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A55555 A treatise of the antiquity, authority, vses and jurisdiction of the ancient Courts of Leet, or view of franck-pledge and of subordination of government derived from the institution of Moses, the first legislator and the first imitation of him in this island of Great Britaine, by King Alfred and continued ever since : together with additions and alterations of the moderne lawes and statutes inquirable at those courts, untill this present yeare, 1641 : with a large explication of the old oath of allegeance annexed. Powell, Robert, fl. 1636-1652. 1641 (1641) Wing P3066; ESTC R40659 102,251 241

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with men learned and Nobly borne He sate himselfe daily in Councell and disposed his affaires of most consequence in his owne Person His Counsellors as one saith were avessa●●es nor principalls He permitted them ability to advise not authority to resolve By this meanes keeping the lore in his owne power as fittest for Princes to doe Hee had a gracious issue of peace ever after attending the remainder of his Raigne and happily lived to traine and adaptate his son and Successor Edward the first Englands Iustinian for the future swaying of his Royall Scepter and afterwards 16. Novem. 1272. dyed his sonne and Successor being then in the holy Land and thirtie yeares of age who being partner of his Fathers experience shewed himselfe in all his actions after capable to command not the REALME onely but also the whole world This renowned King returning from the holy Warres was with Eleanor his Wife crowned at Westminster 15. Aug. 1272. And afterwards 15. Aprilis 3. Regni began his first Parliament at Westminster called West 1. And therein the King did will and command that the peace of holy Church and of the Land bee well kept and maintained in all points and that common right be done to all as well poore as rich And cap. 6. doth provide that no Citie Burrough or Towne nor any man beamerced without reasonable cause and according to the quantity of his trespasse that is to say Every Free-man saving his Free-hold a Merchant saving his Merchandize a Villaine-saving his gainure and that by their Peeres and this is but a reflexe upon the 29. Article of the Great Charter No Free-man shall be taken c. In October 25. Regni after many other Parliaments The King held a Parliament at London and did then fully grant and renew the great Charter made by his Father in the ninth yeare of his Raigne and the 37. Chapters therein contained unto the Peeres and Commons in haec verba and likewise the Charter of the Forest under his great Seale In this Parliament cap. 1. those Charters were confirmed And the King did well that the same should be sent under his Seale as well to his Iustices of the Forest as to others and to all Sheriffes of Shires and to all his other Officers and to all his Cities throughout the Realme together with his writs commanding that they cause the foresaid Charters to be published and to declare to his people that his Highnesse had confirmed them in all points And that his Iustices Sheriffes Majors and other Ministers which under him had the Lawes of the Land to guide should allow the same Charters pleaded before them in judgement in all their points S. the great Charter as the Common Law and the Charter of the Forest for the wealth of the Realme Cap. 2. All judgments given against the points of the Charters should be undon and holden for nought Cap 3. It was enacted that the same Charters should bee sent into every County under the King Seale there to remaine and should be read before the people two times by the yeare Ca. 4. The sentence of examination was to be denounced twice a yeare against the breakers of those Charters Cap. 5. It was enacted That whereas the aydes and taskes given to the King before time towards his Wart●s and other businesse of the Subj cts owne grant and good will howsoever they were made might turne to a bondage to them and their heires because they might bee another time found in the Rolles and likewise for the prices taken throughout the Realme by his Ministers That such ayde taskes or prices should not bee drawne into a Custome for any thing that had beene done before be it by Roll or any other president whatsoever that might be found Cap. 6. That from thence forth no such manner of aydes taskes nor prices should be taken by the King but by the common assent of the Realme and for the common profit thereof Ca. 7. The Commons being grieved with the Maletent of wools S. a toll of 40. s. for every sack of Wooll upon their petition the King released it And did grant for him and his heires that no such things should bee taken without their common assent and good will The whole Subject of this Parliament is stiled Mag. Char. Printed 1540. Confirmatio chartarum de libertatibus Anglia forrestae And followes the great sentene e of excommunication called sententia lata super Chartas denounced by Robert Kilwarby Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the Clergy against the violators of those Charters I find next insuing this sentence in that booke of 1540. the Statute de tallagio non concedendo that no tallage or ayde should be laid or levied by the King or his Heires without the good will and assent of the Arch-Bishops Bishops Earles Barons Knights Burgesses and other Free-men of the Communalty of the Realme Cap. 2. Nothing should be purveyed to the Kings use without the owners consent Cap. 3. Nothing from thence forth should be taken of sacks of Wooll by colour or occasion of Maletent Cap. 4. All Lawes liberties and Customes were againe confirmed and the curse of the Church to be pronounced against the breakers of this Charter This Statute hath no certaine time prefixed of its making But afterwards at a Parliament held at Westminster in Lent 28. Edw. 1. certaine Statutes were made called Articulisuper Chartas whereby the two Charters were more strictly confirmed and injoyned to be read foure times in the yeare by the Sheriffe before the people in full County and those are but explanations upon Mag. Charta The second Chapter being large and wholly made for the reliefe of the Subjects against the Kings Purveyors and Ministers for taking their goods and victualls against their wills at what price they pleased and sometimes without any price The third concerning the Marshals jurisdiction of the Kings House and other good ●n●uing Lawes and S●atures which are but Comments or Paraphiases upon that Article of Nullus liber homo c. and doe provide penalties in certaine where none were before I will wade no further into the numerous confirmations of Magna Charta It hath bin ratified since 9. of Henry third above thirtie rimes I may be bold to say it is the Grammar of the fundamentall Lawes of the Land By which all other Lawes are to be construed It is the lydius lapis of the Law It is the syse and Standard by which all our Nationall Lawes must be assayed and tryed Those are the Lawes which the Kings of England at their Coronations have sworne to maintaine and to execute Iustice to the people according to the Lawes and thereby to protect their subjects No Acts of Parliament are so wisely contrived and interwoven with reason and judgment but some sonnes of Beliall will arte vel ingenio strive and compasse to elude and subvert them At the Parliament in the third yeare of his now blessed Majesties Raigne an humble remonstrance
not our Christian faith and legeance to our Saviour nor our naturall or civill Legeance to our Soveraign cannot bee interdicted to the poorest thoughts Sure I am this Court is so ancient and of such transcendent honour and justice as Plow com.fo 399. observeth that none ought to imagine any dishonourable thought of it and why It must be so esteemed ratione persone regis by reason of the kings sacred person who is there present and president of that great Assembly as also the laws there made are established by the generall consent and are obligatorie both to king and people The parliament being called with the advice and consent of the privie Councell what is the end of their meeting Sir Thomas Smith in his Common wealth of England l. 2. c. 2. shall speake for me The Parliament the Kings Royall assent being had Power of a parliament abrogateth old lawes and maketh new giveth order for things past and things after to be followed changeth the right and possessions of private men legitimateth bastards establisheth formes of religion giveth forme of succession to the Crowne defineth of doubtfull rights whereof no law is already made appointeth subsidies tayles taxes and impositions giveth most free pardons and absolutions restoreth in blood and name with many such preheminences In this great assembly no reviling nor nipping words must be used And if any speake unreverently or sediciously against the Prince or the privie Councell they have not noly beene interrupted but justly sent unto the Tower by the autho●●tie of the house those that be members of that bodie must come with a prepared heart to consult together to give counsell and advertisement what is good and necessarie for the common weale they must come with cheerefull resolutions to supply the prince his wants they must cast off all rancor spleene and private malignancie for locus facer est I will second it with the words of a great Judge Co. Inftit fo 110. a. The jurisdiction of this Court maketh inlargeth diminisheth abrogateth repealeth and reviveth laws Statutes Acts and Ordinances concerning matters Ecclesiasticall Capitall Criminall Common Civill Martiall Maritine and the rest What cannot a parliament doe as a great peere once told Queene Elizabeth Royall assent being had was it not then a hainous and inexcusable crime for any man intrusted with the lawes publikely to declare that the late imposition of Ship-money was a prerogative so inherent in the Crowne as that it could not be taken away by Act of parliament It is most repugnant not only to the workes and writings of the ancient heroes of the law Bracton Fritton Fortescue and others but also to the opinions of grave and learned moderne Writers and dead and living Judges But that opinion and all the proccedings upon the Shipwrits are in this present parliament condemned and disanulled 17. Car. cap. 14. and the petition of right in every particular confirmed To adde something more Bellarmine after many sharpe writings and vehement disceptations in defence of merits and workes of supererogation his age hastening his end now bethinks himselfe falls wholly from disputes of merits to pious meditations and therein presents unto the world Tutissimum est iter ad calum per merita Christi The safest way to heaven is by the merits of Christ An honourable peere as great in the policie of our English state as ever the other was in the Romish Church was formerly a great Zelote for the liberties and wellfare of the common people and an earnest prosecutor of the petition of right Afterwards in the highest of his eminent advancements relapsing and disaffecting the course of parliaments whose examination and try all his actions could not well endure mole tandem ruit sua is at length hurried downe with the weight of his owne greatnesse And not long before his death ingenuously confessed That the Parliaments of England were the happiest constitution that any kingdome did ever live under and under God the best meanes to make King and people happie And sowith his dying words omitting the numerous priviledges of that high Court I conclude this part THE KINGS Royall office OF PROTECTION I Shall proceed to the last of my Generalls that is The Royall office of the King for the protection of his people I have touched before his personall and politike capacity and the naturall Legeance and Subjection of the people to him and principally in the right of payment their dues and duties and the great question de modo reddendi As Legeance is due from the Subject to the King before the Oath be taken and the Oath is but a visible demonstration of it So there is a Protection due from the king to the people before the oath administred to him at his Coronation and that oath is but a politicall expression of what by the law of God and nature and the lawes of our nation appertaines to his Kingly office It is observed upon the sift Commandement Vbi sanciuntnr officia inferiorum erga superiores And. Rivet in 5. Praec Decal ibidem etiam superiorum ergainferiores sanciri where subjection is jojoyned there protection is implyed As the Subjects must bee true and faithfull to the King of life member and terrene honour So the King must be as true to them in the protecting of all these and their libertie and proprietiein all these viz. the libertie of their lives of their religion of their persons and the propertie and right of their lively hood and estates in their lands and goods all which may be comprehended under this one word libertie dulce nomen and res dulcis B●t what is libertie What liberty is It is a freedome or free and quiet enjoying of a man his spiritual and temporall estate his bona animi or animae and his bona fortunae from rapine expilation and all unjust incroachments restrains confinements imprisonments and oppressions whatsoever and that part of our Law which concernes the Subjects libertie is commonly called in the Law bookes Lex terrae Liberty is the only preserveresse of a Christian Common wealth in incolumitie and stabilitie And as one saith Rebus omnibus humanis Anteponenda pro illiusque incolumitate integritate totis viribus opibus dimicandum It is to bee preferred before all humane affaires and the safery and entirement of it to be prop●gned and defended with all manner of strength and power But liberty must have its modum mensuram It must be with an It a tamen cum justitia dignitate praesidio reliquis reipulbl●cae ornamentis sit conjuncta It is and must be joyned with lustice Honour ayd and the rest of the Ornaments of a Common-wealth That is true liberty which is joyned or affianced with uptight reason And he is a true Free-man which hath such reason for his guide in all his actions Reason is radius divini luminis the lustre of a divine illumination It is the stampe of Gods Image
was presented by the Peeres and Commons unto his Majestie in their petition of right concerning diverse rights and liberties of the Subjects before mentioned which had bin intrenched upon touching their lives persons and estates Whereupon his Majesty did fully freely and graciously confirme in all points their said petition of ●gnt with Soit Droit fait come est desire And I da●e boldly say His Royall goodnesse hath beene of himselfe most vigilantly carefull and tender to observe it It is said before that the Law is the Guardian of liberty The Law must bee under wardship too Who be the Law Wardens who then be the Law-Wardens The King originally is intrusted under God with the custody of the Lawes under him the learned and Reverend Iudges are interessed in the Curator-ship of the Lawes and in them of the lives liberties and estates of the whole kingdome And at their first investiture into their places they take a solemne oath incident to their great offices By that oath they ingage themselves as fe-offees in trust to Minister true right betweene King and people and to execute Iustice to the people according to the Lawes of the Land and thereby and by receiving the weighty trust from and under him for the custody of that inestimable Iewell the Lawes they are to acquit the King of so much of his oath I cannot here forget some old verses Realmes have rules and Rulers have a syse Which if they keep not doubtlesse say I dare That eithers greefes the other shall agrise Till the one be lost the other brought to care I will not Comment upon them they were written upon a Subject of 240. yeares a gone and a bad sample thereof hath h●pned in our times Lawes are the syse of rule and government By which the opinions and judgements of our twelve Iustitiars must bee weighed and guided they are the Subjects birth-right and inheritance They are the golden ring by which the King at his Coronation is politically espowsed to the Common-Weale and have bin enameld with the bloud of many Millions and Myriads of soules Woe be therefore unto them that have been are or shall be the violaters and betrayers of that sacred trust What must they be that will render themselves guilty of so haynous a crime Surely none of Iethro his Counsellors Not men of courage nor fearing God nor loving Truth nor hating Covetousnesse They must be in their conditions Tyrants haters of Law for having once broken the lore of Law they feare to be tryed by the plumb-line of the Law And then followes Quod timent oderunt quod oderunt destrui irritum omniò esse volunt what they feare they hate and what they hate they would utterly destroy Oderunt impij omnia Disciplina vincula legem ●yrannum esse judicant Moller in Psa 139. The wicked hate all bonds of Discipline and condemne the Law to be a Tyrant But their guerdon is Qui peccant contra legem lege plectentur Offenders or Subverters of the Law shall have their demerited punishment by the Law It is said of sacrilegious Church-robbers Frustra petunt auxi lium Ecclesiae c. They are excluded all benefit of Clergie that sinne against the Church The Law is the Temple or Sanctuary whether the Subject is to runne for shelter and refuge M. Saint Ioh●s speech fol. 4● If the Wardens of this Temple desert their Office and abjure the Sanctuary Let them expect nor fuge thither nor other but the Law to bee testem jud cem Satellitem their witnesse their Iudge their executioner And their I leave them So much for Law THe other prop or Piller of Protection is Armes Armes whereof I have sufficiently spoken before for so much as concerne the Subjects duty and legeance And for that which concernes his Majesty It is so generally knowne That I shall need to give but a touch By the Common-Law of the Kingdome No man was chargeable to arme himselfe otherwise than hee was wont in the time of the Kings progenitors S. Edw. 1. And no man was compellable to go out of the Shire but where necessity required and sudden comming of strange enemies into the Realme And then it should be done as had been used in times past for defence of the Realme Likewise the preparing men of Armes and conveying them unto the King into forreigne parts was meerely to bee at the Kings charge And howsoever in the time of Edw. 1. certaine Commissioners did incroach upon the Commons and compelled the shires to pay wages to the Preparers Conveyers and Souldiers whereby the Commons had bin at great charge and much impoverished The King did will that it should be so done no more Stat. 1. Edw. 3. cap. 5.7.1327 And 18. Edw. 3. Cap 7. It is provided That men of Armes Halberts and Archers chosen to goe in the Kings Service out of England shall be at the Kings wages from the day that they depart out of the County where they were chosen till they returne Those Statutes are but affirmations or the Common Law and are utterly destructive to the late impositions of Coate and Conduct money and such like levies in that kinde as are not warranted by common assent in Parliament By both these S. Lawes and Armes the peace and unitie of those two deare sisters the Church and Common weale are strengthened and upheld And in both these the Prince hath power of direction to make and establish lawes to raise and levie Wars and power to command the execution and expedition of them Neither of these are acted without Counsell frustra leges frustra sunt arma nisi sit consilium And it is a true rule Sanissimum consilium non fine concilio the best Counsell is from a Councel or Assembly of Counsellors And therefore the King as you heard before is attended with his Privie Councell which is a body politike unum è pluribus const tutum and no body without a head for as Forrescue fol. 30. saith Quandocunque ex pluribus co●st tuitur unum inter illa unum erit regens alia erunt recta This body politike whereof the King is head the autiquity and use whe●of I have sufficiently before remonstrated is at ended with two great Nuncioes Angelis è Caelo Iustice and Mercy They are ornamenta coronae The pr●tious Diadems of the Kings Crowne they are columnae Majestatis the two maine supper●ers of regall d●gnity By the one S. His Iustice he hath potestatem praeveniendi and subveniendi a power by making of Lawes sending forth his Edicts and Proclamations of preventing all capitall and criminall offences all homicides rapines oppressions injuries rebellions mutinies and all greevances whatsoever either of force or frand and either against the person or estare of His Majesties Subjects And if prevention be not availeable ●●in naturall so in Civill diseases it sometimes failes Then must his power of subveniendi be administred and that by 〈…〉 execution