Stuckley Titular Earl of Wexford Page 158 The life of the most Noble General Monk Duke of Albermarl Page 159 The life of W. Wilford Page 160 The life of Sir Humphrey Gilbert Page 161 The life of Sir Walter Rawleigh who would demonstrate the errours of his Traducers a posteriori ibid The life of the famous Hooker Page 163 The life of the Lord Pomery Page 164 Nich. and Andr. Tremane twins alike in all lineaments c. Page 165 The Stratagem of Sir Richard Edgecomb Page 166 EXETER The Fatal Castle of Rugemont Page 167 The life of Princess Henrietta Dutchess of Orleans Page 168 The Character of the famous Iscanus Bishop of Exeter ibid. DORSET-SHIRE Commodities Salt Tobacco-pipe Clay wild madder Page 171 The Life of St. Edward Son to King Edgar ibid. The life of Arch-Bishop Morton Page 173 The life of Arch-Bishop Stafford ibid. The life of Bishop Turbevil ibid. The life of the valiant Sir Richard Bingham Page 175 The Original of White-Hart-Silver Page 177 The descent of the Newburgs ibid. DURHAM The life of Cicely Nevil Daughter to the E. of Westmerland Page 178 The life of Venerable Bede Page 179 The life of John Wickliffe Page 180 The lives of the Nevils ibid. The life of Bishop Horn and Bishop Cosen ibid. The life of Anthony Lord Gray and Rector of Burbach Page 183 ESSEX Where Vulgar wits are said to multiply exceedingly Page 184 The Commodities Page 185 The life of Henry Fitz-Roy Son to Henry VIII Page 186 The life of St. Helen ibid. The Miracle of St. Osith Page 187 The life of Arch-Bishop Bourcher Page 188 The life of the facetious Dr. Jegon Page 189 The life of the Lord Chancellour Audley Page 190 The life of Sir Anthony Cook famous for his learned Daughters ibid. The life of Tho. Howard Earl of Suffolk Page 191 With his Magnificent Entertainment of King James Page 192 The life of Tho. Ratcliffe Earl of Suffolk Page 193 The life of Sir Francis Vere Page 194 The life of Tho. Waldensis Page 195 The Character of Francis Quarles ibid. The life of Joseph Mede Page 196 The life of Sir Walter Mildmey Page 197 The supposed occasion of the Barons War ibid. The Siege of Colchester Page 200 GLOCESTER-SHIRE King James his Observation of fruitful Pastures Page 202 Commodities Tobacco Steel Syder ibid. The Legend of St Kenelme Page 204 Bishop Ruthal's satal mistake Page 205 The life of Bishop Fox ibid. Local Treason or a Treasonable Castle Page 206 Neal's invention of Nags Head Page 208 A treatise sau●…a 〈◊〉 the belly of a Cod ibid. The life of Sir Thomas Overbury ibid. The fatal effects of Fear Page 212 HANT-SHIRE Commodities Honey c Page 213 The Life of King Henry I Page 214 The life of P. Arthur Brother to King Henry VIII ibid. The life of St. Edburg Page 215 The death of Katharine Gouches ibid. The life of Sir Richard Rich Page 218 The life of W. Pawlet Marquess of Winchester ibid. King James his Character of Sir Thomas Lakes ibid. Whitehead's blunt Repartee to Q. Elizabeth Page 221 The base of a Treble Character viz. Pits the Drone Page 222 A Plough drawn by dogs Page 223 HERTFORD-SHIRE Is the Garden of England The life of Edmund Earl of Richmond Page 370 The life of Pope Nicholas ibid. King Henry VIII his prediction concerning Sir Ed. Waterhouse Page 371 The life of Sir Henry Cary Page 372 The life of Alexander Nequam Page 373 The Character of Thomas Cartwright Page 375 The life of the Loyal Lord Capel ibid. Thomas Conisby's Resolution Page 377 HEREFORD-SHIRE Of a good Air Page 377 The wonder of Bone-well ibid. Appearance of two Parelion's ibid. Thomas Cantilupe the last Canonized Englishman Page 378 The Life of Card. de Easton The severe punishment of several Cardinals Page 379 The fatal Riddle concerning King Edward ibid. The Life of the Earl of Essex Page 380 The Spend-thrifts Requiem Page 382 Woodstock Labyrinth Page 383 A Religious President for Perfuming ibid. The life of Sir James Crofts Page 384 HUNTINGTON-SHIRE Protestant Nunnery Page 386 The life of St. El●…led Page 387 The life of Bishop White Page 388 A through-paced Poet Page 389 The life of Sir Robert Cotton the great Antiquary ibid. The life of Stephen Marshal B. D. Page 391 Cromwel's Uncle Page 392 KENT Of the Royal Navy and Navigation Page 394 Proverbs Page 395 The life of King Henry VIII Page 398 The life of Q. Mary ibid. The life of Q. Elizabeth Page 399 King James in his Prayer resolved to have respect to the Virgin Mary Page 400 The lives of Princess Sophia and Prince Charles ibid. The life of St. Elphage 〈◊〉 The fatal death of Judge Hales Page 402 The life of Cardinal Kemp ibid. The life of Sir Edward Poynings Page 405 The life of Sir Anth. St. Leger Page 406 The life of Sir Henry Sidney ibid. The life of Sir Philip Sidney Page 407 The life of Sir Francis Walsingham ibid. The life of Sir Henry Finch Page 409 W. Adams the first effectual discoverer of Japan ibid. The life of Dr. Harvey Page 411 The Life of the Loyal Sir Thomas Wiat Page 412 Charnock's Miscarriage Page 413 The life of Dr. Bois Page 414 Sir John Philpot's Fleet Page 415 A strange account of a Woman in despair Page 417 Sir Tho. Cheney Privy Councellour to four Soveraign Princes Page 419 CANTERBURY The Life of Arch-Bishop Langton Page 421 A