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A12738 The history of Great Britaine under the conquests of ye Romans, Saxons, Danes and Normans Their originals, manners, warres, coines & seales: with ye successions, lives, acts & issues of the English monarchs from Iulius Cæsar, to our most gracious soueraigne King Iames. by Iohn Speed. Speed, John, 1552?-1629.; Schweitzer, Christoph, wood-engraver. 1611 (1611) STC 23045; ESTC S117937 1,552,755 623

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began to be multiplied vpon the earth and from the confusion of Babels building to be scattered by Tribes and Colonies according to the diuer sitie of Languages into diuers parts and Countries of the world giuing names to the places where they seated according to the names of their Princes or chiefe Commanders Amongst whom the sonnes of Iapheth the eldest sonne of Noah whom Moses declareth to haue peopled the Isles of the Gentiles betooke themselues into Europe these westerne parts of the world as Sem did into Asia and Cham into Africa whose posterities accordingly dispersed Iosephus in his first Booke of Antiquities hath both branched into their seuerall diuisions and reduced them to their first roots and originals 3 Now that the Iles of the Gentiles mentioned by Moses were these of Europe all learned men confesse and therefore those especially of Britannie and Sicilie as Wolfangus Musculus is of opinion And that Europe fell to Iaphets portion Iosephus and Isidore doe agree who affirme his off-spring to haue inhabited from the Mount Taurus all Europe Northward so farre as the British Seas leauing names both to places and people And Gildas as Nubrigensis witnesseth and Polydore Virgil granteth will haue this Iland inhabited euen from the Flood But of these ancient things saith Sebastian Munster no man can write certainly it depending only vpon coniecturals and the same by heare-say and flying reports of priuate men as Origen speaketh 4 Gomer then the eldest sonne of Iapheth gaue name to the Gomerians who filled almost this part of the world leading as Villichius saith in the tenth yeere of Nimrod a Colonie out of Armenia into Italie which of Gomer were called Combri and afterwards Cimbri whence such as departed Italy went into the North parts and gaue name to Cimbrica Chersonesus from whence it is certaine we the English proceede and of whom also it is likely the Britaines came For so iudgeth a learned Britain himselfe who saith his countrimen the Welsh which are vnlearned as yet know no other name for their land and people but only C●…mbri 5 And that of these Gomerians were also the Gaules learned Clarenceaux that brightest lampe to all Antiquities out of Iosephus and Zonaras sufficiently hath obserued who that they were also called Cimbri he proueth out of Cicero Appian Alexandrinus that those Barbarians whom Marius defeated Cicero plainly termeth Gaules where he saith C. Marius repressed the armies of the Gaules entring in great numbers into Italy which as all Historians witnesse were the Cimbrians And the Habergeon of their king Beleus digged vp at Aquae Sextia where Marius put them to flight doth shew the same whereon was engrauen in strange characters BELEOS CIMBROS as also the testimony of Lucan doth no lesse who calleth the Ruffine hired to kill Marius a Cimbrian whom Liuy and Plutarch in the life of Marius affirme to be a Gaule They also who vnder the conduct of Brennus spoiled Delphi in Greece were Gaules as all writers with one voice agree and yet that these were named Cimbri Appian in his Illyricks doth testifie And for Brennus their Grand-Captaine our Historians report him to be a Britaine as likewise Virgil though in taunting wise termeth that Grammarian the Britaine Thucydides whom Quintilian affirmes to be a Cimbrian 6 And if of the rest of Noahs nephewes seated in seuerall countries the Nations proceeding from them are knowen by their originall names as the Turkes of Togorma whom the Iewes to this day so terme the Iones from Iauan the Modes from Madai the Thracians from Tiras and so of the rest whose names as yet sound not much vnlike to their first planters why then shall not we thinke that our Britanes or Cumerians are the very of-spring of Gomer and of Gomer tooke their denomination the name so neere according Sith granted it is that they planted themselues in the vtmost borders of Europe as Isodore hath said For the Ark resting in Armenia and the people thence flowing like waters from the spring replenished those parts first that lay next their site as Asia the lesse and Greece before Italy Italy before Gaule and Gaule before Britaine And if we consider the occasions that might be offered either for disburdening the multitudes of people for conquest desire of nouelties smalnesse of distance or commodities of the aire and soile we may easily conceiue this Iland to haue been peopled from thence For it standeth with sense that euery country receiued their first inhabitants from places neere bordering rather then from them that lay more remote for so was Cyprus peopled out of Asia Sicile and Candie out of Greece Corsica and Sardinia out of Italy Zeland out of Germany Island out of Norway and so of the rest Now that Britaine had her first inhabitants from Gaule sufficiently is proued by the name site religion manners and languages by all which the most ancient Gaules and Britaines haue beene as it were linked together in some mutuall society as is at large proued by our Arch-Antiquary in his famous worke to which I refer the studious reader 7 And although the inner parts of the Iland were inhabited as Caesar saith of such whom they themselues out of their owne records report to haue been borne in the Iland yet the sea coasts were peopled by those who vpon purpose to make war had passed thither out of Belgia and Gaule who still caried the names of those cities and states out of which they came as the Belgae the Attrebatij Parisi and the like names of people both in Gaule and in Britaine that after the warres there remained Which is the more confirmed in that both the Prouinces were gouerned by one and the same Prince as Caesar in his owne remembrance knew and nameth one Diuitiacus to hold a good part of Gaule and also of Britaine vnder his gouernment Yea and Tacitus the most curious searcher into Britaines affaires in the life of Agricola thus disciphereth them Now saith hee what manner of men the first inhabitants of Britannie were forraine brought in or borne in the land as among a barbarous people it is not certainly knowen Their complexions are different and thence may some coniectures bee taken for the red haire of the dwellers in Caledonia and mighty limmes import a German descent The coloured countenances of the Silures and haire most commonly curled and site against Spaine seeme to induce that the old Spaniards passed the Sea and possessed those places The neerest to France likewise resemble the French either because they retaine of the race from which they descended or that in Countries butting together the same aspect of the heauens doth yeeld the same complexions of bodies But generally it is most likely the French being neerest did people the Land In their ceremonies and superstitious perswasions there
Prouinces assumed first from their possessors Iudg. 18. 29. Iudg. 10. 4. 〈◊〉 de original Gallic●… Spaine named from Hispalus Italy fr●… Ital●… 〈◊〉 the sixt sonne of Iap●…eth the first inhabiter of this Iland who named it 〈◊〉 252. yeeres after the flood The credit of this Samothes and his Samothea ariseth only from a smal and new pamphlet bearing the name of Berosus the Chaldean Plato in Ti●… Solo●… quippeth the Grecians as not hauing attained to the yeeres of a gray head for historie Lodouic Viues Gasperus Varrerius Berosus reiecte d. ALBION the name of this Iland so termed by the Grecians Pomponius Mela cap. de Gallia The name Albion from Albion the Giant Strabo lib. 4. Munst Cosmogr Bar●…hol de proprietatibus rerum Albion called the White Land Welsh Poets called this Iland I●…is Wen. Britaine stamped in a womans attire sitting vpon rockes Fracast de morbis contagio●…is Lib. 1. Humfrey L●…uyd in Bre●…ar Brit. Marianus Scotus Ioh. Rous. Albion from Albina the beautifull daughter of D●…oclesian A ridiculous opinion for a progenie of Giants in Albion The name Albion re●…eined in the Char●…rs of some of our latter Kings BRITAINE The Grecians first named this Iland by the name BRITAINE Ieffrey ap Arthur How this Iland came to haue the name Britanni●… is very vncertaine The fainings of Poets haue bred mistrust in many true histories Britaine the name of this Iland thought to take his name from Brute In his Breuiarie of Britaine The letter B. no radicall in the British tongue PRYD-CAIN Britaine vsually called Prydain Brita●…ia the Insula 〈◊〉 Bishop Cooper in his Dictionarie 〈◊〉 written Pryd●…a King Edward V●… Prytania so called from the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vibius Sequest Britannia of Bretta a Spanish word Antonius Volscus Dominicus Marius Niger c. Britannia named of Britona a Nymphe Textor Chr●… Textor Hesychius Parthenius Nicaeus Sir Thomas Eliot Britaine of the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grecians called this Iland 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Goropius Becanus in Orig. de Ant. lib. 6. Bridania or Free-Denmark Britaine so named before either Dania or Prutenia were heard of in the world Pomponius Latus Britons in France came of vs. Cambden Brit. pag 8. Forcatulus Britaine called of Brithin a drinke White Britaine called of an Hebrew word Isidore Cambdeni Britannia Ancient nations had names of their owne afterwards wrested by Greeks and Latines Iewry so called of the Iewes Media of the Medes Scythia of the Scythians Britta Brito Britones and Brittus From Brit or Brith BRIT Witichindas Brit the primitiue from whence Britto is deriued Israelites so called in honour of their first founder Israel Iberi why so called Nomades named of their breeding of Cattell Dio. Aethiopians so called of their black hue Iulius Solinus Britaines and their neighbors called both by one name Cimbri or Cumeri Caesar Mela Pliny Martial The Britaine coloured themselues to be distinguished from their neighbors Brith and Brit do accord Oppianus Cyn●… li. 1. Britaines so named for painting themselues Isidore Eratosthenes The Grecians vnto the word Brith added tania Strabo Tania added to●… diuers countries by the Grecians Iuo Carnotensis England comming of Angleterre Danmarch compounded of Dan and March S. Hierom. in Gene. Phlegon Grecians inhabited well neere all the sea coasts of the whole world Athenaeus The certainty of the Greeks inhabiting in Britain Brodaeus Miscellan lib. 3. Vlysses Altar in Caledonia Thule thought to be one of the Iles of the Orcades in Scotland Low countries Thule much mentioned in Greek writers Laza. Baysius As other nations glory that they deriue many words from the Greeks so may we Athenaeus For so by the Scriptures account I place the time In Britaine great store of large trees Phileas Taurominites Caesar. In Scotland Firre trees for masts Lucretius Britaine called Insula Caeruli Britaine the Romane world Prosperus Aquitaine A prophecy of the Romane sooth sayers concerning Britaine This Iland Britaine named the Roman Iland Amianus Marcel lib. 28. cap. 7. This Iland named Valentia Many countries arise by the Romans downfall This Iland Britaine diuided in to three kingdomes The first Scotland whose partition southward is from Carlile to Newcastle The second Cambria or Wales whose partition is from Basingwark to Wye The third Angle-lond coasted with the French and German Seas This Iland named Angle-lond of a place in Denmarke called Engloen Gregorie 1. This Iland not called England before the daies of Canutus the Dane This Iland vsually called both Angle-lond Albion and Britain before Canutus daies The name England not changed either by the Dane or Normane Conquerours Hath the fifth place in all Generall Councels Hath continued and kept the name England the space of seuen hundred eighty and three yeeres Now reduced to the name of Great Britaine Britaine replenished with people before Noahs flood Isa. 45. 18. Noahs flood The hauen of Noahs Arke Mount Araret Babels Tower the cause of sundrie Languages and dispersion of people Iapheths progeny peopled Europe Genesis 10. Sems planted in Asia Chams off-spring seated in Africa Ioseph lib. 1. Europe the Iles of Gentiles Wolfang Muscul Origen lib. 9. cap. 2. Wolfang Lazius Theophilus Episc. Antioch ad An●…ol lib. 2. Sebastian Munster Stories of the first times meerelie coniecturall Gomer the eldest sonne of Iapheth Villichius A Colonie of Gomerians called Combri or Cimbri of Gomer came into 〈◊〉 Englishmen were of Cimbrica Chersonesus which came from Italy Ioh. Lewis in Reform hist. li. 1. ca. 9. Gaules of the Gomerians Appian Alexand. Lib. 〈◊〉 Gaules by all Historie were the Cimbrians Marius Habergeon Marius killed by a Cimbrian Delphi spoiled by Brennus Brennus a Britaine or a Cimbrian Virgil. Catalect lib 8. cap. 3. Quintilian The Turkes the Iones Medes and Thracians come of Noahs nephewes Britaines or Cumerians the off-spring of Gomer Isodore Armenia the fountaine region of all Nations Places neerest Armenia first peopled The occasions why people disperie Each Nation peopled from places neere Britaine had her first inhabitants from the Gaules Britannia Cambdeni Caesar. Comment Lib. 5. The sea-coasts of Britaine peopled out of Belgia Caesar. Com. lib. 2 A part of Gaule and Britaine gouerned by one Prince Tacitus in vita Agricola The Caledoniant import a German disscent The Silures from Spaine Britaine most likely to be peopled by the French Appian Alexand. in 〈◊〉 Celt Plutarch Plato Aristotle Britaines and Gaules both placed in the Continent of France Pomponius Laetus ●… hist. Angl. lib. 1 cap. 〈◊〉 Lucan Britaines and Gaules alike in many respects Strabo Tacitus Dion c. Caesar Strabo Bodin Tacitus The Celts and Gaules our fathers Bale Cent. 1. Britaines assisted the Gaules against Cesar. Berosus thought a forged author Holinsh. hist. lib. 1 cap. 2. Vitus hist. Brit. lib. 1. annot 25. Genes 10. 2. Textor c. Iob. Caius in Antiq Canterb. lib. 1. Laertius in vit Philosophorum cap. 1. Villichus Hollinshead An vnlikely
from whom the eternall King of Kings descended in their offrings made in time of their highest glory were by the Lord thus commanded to acknowledge and say A Syrian was my father who being ready to perish for hunger went down into Egypt and soiourned with a small company And the richest stone of that most beauteous building in his highest pride is counselled by the Prophet to looke back to the rocke whence it was hewen and to the hole of the pit whence it had been digged THE GOVERNMENT OF GREAT BRITAINE CHAPTER V. WEE come at length to speake of the gouernment and politicall estate of the Britaines which doubtlesse the times then considered was as honorable in their rulers and as manageable in the subiects as any other nations in these West parts of the world their temperance religion learning and noble resolution shewing no lesse But in this point I must craue pardon of our British Heraulds and some learned Antiquaries if I bring not a lineall succession from Brute and a monarchicall gouernment in those times of obscurity through whose mists no Egles eies could pierce before the daies of Geffrey ap Arthur as before was touched And therefore following his counsell who is best able in these things to giue direction I will begin the succession of Great Britains Monarchs at the entrance and person of Iulius Caesar at which time it seemeth by him and other Latine writers the best Recorders of kingdoms affaires this Iland was gouerned rather after the manner of an Aristocratie that is by certaine great Nobles and Potent men then vnder the command of any One as an absolute Monarch though herein is a difference in that in the Aristocraticall regiment the rulers are all Peeres of one Common wealth whereas here as many Princes so many seuerall Publike weales For so Caesar himselfe found the state of Britaine to be diuided into Provinces vnder the names of her inhabitants and to be ruled by diuers Peeres or petty Kings 2 And such a Gouernor was Cassibelan ouer the Trinobantes Cingetorix Caruilius Taximagulus and Segonax all foure Rulers together in Kent Comes supposed to be King of the Atrebatij and to be the same Comius of Arras whom Caesar imploied to tease and worke the Britaines to his subiection Caractacus the warlike King of the Silures Galgacus the worthy King of the Caledonians yea and women also without exception of sex held gouernment among them such as was faithlesse Cartismandua Queen of the Brigantes and famous Boudicea Queene of the Icenians Whereby it seemeth that euery seuerall Prouince owed seruice and alleageance only to their owne Prince And as their gouernments were confined vnto certaine bounds and limits so were the Inhabitants diuided and distinguished by diuers Names of whom because we shall haue occasion hereafter often to speak it shal not therfore be amisse in this place once for all table-wise to lay downe the same whereby our narrations may passe vntroubled without more explanations and the readers mind carried with lesse incombrances Those ancient names of people and places for abode throughout the whole Iland from Ptolemie were as follow A TABLE OF THE ANCIENT INHABITANTS AND THE SITES OF THEIR POSSESSIONS AS THEY WERE CALLED BY PTOLEMY AND OFTEN SINCE MENTIONED IN THE ROMAN WRITERS People Countries CANTII Kent REGNI Sussex Surrey DVROTRIGES Dorsetshire DAMNONII Deuonshire Cornwal BELGAe Somersetshire Wiltshire Hampshire ATREBATII Barkshire DOBVNI Oxfordshire Glocester CATIEVCHLANI Warwickshire Buckingham Bedfordshire TRINOBANTES Hertford Essex Middlesex ICENI Suffolke Norfolke Cambridge Ely Iland Huntington CORITANI Rutlandshire Lincolnshire Northhampton Leicestershire Darbishire Nottingham CORNABII Staffordshire Worcestershire Cheshire Shropshire BRIGANTES Lancaster Yorkshire Richmondshire PARISI Duram Westmerland Cumberland ORDOVICES Flintshire Denbighshire Caernaruon Montgomery Merionethshire SILVRES Herefordshire Radnorshire Brecknock Monmouth Glamorgan DIMETAe Caermarden Penbrookshire Cardiganshire OTTADINI Northumberland Teifidale Twedale Merch. Louthien SELGOVAe Lidesdale Ensdale Eskdale Annandale Niddisdale NOVANTES Gallowey Carick Kyle Cunningham DAMNII Cluydsdale Renfraw Lennox Striueling Menteth Fifa CALEDONII Perth Strathern Albin GADINI Argile Lorne EPIDII Cantyre VICEMAGI Murray VENNICONES Mernia Auguis Mar. TAEZALI Buquh●…e CANTAe   CREONES Rosse CERONTES Sutherland CARNONACAe Strath●…ern CARINI CORNABII SIMERTAe Caithues LOGI 3 These States ambitiously banding ech against others to raise their owne Prince to a more soueraigne supremacy and to enlarge their Prouinces vpon the borders of the next were euer ready the least occasion ministred saith Pomponius Mela to enter quarels and seldome held amity or were quiet This was the cause as Tacitus tells vs which brought that puissant nation into bondage and was the only helpe to the Romans victories for seldome it chanced saith he that two or three states met in counsell and concurred in opinion to repulse the common danger so that whilst they resisted and fought one by one all at length were subdued But this was not at once performed by Iulius Caesar the first Roman enterer who as he saith rather shewed the place to posterities then gaue them the possession thereof supposing it his glory sufficient to haue done what he did For vnto the daies of Domitian they held play with the Romans and that with such valour that the subduing of some small part of this Iland was accounted by themselues to match the conquests of other mightier countries and more notes of honour shewed in their publike triumphs for one Britaines misfortune then vsually was solemnized for whole kingdomes subdued 4 That such people possessed and that many Kings together raigned here in Britaine Pomponius Mela doth shew Britaine saith he bringeth foorth Nations and Kings of nations though they be all without ciuility and barbarous And Caesars intendments being known vnto them it is said that many of their Cities sent him by their Embassadors profers of submission whereby appeareth their diuersities of States whereof only two held promise and the rest failing was the occasion of his second expedition for Britaine And Tacitus speaking of the shipwrack suffered by the Romans in the raigne of Tiberius saith that many of their souldiers then distressed and torne being cast vpon the coasts of Britaine were by the people curteously releeued and by their petty Kings sent backe vnto Germanicus their Generall into Germanie which Princes or petty Kings were drawn as else where he saith by emulation into many partialities and factions which was indeed their owne destruction And by Gildas these were termed cruell Tyrants taking his authority out of Saint Hierome 5 Let thus farre suffice in generall of these ancient Britains whose particulars we will further prosecute in the places of their resistances lest otherwise they should seeme to fight only against themselues And therefore so many of these Gouernors as either yeelded their subiections to the Romans or stood their opposits till their owne strengths were spent I will briefly touch vntill such time as the land
by these here inserted doth euidently appeare one with two faces like vnto Ianus and foure more with his owne besides three others wherein is read his name one of them with a womans head another with a horse and the third with a wreath all these if not more are knowne to be his which sheweth his wealth his fame and his ciuill respect The chiefest Citie for his princely residence was Camalodunum now Malden in Essex wonne by Claudius from the sonnes of Cunobeline as by the inscription of the Coyne next ensuing appeareth and wherein many of the British monies also receiued their impresse This City with the free towne Verolam afterwards felt the heauy hand of mercilesse BODVO in her reuenge against the Romans who laid the beauty and gorgeous buildings thereof so leuell with the earth that those walles and mounted turrets neuer since aspired to halfe their wonted heights 7 Adminius the first sonne of Cunobeline King of the Britaines by Suetonius his report vpon some offence was banished the Iland by his father and with a small traine fled ouer the seas into Belgia where Caius Caligula was in making his ridiculous expedition against the Ocean And yeelding himselfe to his protection added matter to his vaine glorious humors as of a great victory and conquest sending the newes therof to Rome with an especiali command that his letters should be deliuered in the Temple of Mars and that in the assembly of a full Senate It is iudged by learned Cambden that the Roman Coyne aboue prefixed vpon whose reuerse is inscribed Metropolis Etiminij Regis to be meant of this Adiminius the sonne of Cunobeline whose Citie Camalodunum Claudius Caesar the Emperour afterwards wonne and wherein a temple was built and consecrated vnto him attended by the Priests Augustals which heauily burdened the poore estates of the Britaines 8 Catacratus another son of Cunobeline immediatly after the death of his father found himself agr●…eued at the Romans for the retaining of certaine fugitiues the betraiers of their natiue country wher●… one Bericus was a chiefe and a great firebrand of Claudius his attempts against the Britains This Catacratus maintained resistance against Aulus Plautius the Emperors Deputy with such noble resolution and warlike encounters that often he endangered both his person and army But Fortune and victory attending the Romans brought at length Catacratus their captiue into bands with great slaughters of his Britaines himselfe led shortly after in great triumph through Rome in honor of Plautius his so fortunate successe The miseries of others thus made the Romans to mount the chaire of their triumphs and the chaines of their captiues the records of their present aspired pride But the bordering D●…buni seeing his fall made their owne standings surer by yeelding themselues subiects to Rome 9 Togodamnus the third sonne of Cunobeline and successor to Catacratus prosecuted his countries quarrell with the like boldnesse and resolution as his brother before him had done was the only touchstone that gaue Vespasian his lustre whose interpositions as Tacitus saith was the beginning of that greatnesse whereunto afterwards he aspired And with such manhood followed the chase of the Romans that in a bloody battell he ended his life and brought Plautius their Lieutenant vnto a stand where straitned in dangers both of place and people he was forced to send to Claudius the Emperor whose conceit was then grounded that in Britaine was greatest glory to be gotten and therefore came to his assistance in person himselfe the first since Iulius Caesar that attempted their conquest His recorded compositions made with Aruiragus the mariage of his daughter and building of Glocester I leaue to be read out of Geffrey of Monmouth and to be allowed at the choice of his hearer only noting that the possession of so faire a land drew the affection and aged person of this Emperor to vndergoe so farre distant and dangerous a iournie as this of Britaine lay from Rome 10 Cogidunus a Britain borne receiued in pure gift at the hands of the Romans certain Cities ouer which he peaceably raigned their King For when they had conquered the neerest part of this Iland and reduced it into the forme of a Promi●… according to their ancient policie it was their custome saith Tacitus to vse Kings themselues for instruments of bondage both in admittance of their authority and in protecting them against their opposits Other memoriall of him none remaineth but that he is reported to haue rested euer most faithfull to the Romans and was of them accordingly esteemed albeit his owne people bare him no such good will but rather accounted him and others his like to be Romes only instruments and Britaines vipers that brought in strangers to eat out the home-bred inhabitants and fettered the freedome of their land with the heauy chaines of a forrein subiection 11 Caractacus the most renowned prince of the Silures in nine yeeres resistance waded through many aduentures against the common enemy For when as the Icenians Cangi and Brigantes began to faint and giue ouer he only with the Ordouices held out with such seruice and fame that thereby he grew both famous and fearefull to the Romans But Destinies determining the downfall of Britain the props that were set to stay it still vp proued too slender and brake vnder the waight For this bold Caractacus ouerthrown in battell his wife daughter and brethren taken prisoners and his forces defeated committed himselfe to the protection of Cartismandua the Brigantes faithlesse Queene who by her was deliuered to the Romans and by P. Ostorius brought to Rome where beholding the riches and glory of that City he openly and boldly checked the auarice and ambitious humors of the Romans who being owners of so great and glorious things were notwithstanding couetous and greedy for the poore possessions of the Britains And there being led in triumph with admiration he was beheld of all the spectators and for his vndanted spirit and magnanimous resolution released of bands and taken into fauour by Claudius the Emperor And the Lords of the Senate assembled together made glorious discourses touching Caractacus captiuity affirming it to be no lesse honorable then when P. Scipio shewed Syphax vnto the people and L. Paulus Perses or if any other had exhibited to the view of the people kings vanquished and ouercome The British Coyne here aboue shewed by the scattered letters therein inscribed is by the iudicious obseruers of such ancient monies supposed to be his 12 Venutius a famous King of the Brigantes and husband to Cartismandua a woman of an high and noble linage but of a base and vnsatisfied lust finding his bed abused by Vellocatus his seruant and harnesse-bearer raised his power against her and her paramour With him sided his Brigantes and the neighbour countries adioining whose good will went generally with the lawfull husband fearing the ambitious authority of a lustfull woman With her went the
before his superiour Lord of whom they said he held by homage and fealtie This practise of the disloyall Lords for what could they bee else seeing King Edward and his heires were absolutely freede by vertue of the said Treatie from all manner of seruice for any of their Dominions in France King Charles did openly at last entertaine and vpon hope to recouer by surprise and plot what the English had won by dint of sword and perfect manhood proceeded to summon the Prince of VVales to Paris there to answere such accusations as his subiects made against him 137 To encrease the indignitie of these deuises you should hear the French kings Orators before the Pope and Emperour to whom king Edward had seuerally sent Ambassadors full of complaints against King Charles laying wholie vpon the French the blame of the new warre as vpon open breakers of faith and violaters of the league most confidently on the contrary part charge the English We had suffered the French hostages to visit their friendes at home vpon the French Kinges word that they should come backe by a day contrary to which word they nor any of them either were or are returned That not so much as the Law of Nations was kept with vs which ties Princes to demaund restitution by their Officers of Armes or vpon deniall to defie them but where say we are the Heralds which King Charles did send We say that without notice hee surpriseth by stealth the Earledome of Ponthieu King Edwards vnquestionable right and hath disseised vs in Aquitaine which doth no lesse belong vnto vs then Pontheiu That Margaret the Inheritrice of Flanders which had beene promised to the Lord Edmund one of our Kings sonnes was by their iniurious practise wonne away and bestowed in marriage vpon Philip Duke of Burgundie Finallie wee say that Lewis Duke of Aniou one of the pledges making an escape by that contrary to honour and the league was by them receiued and not returned which points being all of transcendent qualitie are say wee directly contrarie to the Treatie and sworne agreement at Bretigny The French hereunto answere and charge vpon vs to shew the fault of first breach not theirs but ours That we by vertue of the said Treaty were bound immediately to withdraw our Armie out of France which yet they said we did not during all the raign of Iohn their King That the peace was made thereby more noyous and hurtfull then the warre and that they were faine to purchase the departure of our Souldiers with a greater charge then would haue maintained a very gallant Armie That this breach was ours because the Souldiers were ours That King Edward was bound in an open assembly of the States of both Realmes to renounce his right in the Crowne of France when say they was this done Thus they and Serres ads that the Estates of those Countries which had beene assigned by the Treatie to the English asseuered that it was against the fundamentall laws of France to alien anie part that they neither could nor would cease to be members of that Crowne 138 So ye behold that the fortune of the great is neuer to want friends to speake for them nor occasions to slip out or in whensoeuer profit and aduantage doe inuite Memorable if true is that part of the Frenchmens defense in that polite and learned Italian P. Aemylius where it being obiected with what honour and clemencie King Iohn was vsed by vs they breake out and affirme that wee being their Beneficiaries or Free-holders for such Countries as wee held in France tooke more gold for the onely ransome of King Iohn then they paied to redeeme S. Lewis their king his brother the Peeres and whole French Army captiuated in the Christian warres by the barbarous Soldan But good Aemylius say that were so yet cannot you say that the summe wee tooke was worth the least Countrie in France and when all France was ours was it not great bountie to take so small a pittance If you replie that we had many Countries besides wee reioine and trulie say that wee quit more then we acquired But let vs proceed for now all claimes quarrels were as open as if no obstacle had euer beene interposed the ignominie of their late terrible foiles wounded all true French hearts and they desire king Edward growne aged not to seeme by sitting still vpon so many thornes of disgrace and losse to haue beene outwarred though ouer-warred and though in two or three battels inferior yet not to haue beene clearely debellated 139 What doth our King Edward now Hee cals a Parliament declares the breach praies aid obtaines it and claimes the crowne of France afresh Iohn Duke of Lancaster and Humfrey de Bohun Earle of Hereford are sent ouer to Calais with a great force to inuade France No great matter as then ensued Thomas Beauchamp Earle of Warwicke comming ouer in hope to haue worke for his Curtelax for the French affronted our armie vnder the conduct of Duke Philip le Hardy though at this time scarce shewing himselfe worthy that surname but rose vpon the Earles arriuall and retired accused the Lords for sloath and sware he would abroad among them to find fighting while English bread was as yet vndigested in his souldiers stomacks Somewhat he did but death by a pestilentiall dart preuented the rest This Earle had with him a learned man as Scipio had Polybius to register the acts which hee saw done A worthy example ill followed by posterity The Duke of Lancaster peirced vp with his armie so farre as Roan The same Polydor wondering why they of Pontheiu hauing for an hundreth and twelue yeeres that is euer since King Edward the first had it giuen to him with his wife been ours should reuolt only daring the greatnesse of the English can find no other reason for their doings but this pleasant one that as dispersed cattell gather to their owne heard so Frenchmen flocke to the French and English follow English 140 Stirring Princes cannot containe themselues within their owne quietly possessed rights Otherwise who sees not how much better it is for the people that their Princes should manage well that which they haue rather then graspe at more For King Edward notwithstanding his continuall manifold victories comes back to the Subiect who yet had gained hugely by the warres and therefore might the better doe it for supportation and they yeeld it but his age was abused for the money was not expended as the pretences were made Priuate turnes were serued with publicke loanes Neuerthelesse after Midsomer day that renowned Captaine Sir Robert Knols whom martiall vertue had raised from the lowest rancke to the highest reputation though some also affirme him borne noble was sent by King Edward into France with an Armie where while obedience lasted to his direction all things prospered But by the instigation of one Sir
Sunne Yea and Tacitus saith that in the furthest North part of the Iland the nights are so short that betwixt the going out and comming in of the day the space is hardly perceiued and the Sunne seene neither to set nor arise Because saith he the extreme and plaine parts of the earth proiect a low shadow and raise not the darknesse on high so the night falleth vnder the skie and starre Better might hee haue said by reason of the inclination of his Circle to the Horizon descending not directly but passing obliquely razing as it were vnder their Horizon 7 The aire saith Strabo and Tacitus is rather inclinable to showers then to snow And Cesar commends it to bee more temperate and the cold lesser then that in France as not subiect to either extremes as the more Northerne and Southerne Countries are to which temperature Cescenius Getulicus a very ancient Poet seemeth to haue respect when of this Iland thus he versifieth Non illîc Aries verno ferit aëra cornis Gnosia nec Gemini praecedunt cornua Tauri The horned Ram there butteth not the aire of tender spring The Twins nor Bull do to this soile vntimely seasons bring 8 And although the Seas thereof are accounted and called by Nubiensis the Arabian The darke and dangerous Seas in regard of the misty vapors that therfrom arise yet in the winter season those clouds are dispersed into still showers of raine that doe dissolue the rigour and great extremitie of the cold yea and those Seas themselues stirred and working to and fro with the windes doe thereby wax warme as Cicero saith so that a man may easily perceiue within that world of waters a certaine heat inclosed And Minutius Foelix proouing that GOD hath a speciall regard to the seuerall parts of the world as well as to the whole saith that BRITAINE though otherwhiles wanting the aspect of the Sunne yet is it releeued with the warmth of her enuironing Seas and as much refreshed we may well say by those sweet and gentle windes that in the height of Summer are sent from those seas and doe abate the rigor of the Sunnes great scorching heat and yeeldeth not only entercourse for traffique into all parts of the World but plentifully aboundeth with all sorts of fish to the great benefit of the Inhabitants and bringeth foorth Pearles as Tacitus sheweth which were vsually cast out with the flood and gathered at the ebbe These Pearles though not altogether so orient as they in India by Amianus in his 23. booke and 12. chapter are called Rich Gemmes And Pliny in his ninth booke and thirty fifth chapter vseth the like terme The desire whereof as Suetonius saith drew Cesars affection for the Conquest of BRITAINE 9 The soile saith Tacitus setting aside the Oliue the Vine and such other plants as are onely proper to hotter Countries taketh all kinde of Graine and beareth it in abundance it shooteth vp quickly and ripeneth slowly the cause of both is the same the ouer-much moisture of the soile and th●… aire And Cesar writeth that for timber it was stored of all kindes as in Gallia the Beech and Firre tree onely excepted For abundance of Graine Britaine is said to bee The seat of Queene Ceres by Orpheus the old Poet and the Granary and Storehouse for the Westerne World as Charles the great tearmed it and by our owne Ancestors in the blacke Booke of the Exchequer it is called a Paradise of pleasure From whence the Romanes were wont yeerely to transport with a fleet of eight hundred vessels bigger then Barges great store of corne for the maintenance of their Armies But vnto the particular relation of each seuerall blessing belonging to this most happie Iland wee will not againe enter seeing that in euery County wee haue sufficiently and no more then truly spoken thereof Only if you please heare what hath beene said of this Land by the Romane Orators and first in the Panegyricke to Constantius the Emperour 10 O happie BRITAINE and more fortunate then all other Lands beside which first didst see Constantine Emperour For good cause hath nature endowed thee with all blessings both of aire and soile wherin there is neither excessiue cold of Winter nor extreme heat of Summer wherein there is so great abundance of graine that it sufficeth both for bread and drinke There the forrests are free from sauage beasts and the ground void of noisome serpents in whose stead an infinite multitude of tame cattle there are with their vdders strutting ful of milke and loden with fleeces to the ground And verily that which for the vse of our liues wee most esteeme the daies are therein very long and the nights neuer without some light for that those vtmost plaines by the sea side cast and raise no shadowes on high and the aspect both of skie and starres passeth beyond the bound of the night yea the very Sunne it selfe which vnto vs seemeth for to set appeareth there only to passe by a little and goe aside And in another spoken to Constantius the father of Constantine the Great thus is said Though BRITAINE be but a single name yet surely the States losses haue beene manifold in forgoing a Land so plentifull in fruit and graine so rich in pasturage so full of mines and veines of metall so gainfull in tributes and reuenewes so accommodated with many hauens and for circuit so large and spacious And a Poet of good antiquity of natures motherly affection towards this our Iland hath thus written Tu nimio nec stricta gelu nec sydere feruens Clementi coelo temperiéque places Cùm pareret Natura parens varióque fauore Diuideret dotes omnibus vna locis Seposuit potiora tibi matrémque professa Insula sis foelix plenáque pacis ait Quicquid amat luxus quicquid desiderat vsus Ex te proueniet vel aliunde tibi Nor freezing cold nor scorching hot thou art Thy aire a heauenly temper sweetly breath'd So pleas'd Dame Nature when she first bequeath'd To euery soile of her rich gifts a part Then Mother-like best choice for thee she sought Be thou quoth she the blessed I le of peace What euer pleasure yeelds or wealths increase From thee shall grow or shall to thee be brought 11 And that BRITAINE hath beene taken for those fortunate Ilands whereof the Poets haue imagined a perpetuall spring time is certaine by Isacius Tzetzes a Greeke Author of good account And in Robert of Auesburie wee read what time Pope Clement the sixth had elected Lewis of Spaine to be Prince of the Fortunate Ilands raising him powers both in Italie and France the English Ligier Embassadours that lay then in Rome for King Edward the third were so deepely set in the opinion that this preparation was made against BRITAINE that they wrote their suspicions conceiued and presently with-drew themselues into
not learned the truth of things indeed he admitteth without discretion and iudgement the vanitie and vntruths of fables I forbeare to speake saith he what great matters this fellow hath forged of the Britaines acts before the Empire and comming in of Caesar. Thus farre Paruus But I know the answer to this so great an accusation namely that this William making suit vnto Dauid ap Owen Gwyneth Prince of North-wales for the Bishoprick of Saint Assaphs after the death of Geffrey and thereof failing falsly scandalized and impudently belied that most reuerend man Which surely had been a great fault and might of vs be beleeued had not others of the same ranke and time verified asmuch 17 For Syluester Giraldus commonly called Cambrensis that flourished in the same time with the said author made no doubt to terme it The fabulous story of Geffrey The like is verified by Iohn Weathamstead Abbat of Saint Albanes a most iudicious man that wrote in anno 1440. who in his Granarie giueth sentence of this history as followeth The whole discourse of Brutus saith he is rather poeticall then historicall and for diuers reasons is built more vpon opinion then truth first because there is no mention thereof made in the Romane story either of his killing his father or of the said birth or yet of banishing the sonne Secondly for that Ascanius begat no such sonne who had for his proper name Syluius by any approued Author for according to them he begat only one sonne and his name was Iulius from whom the family of the Iulii tooke their beginning And thirdly Syluius Posthumus whom perhaps Geffrey meaneth was the sonne of Aeneas by his wife Lauinia and he begetting his sonne Aeneas in the thirty eighth yeer of his raigne ended his life by course of naturall death The kingdome therfore now called England was not heretofore as many will haue named Britaine of Brutus the sonne of Syluius Wherefore it is a vaine opinion and ridiculous to challenge noble blood and yet to want a probable ground of the challenge for it is manhood only that enobleth a nation and it is the mind also with perfect vnderstanding and nothing els that gaineth gentility to a man And therefore Seneca writeth in his Epistles to Plato that there is no King but he came from vassals and no vassall but he came from Kings Wherefore to conclude let this suffice saith he that the Britaine 's from the beginning of their nobility haue been couragious and valiant in fight that they haue subdued their enemies on euery side and that they vtterly refuse the yoke of seruitude 18 Now that William of Newborough had sufficient cause say some to exclaime against the fantacies of Merline and the fictions of Arthur is made manifest in the sequel not only by the decree of that obtruded Councell of Trent wherein was inhibited the publication of Merlines books but also in effect by the statute enacted the fifth yeere of our last deceased Queene Elizabeth of blessed and immortall memorie wherein is forbidden such fantasticall predictions vpon occasions of Armes Fields Beasts Badges Cognizances or Signets such as Merline stood most vpon and likewise William of Malmsbury saith that Arthur being the only proppe that vpheld his country deserued rather to be aduanced by truth then abused with fables wherewith that story is most plentifully stored And also that Weathamstead had reason to account Brutes acts and conquests to be rather poeticall then any waies warranted by the records of truth appeareth by the silence of the Romane writers therein who name neither Brute nor his father in the genealogie of the Latine Kings and if any such were saith the contradictors how could they be ignorant of the vntimely death of their king slaine by the hand of his naturall though in this act vnnaturall sonne or what should moue them being so lauish in their own commendations to be thus silent in their Brutes worthinesse that with seuen thousand dispersed Troians warred so victoriously in Gallia conquered a kingdome of Giants subdued a most famous Iland raigned gloriously and left the same to his posterity none of them either in prose or poetry once handled but left to destiny to be preserued by a long ensuing meanes or to perish in obliuion for euer And surely this moued the whole senate of great Clerks to giue sentence that neuer any such Brute raigned in the world such as were Boccace Viues Hadrian Iunius Polydore Buchanan Vignier Genebrard Molinaeus Bodine and others 19 Yea and there are some Criticks that faine would take aduantage from the defenders of Brutes history themselues as from Sir Iohn Prys that produceth many vncertaine ensamples of the originall of other nations which granted say they doth no waies confirme the truth or certainty of our owne neither is it any honour to deriue these Britaines from the scumme of such conquered people as the Troians were Humfrey Lhuyd likewise denying absolutely the deriuation of the Britaines name from Brute and bringing it from two compounded words as we haue said doth thereby weaken the credit of his conquest of this Iland to their vnderstanding as also the catalogue of his successors which are said to raigne successiuely for many hundred of yeeres after him And another industrious British writer hauing the helpe of two most ancient British copies the collections of Caradock of Carnaruan their owne Bardies euery third-yeeres visitation and twenty seuen authors of good account all of them cited in the preface of his Chronicle besides his helps had in the offices of records for this realme yet ascending no higher then to the person of Cadwallader Prince of Wales whose raign was in the yeere of Christs incarnation 682. and no lesse then one thousand seuen hundred twenty and sixe yeeres after that Brute is said to come into this Iland doth not warrant say they the story that is included betwixt but rather euen the same is enterlaced with many doubtfull vncertainties and so left disputable by the said compiler himselfe as namely whether that this Cadwallader whom the Britaines claime to be their king be not the same Chedwald whom the Saxons would haue theirs both liuing at one time both in acts alike and names neere both abandoning their kingdomes both taking the habit of religion both dying in Rome both buried in one Church nay say they in one Sepulchre The like he bringeth of the Britaines Iuor and the Saxons Iue in the like coherences of names acts deuotions and deaths so that this history of Brute carieth not so smooth a current for passage as is wished nor is that Gordeons knot so easily vnloosed Againe the Reformer of the British history himselfe although he hath written one whole chapter in defence of Geffrey Monmouth and straineth to make his booke authenticall complaining often and accusing learned and vnpartiall Cambden seuerall
Romans at the command of Didius their Deputie and these striking battell won the day yet so as the war continued to the Romans the kingdome to Venutius and the infamy with Cartismandua both for betraying the pledge of her trust reposed by Caractacus in his distresse and her truth to Venutius her noble Lord and husband preferring the licentious pleasures of a vassall before the bed of chast mariage or the nuptiall imbracements of a worthy King and hath to ages following left her name noted with the scarres of infamy that time nor continuance shall euer weare away His ancient coyne is thought to be as thou seest here aboue described 13 Prasutagus Boduo King and Queene of the Icenians a people vnshaken by war and themselues rich as Tacitus reporteth the only cause of their ruines for which the Romans then warred were brought to destruction vpon this insuing occasion King Prasutagus dying by will left Nero his heire supposing by this meanes to leaue his state the safer together with the protection of his two daughters These contrary to trust were abused and defloured the mother Boduo turned out of all and against all manly ciuility or womanly much lesse princely respect contumeliously and despitefully whipped In the reuenge of which vnsufferable wrongs she so opposed and oppressed the Romans that at one battell seuenty thousand or as Dion Cassius saith 80000. of their slaughtered bodies she sacrificed to her dead husbands ghost and hath left the fame of her proceedings registred euen by her enemies themselues to her immortall and neuer dying memory The strong Cities Camalodunum and Verolanium she sacked with the rage of mercilesse war Petilius Lieutenant of the ninth Legion she discomfited Catus the Procurator droue ouer the seas Posthumus the Campe-master durst not resist her and all indeed feared the valour of this heroick Lady whose lawes were not martiall to saue vpon ransome whose reuenge was not pacified with yeeldings or submission nor did she thinke there was blood enough in the Romans to imbrue the altars of her assisting gods or to wash off the staine of their vnnoble and vnmanly iniuries But when successe altered after losse and valorous resistance she made an end of her life by poison lest liuing she should see either her owne miseries in their triumphs or leaue her remembrance in the records of their lauish and selfe-pleasing historians Her Coyne of gold we haue here expressed the forme shield-like and vpon the embossement thus inscribed BODVO 14 Aruiragus the valiant British King whom Humfrey Lhuyd confidently affirmeth to be the same man that is called Meurigus and is said to withstand Claudius in his enterprises for Britaine vntill a composition of mariage was concluded betwixt the Emperors daughter and himselfe Notwithstanding by Iuuenal it is plaine that this Aruiragus was in his fame in the daies of Domitian vnto whom the Poet as a Prophet would foredoome his happy successe in the dispossession of his gouernment ouer the Britaines as in these his verses are seene It bodes great honor to thy selfe some King th●… shalt depriue Or els Aruiragus from the rule of Britains waine shalt driue An ancient British Coyne of siluer is here inserted and a mans head thereon instamped which is supposed to be his the letters alluding so neere to his name 15 Galgacus a worthy and most valiant prince of the Caledonians for vertue and birth preferred before any other in the Northern parts of this Iland and made their Generall against the inuasions of Iulius Agricola was the last Britaine that against the Romans stood out accounting those only happy which were free from the contagion of that Roman tyranny and themselues the flower of all the British nobility that yet had not subiected their necks to their yoke The resistance which he made was great and warlike but against the decree of God no man can stand for the Romans risen to their greatnesse bare downe all that withstood them and in a bloody battaile subdued him and his forces making all silent before them where they came and leauing desolation in the places where they had been Thus then was the whole Iland subiected to the Roman Emperors about one hundred thirty and six yeeres after Caesars first entrance and the land that had been ruled by many petty kings was brought now as most parts of the world besides were vnder the gouernment of one absolute Monarch Grieuous no doubt was the losse of their liberties but a greater gaine was gotten not many yeeres after for from the rude and sauage manners of the barbarous they were reclaimed and became most ciuill And he that had giuen their Iland to his Christ prepared their hearts to receiue him their King vnto whose subiection also they were motiues to the Romans themselues Two ancient British Coynes stamped in siluer we haue here set downe attributing them both to this Galgacus of Caledonia Notwithstanding in these as in the rest I must submit my selfe to the more experienced and the censures of these ancient things to the learned and more iudicious 16 These then were the resisters of the Romans proceedings that rather yeelded their brests to the sword then their necks to the yoke of a forrein subiection and made their assaulters more famous in their conquests and themselues more renowned to following posterities neither in these relations haue we followed the records of our owne but the approued testimony of their best writers who haue deliuered what we haue said and no doubt felt the like repugnancy of many others both in the South and North of this Iland though their names died with their valiant resistance And as these Britains held the Romans at euen hand the space of one hundred thirty and six yeeres neither yet then were subdued without themselues that euer sided with the enemy against themselues and whose factions made way for the feet of their conquerors as from Tacitus we haue declared So their successors the Saxons found as warlike withstanders till God for Britains sinnes had cast downe their strength whereof more shall follow Christ assisting in the due place of their stories that from the raigne of Vortigerne the scourge of his country to Cadwallader the last prince of the Britains spent their liues in the quarrell of liberty and hath left their memorials famous for their countries defence 17 But the state of kingdomes how largely so euer extended or by what humane wisedome strengthned with defence do find their periods not to exceed much the number of six hundred yeeres as by common experience among most nations is seene In these times therefore when the world was shaken with wars first by the Romans that stroue to mount hie the spires of their intended glory and were by Gods decree appointed to ouerrun and afflict the earth when Kings of people I say were enforced to lay the Crownes from their heads at their conquering feet and free nations loaded with the yokes of their bondage then was fulfilled
greatnesse as it seemed euen burdensome vnto it selfe whereby this remote Iland lay ouershadowed from their sight whereunto may be added that the presence of Kymbeline the British King as their historie recordeth in great fauour with Octauian was a great furtherance to the peace euen without paiment of the formerly imposed Tribute But yet the truth is as Dion Cassius hath it that Octauian desirous in all things to be like vnto Caesar seeing their tribute neglected had intended a voiage towards Britaine but hauing set forwards into Gallia he had there tidings of the sudden reuolt of the Pannonians against whom he diuerted his prepared power and left his first designement for that time Notwithstanding he still retained the desire of their subiection and foure yeeres after made a second very great preparation thitherward proceeding with his power againe into Gallia 4 The Britaines that had felt the force of the Romans and in regard of their own distractions at home were hopelesse of strength to withstand them sought the fauor of Augustus by their submission and to that end sent ouer their Ambassadours who presenting themselues before him in Gallia Celtica appeased his wrath with promise of obedience and full satisfaction for their Tributes deteined whereby Caesar was again staied and the Britaine 's taken into sauour and protection Notwithstanding the mindes of their Magistrates were so vnconstant or else the money so hardly drawen from the people who naturally hated all such obliged seruitudes hauing euer liued a free Nation as Aegisippus speaketh of them that they againe failed their paiment whereat Augustus was sore offended and the third time prepared his voiage that way which yet a while was hindred by the reuolt of the Byscayans and some other Prouinces 5 The Britaines seeing themselues thus still sought after sent vnto Caesar their excuses with presents to be offred in the Capitoll to the Romane Gods hauing now learned with the rest of the world to appease Princes by gifts and rewards yeelding part of the Iland and swearing him fealtie in the Temple of Mars and so were registred subiects to the Romane Empire At which time also they agreed to pay toll●…s and customes for all wares which they transported into other parts their merchandize chiefly consisting of Iuorie boxes Iron Chaines and other small trifles of Amber and Glasse All which agreements and compositions were afterward so loyally obserued and the Land so composed to quietnesse that one band of souldiers with a small troope of horse as Strabo saith or foure Legions as Iosephus writeth were sufficient to containe so great a multitude in a setled forme of obedience 6 Ouer the Trinobantes the greatest and most potent State of the Britaines then raigned the happie Prince Cunobeline for so in his Coines yet remaining we finde it corruptly written Kimbeline the sonne of Theomantius nephew to Cassibelan before spoken of whose abode and principall seat was Camalodunum as by the reuerse of the said Coines may appeare This Prince to make his estate more respectiue caused his owne Image to be stamped thereon after the manner of the Romans who now had newlie taken vp that fashion his paiments before consisting for the most part in rings of iron and plates of brasse seized at a certaine waight which vsually passed for currant amongst the Britaines as Caesar reporteth and as those rings are yet witnesses whereof we haue seene some This man trained his people to a more ciuill life then formerly had beene accustomed and enioied peace with the rest of the world which then stood vniuersallie in quiet as waiting the comming of that Prince of peace whose going foorth had beene from euerlasting and of whose kingdome there shall bee no end euen Christ the anointed Emmanuel and sonne of the liuing God so long before expected and now in the fulnesse of time manifested at whose birth warre went downe as Virgil speaketh or rather to vse the words of the Prophet when 〈◊〉 were made into mattocks and speares broken into 〈◊〉 And as in the building of Salomons Temple neither 〈◊〉 of axe nor the sound of hammer was heard●… so his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the true Temple hee came and was ●…arnate at such time when the sound of warre did not awake the world but a calme and quiet peace incompass●…d it as by the Angels was proclaimed amongst the Iewes and now was more publikely made knowen amongst the Gentiles by the shutting of Ianus Temple in Rome This vniuersall peace was so famous and so admirable that it found matter for the finest wits amongst the Heathens to enlarge themselues whereupon Virgil framing the perswasions of Iupiter to his daughter foresheweth the happy successe of her seed and in what tranquillity they should sit when the hands of Mars were thus restrained from fight as he thus expresseth Aspera tum positis mitescent secula bellis Cana fides Vesta Remo cum fratre Quirinus Iura dabunt dirae ferro compagibus arctis Claudentur belli portae furor imptus intus Saeua sedens super arma c●…ntum vinctus ●…enis Post tergum nodis fremet horridus ore cruento Then men shall milder prooue cease shall fierce warres Faith Gods and Princes all shall iustly guide Warres gastly gates with bolts and iron barres Fast shut shall stand and Mars cashierd shall hide Mongst heapes of rusty armour where his hands Bound fast shall be with hundred brasen bands And yet further in his Ecloge from the Sibyls who in all likelihood had it from the diuine Oracles hee vseth the very words of the Prophets in speaking of a Maid and a Child of a new progenic borne and sent downe from heauen by whom the brassy and iron-like world should cease and a pure golden age succeed Thus he sweetly singeth Vltima Cumaei venit iam carminis aetas Magnus ab integro seclorum nascitur ordo Iam redit Virgo redeunt Saturnia regna Iam noua progenies coelo demittitur alto Tu modò nascenti puero quo ferrea primùm Desinet ac toto surget gens aurea mundo c. Now is the time of which Sibylla said The old world doth his prime againe renew Now hath the world a pure vnspotted Maid Now raignes the * God of Gods whose off-spring new Descends from heauen Bless'd be the babe whose raies Hath turn'd our iron age to golden daies In which Ecloge are sweetly couched many other most diuine allusions to our Sauiours Deity birth and humanity pouerty graces crosses kingdome and redemption of the world from sinne death and hell So likewise Marcus Tullius Cicero saw in his dreame as himselfe reporteth a childe of an ingenuous and beautifull countenance let downe from heauen by a golden chaine And Suetonius in the life of Augustus from Iulius Marathus hath obserued that
certaine predictions in Rome happening were so respected and generally expounded That Nature was about to bring forth a King that should raigne ouer the whole world And albeit these and other Heathen Writers ascribe these things either to Augustus himselfe or to some of his fauorites yet wee see them accomplished in none other but Iesus Christ the Messiah our blessed Sauiour in whom only the Kingdome of God began with the vtter subuersion of all their heathenish Oracles which at his birth or at furthest at his death ceased all and gaue place to HIS eternitie Which time of his birth by the Scriptures most certaine account was from the worlds creation 3927. and is set by the Britaine 's in the fourteenth of their Cunobelines raigne and by other authenticke Writers in the two and fortieth of Augustus Caesar euen in the top of that Empires greatnesse when Rome was with an vniuersall subiection acknowledged the absolute Lady of the knowne earth For so in S. Luke wee read that this Augustus then first taxed the world A text most strong for the full dissolution of the foure foregone kingdomes represented in Daniels Image by the fall of this stone Christ the rocke and stay of our eternall happinesse 7 This Emperour raigned in great honour the space of fifty six yeeres and was obeyed both by the Easterne Indians and the Northerne Scythians with the subiection of the Parthians a fierce and vntamed people and generally with the loue of all Hee was a Prince indued with great wisdome magnanimitie and Iustice yet faulty in this that he tooke from Tiberius Nero his wife Liuia both great with child and hauing also formerly borne him a sonne Deuout hee was in the worship of the Romane Gods amongst whom in the Capitoll he built an Altar vnto the Hebrew childe with this inscription The Altar of the first begotten Sonne of God being thereunto mooued by the Oracle of Apollo that had answered his owne destruction by the birth of this childe Of Stature he was but low and of a good complexion gray-eied his haire somewhat yellow and his body freckled with spots which as his flatterers would haue the world beleeue were in forme like starres Predictions foreshewing his gouernment and death are alleged the which I willingly ouerpasse holding most of them rather fantasies then truth At his death hee demanded of the standers by whether he had well acted the enterlude of his life vpon the stage of this world and died fourteene yeeres after Christ his incarnation leauing after him so honourable an estimation of his glory that as the succeeding Emperours in remembrance of Iulius Caesar gloried to be called Caesars so they euer held the name of Augusti to be sacred and only befitting persons destinated to imperiall Maiestie And both their names were inserted into the number of the moneths that the honour of them both might neuer perish while Times euiternitie should endure TIBERIVS CHAPTER IV. AVgustus Caesar thus gloriously raigning and peaceably dying had ordained for his successour Tiberius Nero the sonne of Tiberius the Patritian and of Liuia his wife whom as we said before he had taken for his Empresse and by whose incitements and continuall instigations that matter was procured though Suetonius thinketh it was by Augustus his owne ambitious conceit to make himselfe the sooner missed and the more lamented in leauing his sonne so vnlike him to succeed whose conditions as they stood vpon their owne basis hee knew to bee both reprooueable and also contemptible 2 But before the death of Caesar could be diuulged to write his imperiall stile as it were in blood he began with the murder of young Agrippa the sonne of Iulia daughter to Octanian and once his owne wife and continued his raigne with such tyrannie that many he slaughtred without respect of person or cause and in his loosest lasciuiousnesse thought of nothing but how to subuert the Nobilitie for rare it was in his daies that any such died a naturall death and maintaining a race of men Promoters as Tacitus tearmes them found out for a common ouerthrow and destruction of others allured them by rewards to accuse the rich though guiltlesse only this fauour granted to the condemned that if they slew themselues before the day of execution their bodies should haue buriall their goods not confiscate and their testament stand good in law 3 A great dissembler he was seeming euer to hate those vices which in truth he loued and to loue those vertues which he did most deadly hate and for life and libidinous filthinesse so extreme that a Christians pen may not expresse when the Heathen themselues doe blush to name such things as hee shamed not openly to commit his publike drunkennesse and continuall banquettings whereat hee spent whole daies and nights together without intermission caused exchange of names from Tiberius Nero to Biberius Mero Dissolute and carelesse he was in gouernment though some haue accounted him a wise and politicke Prince for the Prouinces he left to defend themselues and yet daily charged them with larger Tributes to their great impouerishment and almost vtter ruine 4 In this state amongst others neglected Britaine stood wherein Tiberius neither maintained garrison nor attempted alteration and whereby as it may be thought their owne Lawes and Princes bare sway among themselues howsoeuer the cause for Tribute was ballized betwixt them And most certaine it is the Britaines if not in subiection yet were well affected to the Romanes as appeareth by Tacitus in the kinde entertainments and in releeuing their shipwracked souldiers that in crossing the Seas were by tempest driuen vpon their Coasts and courteouslie sent thence by their petty Kings vnto Germanicus their Generall Notwithstanding Ieffrey Monmouth seemeth to affirme the contrary that bringeth the raign of one Guiderius and the valour of Aruiragus the sonnes of Cunobeline of whom more heereafter to withstand the Romish Command and vtterly to refuse the paiment of Tribute banding both against Tiberius as also against Caligula and Claudius the Emperours succeeding 5 Other remembrances of these times concerning vs finde we none besides that which is common to all namely the death of our Saviour Christ which vnder this Tyrant and in his eighteenth yeere was accomplished by the proceeding of his as wicked Deputy Pontius Pilate who both adiudged him to die and to bee guiltlesse of deseruing death whereby was wrought the mysterie of our Redemption with such signes and euidences of his Deitie that the wicked Iudge himselfe wrote thereof to Tiberius and hee to the Senate to haue him consecrated among the Roman Gods Which they refused to doe that the wisdome and diuine power of God in the doctrine of Saluation should not need the allowance and commendation of men as Eusebius hath well obserued 6 Finally when hee had raigned hated of all men
nothing but hypocrisie was in the face deceit in the heart and guile in the tongue whereby mischiefe was euen full at the brimme then began the heauy hand of God to visit vs c. Where he proceedeth and sheweth that the greeuous sinnes of the Christians was the cause of drawing downe these iudgements on their heads 17 And so this wicked Tyrant accordingly was but as Gods Instrument and Iron-threshing-flaile to bruise the precious wheat and seed of the Gospell and to crush that outward glory of the Christian profession which then was flourishing in most parts of the world 18 But long the Lord deferred not their release nor that Tyrants end For after the First yeere of their persecutions and twentith of his Raigne the thirteenth day of Aprill in the yeere of Christs Natiuitie three hundred and three hee with his Fellow Emperor both of them by the reuenging hand of God stricken with a mad humor saith Eusebius renounced the Empire and descending from the Tribunall put off their Purple and Imperiall robes whereby they againe became Priuat men 19 Dioclesian retired into Dalmatia where in the Citie Salonia hee poisoned himselfe as Aurelius Victor affirmeth and Eusebius saith that no small disease ouertooke him for that hee died mad His consort Maximianus escaped not vnpunished but died for attempting the Murther of Constantius and as Eusebius auoucheth hee hanged himselfe in the citie Marsillis such ignominious deaths followed these two persecuting Tyrants whereof Dioclesian had formerly made himselfe a God and by an Edict commanded his Foote to bee kissed a practise pretily since imitated by his Successors who haue reuiued the wounded Head of the Beast and haue trod his steppes in wounding and persecuting the true members of Christ. FLAV. VALER CONSTANTIVS CHLORVS C. GALERIVS VALERIVS MAXIMIANVS CHAPTER XLV DIoclesian and Maximianus resigning vp their Soueraignties as is said at the Citie Nicomedia in Bithynia cōmitted the charge thereof and the defence of the Common-weale vnto Gallerius and Constantius who had been their Caesars vpon which occasion great peace followed in the Church of Christ and most especially vnto these Westerne Prouinces For those Emperors confirmed by the Senate presently diuided the Empire betwixt them as two Seuerall Estates and not subiect to one Gouernment as formerly had been exercised which as Eusebius hath noted was the fatall end of the Imperiall Glory 2 Vnto Gallerius fell the gouernment of Sclauonia Macedonia Thracia Egypt and the Prouinces in Asia who tooke for case of that burden these two whose Coines we haue here expressed 2 C. Galerius Valer. Maximinus and Aurel. Valer. Seuerus his sisters sonnes whom in the yeere of Christ three hundred and six hee elected Caesars and after Augusti which honours the last enioied not long for he was slaine at Rome by the treachery of Maxentius after one yeere And the other when he had foure yeeres gouerned as Caesar and three as Augustus in the East died at Tharsis in Cilicia 3 And to the lot of Constantius who much at one time with his Copartner elected his sonne Constantine so famous in christian historie Caesar fell Italy France Britannie Spaine Germany and most of the Prouinces in Africke which seeming to him who rather chose to gouerne well then much too spatious gaue vp to Gallerius all that in Africke as too remote from the Seat of his residence and eie of his direction 4 This good Emperor was for his Palenesse surnamed Chlorus by birth a Roman his Father named Eutropius his Mother Claudia Neece to the Emperor Claudius Himselfe had attained the dignitie of a Senator and was both Wise Valiant Noble and Vertuous whose parts Eusebius doth thus commend Constantius was a man of singular clemencie towards men and pietie towards God He did not partake with him in crueltie whose partaker he was in Soueraigntie neither staining his Raigne with the bloud of the Saints nor destroying our Churches and places of Praier as Maximianus furiously did but rather he reuerenced and highly honoured those who truly honoured God For which God so blessed him that this godly Father left a more godly Sonne Constantine the Heire of his well-gotten Empire 5 To which his vertues other Authors adde that he was of great affabilitie louing and gentle little regarding his Priuate Profit but altogether raigning to inrich his Subiects and to that end would often say That it was more be h●…full for the Weale publike that the wealth of the Land should bee dispersed into the commons hands then to lie locked vp in Princes coffers In which kind so auerse he was from all superfluities that hee may be adiudged faulty the other way for vpon Feastinall daies and in his Entertainments of Strangers he was faine to borrow Plate of his friends for such many times are richer then their Soueraignes to furnish his Table and Cupbords 6 But aboue all other vertues was his louing countenance and protection to the late persecuted Christians making his Court their Sanctuarie and his Chapell their Oratorie And to winnow the Chaffe from the Wheat he vsed the like policie as Iehu King of Israel sometime had done against the Priests of Baal For he commanded all his Officers to offer sacrifice to the Idoll-Gods pretending to dis-court all such as refused but contrariwise those that obeied hee put from him with this reproofe that hee who is disloyall to his God will neuer be true nor trustie to his Prince 7 When he was first made Caesar he was forced to forsake his first wife Helena by whom hee had his vertuous sonne Constantine and to take Theodora daughter in Law to Maximianus for a further confirmation of friendship 8 Helena by birth was a Britaine the daughter of Coelus a British Prince as saith Eutropius though Nicephorus make her of Bithynia and Beda tearmes her his Contubine some an Inne-holder and others for her person and parentage stand very doubtfull to meet with whom let vs heare the censure of Times Chiefe Secretarie the learned Cambden in his Britannia Constantius saith hee what time hee serued in Britaine vnder Aurelian tooke to wife Helena daughter of Coelus or Coelius a British Prince on whom he begat that noble Constantine the Great in Britaine for so together with that great Historiographer Baronius the common opinion of all other Writers with one consent beare witnesse vnlesse it bee one or two petty Greeke Authors of late time and those dissenting one from the other and a very learned man grounding vpon a corrupt place of Iul. Firmicus Howbeit compelled he was by Maximianus to put her away for to mary Theodora his daughter This is that Helena which in Antique Inscriptions is called VENERABILIS and PIISSIMA AVGVSTA and for Christian Pietie for cleansing Ierusalem of Idols for building a goodly Church in the place where our Lord suffred and for finding the sauing Crosse is so highly commended
notable or remarkable him obeied respectiuely to the number of the Prouinces two Consular deputies and three Presidents who had the hearing of ciuill and criminall causes For military affaires there ruled the Leader or Commander of the footemen in the West at whose disposition were the Earles or Lieutenants of Britaine the Earle Count or Lieutenant of the Saxon coast along Britaine and he Duke of Britaine stiled euery one Spectabilis The Earle Lieutenant of Britaine seemeth to haue ruled the Inland parts of the Iland who had with him seuen companies of footmen and nine coronets or troopes of horse The Earle Lieutenant of the Saxon coast who defended the Maritime parts against the Saxons and is named by Amianus Lieutenant of the Maritime tract for defence of the Sea coast had seuen companies of footmen two Guidons of horsemen the second legion and one cohert The Duke or Generall of Britaine who defended the Marches against the Barbarians had the command of thirty and eight garrison forts wherein their Stations kept consisting of fourteen thousand foot nine hundred horse So that in those daies by Pancirolus account Britaine maintained nineteene thousand two hundred sootmen and seuenteene hundred horsemen or thereabout in ordinary Besides all these the receiuer of the Emperors Finances or publike reuenewes the Prouost of the Emperors Treasures in Britaine and the Procurator of the Draperie in Britaine in the which the clothes of the Prince and Souldiers were Wouen and the Count also of priuate reuenewes had his Rationall or Auditor of priuat State in Britaine to say nothing of the sword-fence-schoole Procurator in Britaine whereof an old inscription maketh mention and of other officers of inferior degrees 12 After the setling of these affaires to the end that he might with the more facilitie bridle the vntamed Persians that seldome were in quiet he remoued the Imperiall seat of his Residence into the East for now Gallerius and Licinius both dead the rent and diuided state of the Roman Empire was in him vnited and purposing to build there a Citie as an eternall Monument of his name he chose the plot at Chalcedon in Asia but whiles they were measuring out the circuit an Eagle scouping at the Line fled with it ouer the Sea towards Byzantium in Thracia to which place the thing seeming ominous he transferred his new foundation and there built a most Magnificent Citie naming it New Rome as appeareth by an inscription of his Statue In imitation whereof he circulated Seuen hils with a Wall for Height Thicknesse and Beauty the fairest in the world and not only erected Temples Towers and most stately Palaces himselfe but by his publike Edicts cōmanded all the Princes of the Empire to raise therein some Monuments memorable Edifices beseeming the Maiesty of so glorious a foundatiō 13 Hither also from Rome hee caused to bee brought many renowned Monuments of Antiquities as the famous Goddesse Pallas of old Troy the Image of Apollo in brasse of an vnmeasurable bignesse the Statues of Iuno Minerua Venus and the like whereupon Hierome saith That Constantine to inrich this one Citie impouerished all others in the Empire and other Writers which saw it in the perfectiō of beauty report it to be rather an habitation for the Gods thē the dwelling place for Earthly men Herein also so studious was he of good Arts was built the Proud Palace of that Publike Library wherein were contained one hundred twenty thousand of the chiefest Written Bookes and in the midst thereof were the Guts of a Dragon in length one hundred twenty Foote on which was admirably written in Letters of Gold the Iliads of Homer The New Name of this new Citie lasted not long for the affection of all men to the Founder afforded it rather the name of Constantinople As a trophey then of this Emperours renowne though now a brand of infamie to another of that name who lost it in the yeere 1452. to Mahomet the Turke and as New Rome was reared and ruined in one name so had Old Rome in Augustus her pitch of height and in Augustulus her period 14 He drew likewise hither those Legions that lay for defence of the Prouinces as well in Germany and Gallia as in Britaine from whence hee brought saith Malmesbury a great power of British Souldiers through whose industry and forward seruice hauing obtained Triumphant Victories to his hearts desire and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Empire such of them as were past seruice and 〈◊〉 formed the painefull parts of Souldiers their fulltime he planted in a certain part of Gaule Westward vpon the very 〈◊〉 of the Ocean where at this day their posterity 〈◊〉 are wonderfully growen euen to a mightie people in manners language somewhat degenerate from our 〈◊〉 In which his doings he laid open the Prouinces to the irruptions of their Enemies and is therefore by Z●…imus hardly censured as being the onely man that by this meanes first subuerted the flourishing estate of the Empire And indeed by withdrawing his Forces out of Britaine the Picts and other their wonted Enemies had the bolder and easier entrance into the more ciuill parts of this Iland where by ere long being altogether abandoned of the Romans it became a pray of Conquest to the Saxons as shall be shewed in due place 15 But howsoeuer his policie failed carried as it seemeth by a Diuine inspiration to leaue Rome yet is this good Emperour much commended by all Writers for his many vertues especially for that hee so laid the foundation of the Christians securitie that the same hath stood vnder the protection of Princes euer since euen vnto this day And albeit that many Caesars his successors haue often attempted to shake it by their authorities and the sharpe instruments of heretikes dangerously haue vndermined it yet hath it borne out the Stormes of all their boisterous assaies and stood in the strength that this Emperor first laid it 16 And vpon this foundation that a glorious building might be raised hee congregated three hundred and eighteene Christian Bishops in the Citie Nice in Thracia where himself was present and also President of the same Councel though now his Beadsmen the Popes put him his Successors from that right and as another Moses he then pacified the contentions of the brethren and reestablished the authorities of the Bishops for the godly gouernment of the Church in that Primitiue age 17 But as the cleerest Sunne hath his set and the fairest day his night so Constantines glorious life drew to an end though his liuing-glory shall be endlesse for intending a voyage against the Persians hee fell grieuously sicke and counselled by his Physitions to be carried vnto Nicomedia a Citie in Bythinia to the Hot Bathes that naturally there sprang which caused some erroneously to write that he became a Leaper he died on the way neere to the place and in great deuotion commended his departing Soule to
his Crucified Redeemer Maij 22. the yeere of Christ Iesus three hundred thirty seuen and of his happy victorious raigne thirty one and of his age sixty fiue whose body was interred at Constantinople in the Church of the Apostles that himselfe had therein founded 18 Eusebius writing this good Emperors life saith that he deferred his Baptisme vntill his old age in desire that he might receiue it in Iordayne where our Sauiour himselfe was baptised Yet others thinke that he was baptised with his Son Crispus what time he created him his Caesar for the Celebration whereof hee caused a most sumptuous Font to be made in Rome which Platina Sabellicus affirme to haue continued to their times And the ingenuity of the same Sabellicus is much to be approued in that speaking of Constantines Donation which some so much vaunt of though the vanity of that forgery is now laid open to the view of all by sundry learned men he acknowledgeth himselfe being a Romanist that he findeth no mention of any such matter in any of the ancient Records which he followed and so leaueth it to the Patronage of those Crafts-men out of whose forges it first was formed He left to succeed him in the Empire as Augusti with distaste of the eldest his three Sonnes Constantine Constantius and Constance whom before he had made Caesars designed by Testamēt Delmatius the son of Anniballinus his brother Caesar and therefore we haue inserted his mony in ranke of those that succeeded this great glorious Emperor FLA. VAL. CONSTANTINVS IVNIOR Emp. FLA. VAL. CONSTANS FLA. IVLIVS CONSTANTIVS FLA. DELMATIVS ANNIBALLIANVS CHAPTER XLVII FOR the Empire being diuided among these Brethren Constantinus the eldest whose portion was Britaine France Spaine and part of Germanie tooke himselfe wronged in this partition whereas Constans his second brother had Italie Africa Sclauonia Dalmatia and Greece and Constantius the youngest possessed Thracia Syria Mesopotamia and Egypt Prouinces much greater in his sight then his owne seemed to bee and therefore at last ambitiously hee attempted to inlarge his vpon the Frontiers of his brother Constans at that time in Dacia and in warres against the Gothes who there also inuaded his territories but was met with and slaine by a Captaine of his brothers neere to the Citie Aquileia in Italie when he had held his Seigniories the terme of three yeeres 2 Hereupon Constans grew exceedingly proud and seising his deceased brothers Prouinces ioined them vnto his owne Possessions and with his brother Constantius came into this Iland This Battle and their arriuall heere by the words of Iulius Firmius chanced in the winter season for saith hee speaking to these Emperours you haue subdued vnder your Oares the swelling and raging waues of the British Ocean euen in the deepe of Winter a thing hitherto neuer seene before And the Britaine 's were sore afraid to behold the vnexpected face of their Emperour This Constans was he that called a Councell to Sardica against the Arrians whither were assembled three hundred Bishops and among them some of the British as formerly we haue mentioned But this Prince being youthfull cast away all care of the Empire and drowned in his owne pleasures followed ill counsell the vsuall way to Princes ruines Thus growne greeuous to the Prouinces and nothing acceptable to the Souldiers was by Magnentius a Captaine of his owne slaine as hee was hunting neere the Castle of S. Helens situate amongst the Tapori a Spanish people vnder the Pyren Mountaines And as hence this Murderer of his Soueraigne Lord and Master was branded with the name of Taporus so in this Emperour there murdered was fulfilled a Prophecie that hee should die in his Grandmothers Lappe Olympias the Widow of this Constans was giuen to Arsaces King of Armenia by Constantius his brother to be a bond and purchase of his surer friendship of which his need was much as the times required for after the death of Constance Vetranio was proclaimed Emperour by the Pannonian Armie though shortly disrobed and sent to end his decrepit age in a priuate fortune Nepohanus the nephew of Constans by his sister Eutropia was at Rome by the abiect Rout saluted Augustus which he enioied not much aboue twentie daies being suppressed by Magnentius who had now made the truncke of Maiestie his Soueraignes bodie the Basse whereby he meant with Decentius and Desiderius his two brethren to ascend the Throne 3 Simon Dunelmensis saith that Great Constantine at his departure from Britaine left one Octauius to gouerne the Land who shortly rebelled and after diuers conflicts was slaine by Traherne Commander of a Roman Legion Galfridus makes the said Octauian a Britaine and will haue him to raigne with great Victories ouer this Iland the space of fifty foure yeeres which as Fabian hath accounted doth extend to the time of Valentinians Rule in Rome so farre doe our British Historians differ from the Romans But from them most certaine it is that Magnentius before mentioned a Britaine by his father though borne among the Laeti in France inuested himselfe into the Imperiall Dignitie vsurping France Spaine and Britaine thus stamping the face of himselfe and his brother Decentius by him made Caesar at Millan vpon the currant Monies of such reuolted Prouinces as he vsurped And did for three yeeres bandy against Constantius though with some vnequall successe but lastly despairing to vphold his owne greatnesse murdered himselfe at Lyons in Gallia as his brother vpon newes therof did with a halter in the same Countrey For this euent no other occasion moouing Constantius both shut the Temple of Ianus in Rome as a token of an Vniuersall Peace and gloriously triumphed with more then a vsuall aspect 4 At this time the Generall of the Armie in Britaine was one Gracianus the father of Valentinian the Emperour by birth an Hungarian and so strong of limme that no fiue men could pull a rope out of his hand with all their force whereof hee was surnamed Funarius the Roper This man giuing entertainment to Magnentius was condemned in confiscation of all his goods by Constantius that now ruled sole Emperour vnto whom also the Britaines submitted themselues and whose Deputie after Gratianus was aged Martin a man no doubt vertuous and vpright as he witnessed by his death for Constantius whose base and distrustfull heart feared the wagging of euery leafe by the slaughter of many guiltlesse sought to make himselfe secure and egged on by his Flatterers to serue their purposes sent one Paulus a Notarie into Britaine to apprehend them that had aided Magnentius 5 The said Notarie was a Spaniard of a pestilent wit and subtiltie especially in finding out all quirkes and deuices to endanger mens estates whose businesse being now to apprehend and bring away such Martiall men as had entred action in the foresaid conspiracies he vnder that pretence
may appeare out of the ancient Gildas who thus recordeth it To represse saith hee many Inuasions of those their ancient enemies which with cruell slaughters and booties continually afflicted them the Britaines fell to consult vpon some conuenient course therein to be taken Lastly all the Counsellers together with the proud Tyrant being blinded in iudgement deuised such a protection as in the end prooued their Countries destruction namely that those ●…rce Saxons a people sauage and of hatefull name odious both to God and man should be let into this Iland as it were wolues into sheepe-folds to repulse for sooth the Northerne Nations then which proiect doubtlesse nothing was euer more pernicious and vnhappie vnto this Land O senses senslesse and plunged into deepest mists of errour O desperate dulnesse and blinde blockishnesse of minde Those whom in absence were feared more then death now of their owne accord are inuited by these Princes of Aegypt if I may so say thus sottishly counselling their Pharao to come and rest with them vnder one roofe Presently out of the Denne of that barbarous Lionesse rushed foorth a kennell of her whelpes in three long Vessels called in their Language * Cyula carried vnder full saile and with ominous presages fore-prophecying that for 300. yeeres they should possesse that Land vnto which they then directed their course and for halfe of that space viz. one hundred and fiftie yeeres they should waste and depopulate the same These being put on shore first in the East part of the Iland and that by Commandement of this vnfortunate Tyrant there set fast their terrible pawes pretending to the Ilanders defense of their Countrey but more truly intending the destruction of them The foresaid Lionesse finding that her first troupe of whelpes sped so well sends againe a greater Rabble of the same Litter which heere arriued in Fl●…es bringing with them some other Associates of bastardly and vnnoble brood And these beginnings the slips of iniquitie and the roots of bitternesse an accursed plantation well befitting our demerits haue sprung vp and put foorth in our soile their haughtie boughes and spreading branches This barbarous Nation thus admitted professing themselues our Souldiers and such as would endure all hazards so they fained in defense for their good Hosts first they craued supplie of victuals only which being giuen them for some time stopped as we may say the Dogs mouth howbeit afterward they complaine that their wages was not bountifully enough paid deuising of purpose colourable occasions of quarrell and threatning that vnlesse they might haue more munificent entertainment they would with the breach of couenant spoile and waste the whole Iland And without further delay they second these threats with deeds for our Sinnes the cause of deserued reuenge were still nourished and the fire kindled Eastward was set a flaming by these sacrilegious men from Sea to Sea ceasing not to consume all the Cities and Countries bordering there about vntill such time as burning welneere all the Inland Soile of the Iland it licked as it were with the red tongue of the flame the very Westerne Ocean it selfe In this violent inuasion comparable to that of the Assyrians against the Land of Israel in old times is historically fulfilled also in vs that which the Prophet by way of sorrowfull lamentation vttereth They haue set fire vpon thy holy places and haue burned the dwelling place of thy name euen vnto the ground And againe O God the Heathen are come into thine heritage thy holy Temple haue they defiled for all the Fortifications demolished with their Engines and the Inhabitants together with the Bishops of the Church and also the Priests and people with glistering swords and crackling flames were all at once laid along vpon the ground yea and which was a most lamen-table spectacle the stately Turrets high mounted Walles and the sacred Altars lay all tumbling together all purpled with the broken and bloudy Quarters and goared Carcases mixed as in a horrible wine-presse Neither were there any other Sepulchers abroad saue the 〈◊〉 of buildings and the bowels of wilde beasts and birds 9 During this most wofull desperate and tempestuous season saith the mournfull Historian some poore Remaines of Britaines being found in the Mountains were slaine by whole heapes others pined by famine came and yeelded themselues vnto their enemies vpon composition to serue them as Bond-slaues for euer so they might not bee slaughtered out of hand which granted was reputed a most high and especiall grace Others went ouer Seas into Strange Lands singing vnder their spread Sailes with a lamentable and mourning note that of the Psalmist Thou hast giuen vs O Lord as Sheepe to bee deuoured and hast scattered vs among the Heathen Yet others remained still in their owne Countrey albeit in fearefull estate and continually suspecting hazard committing their liues and safetie to the high steepe Hilles to craggie Mountaines naturally intrenched to thick growne Woods and Forrests yea and to the Rockes of the Sea 10 Thus was Britaine brought to the period of her glory and the people miserably subiected to a forraine Nation about the yeere from Christs Natiuitie 473. and after the Romans last farewell 28. In which time you see they were most cruelly pursued with all calamities of warre and lastly betraied by them in whom so much trust was reposed as mournfull Gildas hath ruefully declared THE SAXONS ORIGINALL CHAPTER II. AS times decaied Ruines haue stopped the Passage of those small Springs issued from the first fountaine of Nations beginnings and haue diuerted their streames far from any sure Course or certaine known Heads so the originall parent place and name of our English-Saxons haue bin writtē with a pen of slight touch vpon the leaues of obliuion or else recorded in those obscure Roules that as yet lie bound vp in the Office of Times forgetfulnesse whereby it rests doubtfull from what root these branches first sprang some bringing them from Asia some from Africa some from Macedon some from Denmarke and some without all likelihood from Britaine it selfe Occa Scarlensis a Frislander borne affirmeth these Saxons to come of Saxo a Prince of India who with his two brethren were banished by lot to seeke their destinies abroad their owne Countries being pestered with ouer many people at home These saith he following Alexander the Great into Greece became Progenitors to their Countries that from them receiued their of-springs and names as that from Friso the eldest his Frislanders descended from Saxo the second the Saxons vpon the Riuer Albis and from Bruno the yongest the Inhabitants of the Dukedome of Brunswic And of this opinion also Sufridus Petri seemeth to be Crantzius doth deriue them from the Catti in Germany and the Phrygians a Region in Asia to omit others who would bring them from Saxo the brother of Vandale 2 F. Albinus a learned Author doth thinke the Saxons to bee
whole possession of Kent sent for more supply of Saxons vnto his ayde pretending imployments of their seruice in other parts but indeede to make strong his owne designes and these swarming daylie ouer into Britaine got the strength of munition and command of military affaires without impeach For the King holding himselfe now sure from all interceptions gaue his immoderate senses scope to nourish more freely their sensuall pleasures and committed more audaciously those vices vnto which his owne corrupt nature was naturally addicted This Hengist soone perceiued and to adde more matter fit for flame fed still the humors of this vicious King outwardly shewing his care and readinesse for the Lands defence his counsell and loue to the Nobles in estate and his courteous carriage to the Commons in generall but to the King an ouerseeming dilligence and seruile obedience by all which ere it was long he gaue fire to the traine that blew vp the foundations of the British policie 4 For feasting the King in the Castell of Tonnge commanded his daughter a Lady of passing beautie to attend the banquet whose excellent feature and seemely behauiour blew the sparkes of desire so right into Vortigerns wanton eie that they presently kindled a flame in his lasciuious heart for in the midst of his cups Rowena so was the damosell called with a low reuerence and pleasing grace saluted the King with a cup of gold full of sweet wine incharming it with these words in her language Waes heal hla●…po Cyning which is in our English Be of health Lord King he demāding the meaning would be taught to answer to her owne vnderstanding and said D●…c heal that is Drinke health whereof when hee had pledged her as we speake this bowle infected his senses with no lesse sottishnesse then that of Belus is said to doe Dido when Cupid plaid the childe Ascanius betwixt Aeneas and her And brought more bale to the Land then afterwards did that which was presented to King Iohn at Swinsted Abbey by Simon the poisoning Monke for notwithstanding that hee had a Queene then liuing himselfe not young hauing sonnes at mans estate in profession a Christian whose Religion alloweth neither polygamie nor adulterie did importunate Hengist that Rowena might be his wife which at first with some shew of excuse and vnworthinesse of person was denied but lastly consented vnto and the Nuptials performed And now Fortune casting occasion daily into Hengists lap hee gaue his aspiring thoughts no rest till hee had got the Crowne from Vortigerns head and seized all vnder the Saxons power 5 Hengist and Horsa in their Language as also in the ancient Teutonic Tongue doe both of them signifie a Horse vnto which beast the Saxons had great regard and whose neighings saith Tacitus were their presages and being white were imploied in their sacrilegious ceremonies Virgil also maketh the Horse to bee a luckie Osse or foretokened successe in Battle as in this his verse he doth intimate and write Bello armantur equi bella has armenta minantur And Crantzius telles vs that it was a vsuall thing with the Pagan Germans especially of their Noble-men to take the names of Beasts some from the Lion some from the Beare some from the Woolfe and some from the Horse as heere Hengist and Horsa are said to signifie 6 Which beast they bare in their shields of Armes at their entrance of Britaine and was blazed saith Verstegan in this manner A Horse Argent Rampant in a Field Gules which was the ancient Armes as hee affirmeth of the Princes and Dukes of Saxonie And albeit those Dukes haue of latter yeeres changed that Coat yet doth Henry Iulius now Duke of Brunswicke a most ancient Saxon Prince who sometimes bore the White Horse in a Red Field beare the White Horse for his Creast hauing for his chiefe Coat of Armies the two Leopards which by Richard Cordelion King of England was giuen vnto his ancestor Henry the Lion Duke of Saxony who had maried Mathilda the said Kings sister and by the Emperour Frederic Barbarossa had been bereft of his Armes and Titles of honor Moreouer Charles Emmanuel the now Duke of Sauoy who is lineally descended from the ancient Princes of the chiefe house of Saxony by Prince Beral who came out of Saxonie into Sauoy in the yeere of our Lord 998. and was the third sonne of Hugh Duke of Saxonie which Hugh was brother vnto the Emperour Otho the Third doth yet beare for one of his Coats the said Leaping Horse 7 This Hengist was doubtlesse a Prince of the chiefest bloud and Nobilitie of the Saxons and by birth of Angria in Westphalia wherein vnto this day a place retaineth the name of Hengster-holt Hee with his brother were the sonnes of one Wihtgisil whose father was Witta and his father Vecta the eldest sonne of Voden as Beda writes him of whose issue many Kings of sundry Prouinces saith he had their originall Hee growne now into high fauour with the King by the mariage of Rowena and feared of the Nobility for his strength and policie bare himselfe great among all and his supplies daily arriuing pestred if it not plagued most parts of this Iland For saith Ninius and Beda the riches of Britaine and the fertilitie of the soile were such motiues to their couetous and aspiring mindes that where they got footing there they kept standing and picked occasions where they were too strong Among thē that were sent for by the aduice of Hengist two principall Captaines Octa and Ebissa were chiefe who being embarked in forty Pinnaces sailed about the Picts Coasts wasting the Iles that were called the Orcades and got many Countries from them beyond the Frith whereby a further terrour was stricken into the Britaines hearts 8 The Nobilitie perceiuing what was in working and the marke whereat Hengist set his eie to aime complained to the King of their dangerous estate shewing themselues agreeued to bee dispossessed of Offices and Charge as Guorong the Earle or Lieutenant of Kent by Hengist had beene the Land pestred with strangers that sought their subuersion reproouing him much for his match with that Infidel Kowena his owne carelesse gouernment and adulterous life and in such manner that Vodine Archbishop of London a man of great sanctitie feared not to tell him that therby he had indangered both his soule and Crowne which words by Vortigern were so digested that shortlie it cost the good Archbishop his life But hee still continuing in his lasciuious and carelesse idlenesse was lastly taught by wofull experience what miserie wilfull rashnesse and neglected gouernment do bring for the Britaine 's his subiects no longer would be thus abused to see themselues wouen into greater danger by shew of defense then they formerly had beene by the hostilitie of the enemie but forthwith disclaimed their obedience to the King when he had
receiue some breath of hopes and to shew themselues out of their Caues This Ambrosius saith Beda was a gentle natured man which only of all the bloud of the Romans remained then aliue his parents being slaine which had borne the name of the King of the Countrey Hee with his brother Vter commonly called Pendragon returning out of Britain Armorica where they had remained from the Tyrannie of Vortigerne landed at Totnesse in the West of this Iland vnto whom resorted great Troopes of Britaines His first Expedition was against Vortigern the scourge of his Country and murderer of his King whose Castle straightwaies hee besieged and by the iust reuenging hand of God with wilde fire consumed wherin those adulterous and incestuous persons were burned to ashes 16 Next following the common Enemie hee gaue battle to the Saxons on the North of Humber at a place called Maesbell wherein Hengist was discomfited and in flight taken by Earle Edol of Glocester and beheaded at Conningsborrow saith he of Monmouth Howbeit Matthew of Westminster maketh him fight another battle vpon the Riuer Dun in Anno 489. wherein saith he Hengist was taken And Polydore saith that in the same battle Hengist at the first onset was slaine with many of his Germans the fame of whose victorie saith he is had in memorie with the Inhabitants of those parts euen vnto this day Yet Gildas Beda and Ethelward Writers of those ancient times and two of them Saxons mention not the death of Hengist neither this great victorie of the Britaines And Marianus the Scotish Monke seemeth to affirme the contrarie where he saith that Hengist raigned thirty foure yeeres in great glorie and died peaceably leauing his sonne Eske to succeed him in the Kingdome of Kent With whom also Florentius the Monke of Worcester agreeth Howsoeuer sure it is had not the diuine power of God otherwise determined the waning estate of Britaine doubtlesse had recouered her former strength both by the praiers of Bishop German the prowesse of this last spoken of Ambrosius the valorous attempts of Vter Pendragon and the worthy industries of the Christian King Arthur The famous resistances of this last mentioned Arthur the Monke of Monmouth with such fables hath augmented that his Acts and Trauels may bee compared to those of Hercules or with the Conquests of Caesar himselfe insomuch that he hath beene accounted and ranged in the Catalogue of the worlds nine Worthies And surely by the testimonie of Malmesbury hee was a Prince of great worth and did often aduenture with his small power to meet the Saxons in the face and in Field But the Britaines strength daily decreasing and new supplies of these Saxons daily arriuing brought the one in despaire to enioy their owne right and the other to triumph in their intrusions of wrongs For continually incroaching forward and inlarging their limits wheresoeuer they came droue the inhabitauts before them from their wonted possessions seated themselues in the southern and best part of the Land laying the stones as it were of those foundations whereupon in short time they raised their most glorious buildings 17 For euery seuerall Captaine or Commander accounting that part his owne wherein he first entred or made conquest of with full resolution determined to keepe what he had got and as an absolute King commanded his Prouince whereby the Land became burdened with seuen of them at the first as Hengist of Kent Ella of those parts now called Sussex and Surrey Cherdik of the West Erchenwin of the East Ida of the North Crida of the Middle-land Vffa the parts now Middlesex and Essex which Kingdomes thus begunne and erected stood not long vnshaken by ciuill dissensions among themselues each King enuying his equals greatnesse and seeking to inlarge his owne Dominions vpon the next In which combustions few or none of them came to the graue in due time but were either slaine in warres or treacherously murdered in peace or else inforced to sheare himselfe a Monke and resigne his Crowne to another To speake of all these together I hold would bring too great a confusion to our Historie and a needlesse surcharge to the Readers memorie To auoid which I will briefly set downe the Conquests Circuits Acts and Descents that in euery seuerall Kingdome happened while they stood in their Heptarchie before they were vnited to an absolute Monarchie and then according to my prefixed purpose continue the succession of GREAT BRITAINES Monarchs 18 For albeit the Land was diuided into 7. seuerall Kingdomes and each of them carrying a soueraigne command within his owne limits yet one of them euer seemed to be supreme of the rest and that Prince who had the greatest power or successe in his warres was euer accounted and called The King of the English-men as Venerable Beda in the fifth Chapter of his second Booke and Historie of England euer termeth them 19 Such therfore as held the rest vnder either by Armes or alliance in amitie or subiection swaied the whole Monarchy and were acknowledged as Supremes in power ouer the rest which succeeded not euer in the same Familie neither continued in one and the same Kingdome without reuersement but were carried vpon the Flouds and Ebbes of variable successe or as destinie pleased to alter the chance wherof each of them sauing the East-Saxons only did attaine to the height of that gouernment as to the hauen of their wished desires See therefore if you please a generall view of the whole and afterwards the seuerall Histories of euery Kingdome apart before wee enter into the Succession of the English-Saxons Monarchs Heptarchy Kingdomes Counties Kings Successions Kingdomes Continuance Kings first Christians The Saxons Heptarchy The Kingdome of Kent contained Counties Kent Kings raigning 1. Hengist 31. 2. Eske 24. 3. Octa 20. 4. Ymerick 29. 5. Ethelbert 56. 6. Eabald 24. 7. Ercombert 24. 8. Egbert 9. 9. Lother 11. 10. Edrik 6. 11. Withred 33. 12. Edbert 23. 13. Edelbert 11. 14. Alrik 34. 15. Ethilbert 3. 16. Cuthred 8. 17. Baldred 18. Beganne in An. 455. Continued yeers 372. Ended in Anno 827. Ethelbert The Kingdome of Souh-Saxons contained Counties Sussex Surrey Kings raigning 1. Ella 32. 2. Cissa 75. 3. Edilwach alias Ethelwolf 25. 4. Berthum 5. Authum Beganne in An. 488. Continued yeers 113. Ended in Anno 601. Ethelwolse The Kingdome of West-Saxons contained Counties Cornwall Deuon-shire Dorset-shire Somerset-sh Wilt-shire Hant-shire Bark-shire Kings raigning 1. Cherdik 33. 2. Kenrike 26. 3. Cheulin 33. 4. Ceaclik 5. 5. Chelwold 12. 6. Kingils 32. Quithelin 1. 7. Kenwald 30. 8. Eskwyn 2. 9. Kentwin 9. 10. Ceadwald 7. 11. Inas 37. 12. Ethellard 14. 13. Cuthred 16. 14. Sigebert 2. 15. Kenwolfe 29. 16. Brightrik 16. 17. Egbert 19. Beganne in An. 519. Continued yeers 561. Ended in An. 1066. Kingils The Kingdome of East-Saxons contained Counties Essex Middlesex Kings raigning 1. Erchenwin 34. 2. Sledda 10. 3. Sebert 21. 4. Sexred Seward
Sigbert 7. 5. Sigebert 23. 6. Sigibert 13. 7. Swithelme 14. 8. Sighere 9. Sebba 30. 10. Sigherd 8. 11. Seofrid 12. Offa 4. 13. Selred 30. 14. Suthred 38. Beganne in An. 527. Continued yeers 281. Ended in Anno 827. Sebert The Kingdome of Northumberland contained Counties York-shire Durham Lanca-shire Westmorland Cumberland Northumber Kings raigning 1. Ella Ida 2. Adda 7. Elappea 5. 3. Theodwald 1. 4. Frethulfe 7. 5. Theodrik 7. 6. Ethelrik 5. 7. Ethelfrid 23. 8. Edwine 17. 9. Oswald 9. 10. Oswy 28. 11. Egfrid 15. 12. Alkfryd 20. 13. Osred 11. 14. Kenred 2. 15. Oswike 11. 16. Ceolnuphe 8. 17. Egbert 20. 18. Oswulph 1. 19. Edilwald 11. 20. Alured 21. Ethelred 5 7. 22. Alfwald 11. 23. Osred 1. Beganne in An. 547. Continuedyeers 379. Ended in Anno 926. Edwin The Kingdome of Mercia contained Counties Huntington Rutland Lincolne Northampton Leicester Darby-shire Nottingham Oxford-shire Chesse-shire Shrop-shire Glocester-shire Worcester-shire Stafford-shire Warwick-shire Buckingham-sh Bedford-shire Hartford-shire Kings raigning 1. Creda 6. 2. Wibba 3. 3. Cheorl 34. 4. Penda 30. 5. Peada 4. 6. Wolfere 17. 7. Ethelred 30. 8. Kenred 4. 9. Chelred 7. 10. Ethelbald 42. 11. Offa 40. 12. Egfrid 4 monet 13. Kenwolfe 22. 14. Kenelme 5. mon. 15. Chelwolfe 1. 16. Bernulfe 3. 17. Ludecan 2. 18. Whitlafe 13. 19. Bertwolfe 13. 20. Burdred 22. Beganne in An. 582. Continued yeers 202. Ended in Anno 886. Peada The Kingdome of East-Angles contained Counties Suffolke Norfolke Cambridge-sh Ely-Iland Kings raigning 1. Vffa 7. 2. Titullus 10. 3 Redwald 44. 4. Erpenwald 12. 5. Sigebert 6. Egrik 7. Anna 13. 8. Ethelbert 9. Ethwald 9. 10. Aldwolfe 19. 11. Afwald 7. 12. Beorn 24. 13. Ethelred 52. 14. Ethelbert 5. 15. Edmund 16. Beganne in An. 575. Continued yeers 353. Ended in Anno 914. Redwald THE KINGDOME OF KENT BEGVN BY HENGIST THE SAXON WITH THE SVCCESSION OF THEIR KINGS THEIR ISSVES AND RAIGNES CHAPTER V. KEnt the first Dominion of the Saxons Heptarchie was formerly in the daies of Iulius Caesar the Seat of foure seueral petty Kings yet neuer called a Kingdome before that Hengist the first Saxon Captaine in fauour of his Daughter Rowena got it by the gift of King Vortigern about the yeere of Grace 455. and in the seuenth yeere after his first arriuage heere he first laid the foundation of those fortunes which the Saxons his Nation in this Land afterwards attained vnto for hauing possessed the same with Victorie and Wealth the space of thirty one yeeres some adde three more he left it in peace to his sonne Eske and the rest of the Iland so weakened by his meanes that others of his Nation were shortly planted in other parts thereof It contained the Continent that lieth betwixt our East-Ocean and the Riuer Thames being bounded vpon the West with Sussex and Surrey ESke the second King of Kent is reported to bee the second sonne of King Hengist who accompanying his father into this Iland made proofe of his great valour in all his Battles fought against the Britaines and in one of them as Geffrey of Monmouth rereporteth being taken prisoner was for a time retained in Yorke but thence escaping hee aided his father in the Battle of Crekynford and after his decease succeeded him in the Kingdome of Kent from whom those Inhabitants saith Beda were called Eskings amongst whom he peaceably raigned about twentie yeeres and died in the yeere of our Lord 512. OCta the sonne of Eske began his raigne ouer his Fathers Dominions the yeere of Christs Incarnation 512. and raigned twenty two yeeres without mention of any memorable Act. IMerik the sonne of Eske and the fourth King of Kent raigned twenty fiue yeeres saith Stowe twentie nine saith Sauil in his Table collected from our English Writers He had issue Ethelbert the first Christian King of Kent and a daughter named Rikell maried to Shedda the second King of the East-Saxons the mother of Sebert and Segebald EThelbert the sonne of Imerik in the yeere of grace 561. succeeded him in the Kingdome of Kent who by reason of his young yeeres was sore molested by his neighbour Princes that sought to inlarge their Prouinces vpon his for now the Saxons hauing made full Conquest of the Britaines fell at variance among thēselues taking all occasions to supplane each other as Conquerours commonly can endure no equals and prosperitie euer is looked at with an enuious eie whereupon Cheulin King of the West-saxons proud of his victorious successes ouer the Britaines beganne to disdaine all amitie with his owne neighbour Saxons inuaded the Territories of this young Prince and in a set Battle slew Oslaue and Cnebban two of his Dukes discomfited the King and wonne the day This field was fought at Wiphandun in the yeere of our Redemption 567. and is noted to bee the first Battle betwixt the Saxons themselues since their first entrance into Britaine But young Ethelbert growne vnto yeeres repaired his losses with the inlargement of his Kingdome to the banks of Humber and was the fifth Monarch of the Englishmen as after we shall heare His first Wife was Berta the daughter of Chilperik King of France by whom he had Edbald Ethelburg and Edburg a second Wife he had vnworthy of name for her incestuous and abominable act in matching her selfe in marriage with her Husbands Sonne A sinne saith the Apostle not to be named among the Gentiles Of this King as also of all the rest that attained vnto the glorie to bee enstiled per excellentiam the Soueraigne Kings of the Englishmen I purpose to bee sparing in their particular Kingdomes and to reserue the larger relation of their Acts Matches Issues and continuance to the times of their seuerall Monarchies whereby a more historicall course may be carried through the successions of the English-Saxon Monarches and a needlesse repetition of the same things auoided which otherwise of necessitie would follow Hee raigned in great glory fiftie six yee●…s and was the First Saxon King that receiued and established the Gospell He died the foure and twentieth day of Februarie the yeere of Christ 616. after he had raigned 56. yeeres and was buried at Canterbury with this inscription vpon his Tombe Rex Ethelbertus hîc clanditur in Poliandro Fana pians Christo ad Christum meat absque Meandro EDbald the sonne of King Ethelbert in the yeere of Christ 617. assumed the Gouernment of Kent who no sooner saith Beda had gotten from vnder the awe of his father but he refused to entertaine the Doctrine of Christ and so polluted himselfe with the foule sinne of fornication as that hee married his Mother in Law the late Wife to his owne Father which two hainous faults gaue his subiects both occasion and impunity to returne to their former idolatry who vnder his Father for fauour or for feare had yeelded to the Lawes of the Christian Faith But the scourge of God
saith it was done by S. Berinus Bishop of Dorchester who vsually preaching the Gospell in the kingdome of the Mercians in the Citie of Oxenford and presence of Wulpherus King of Mercia it hapned that King Athelwold then a Pagan was present who by the indeauour of Vulpherus and instruction of Berinus receiued the lauer of Baptisme whom also Wulpherus receiued at the Font for his God-sonne and in signe of that adoption gaue vnto him two Prouinces to be annexed to his former kingdome that is to say the I le of Wight and the Prouince of Manures in the West of England at which time also Berinus by King Athelwolds permission baptized the chiefe Dukes and Nobles of that Prouince His Queene Ebba was baptized in her owne I le the Prouince of the Viecians being the daughter of Eanfride who was brother to Eanheres and both of them Christians But it is generally held that King Edilwach gaue vnto Wilfride the Peninsula as the Latines speake of Seoleseu now Selsee in the West with the demaynes of eightie seuen Tenements wherein he built the Monasterie that bare the same name and was his owne Episcopall Sea Against this Edilwach Ceadwald a valiant young Prince of the Bloud-royall of the West-Saxons being banished his Countrey making head with the assistance of friends and followers entred his Territories with an impetuous incursion and slew the King as he made resistance when hee had raigned twentie fiue yeeres in whose raigne and Countrey raged such an extreme Famine that both men and women in great flockes and companies cast themselues from the Rockes into the Sea 4 Berthun and Authun two Dukes of the South-Saxons maintained the Warres and defence of their Country against Ceadwald and by manly valour forced him to retire These Captaines betwixt them held the dominion of that Prouince vntill such time as Ceadwald had gotten the Kingdome of the West-Saxons who bearing in mind the remembrance of his former proceedings and thinking to inlarge his owne Kingdome with the subiection of the South-Saxons entred againe that Prouince and in Battell slew Duke Berthun harrying the Country miserably before him Which State vnable to withstand the West-Saxons puissance was by Iue the next King succeeding made a subiected Prouince their Gouernment thence forward resting vnder his Successors after it had stood one hundred and thirteene yeeres and ended in the yeere of Christ 601. by ordinary computation But whosoeuer shall compare the times of the foresaid Kings Wulpherus and Athelwold together will easily finde that it is not easie to finde the certaine concurrence of times in affaires so clouded in obscuritie and so farre remote from our preseut times THE KINGDOME OF THE VVEST-SAXONS THE CIRCVIT THEREOF AND SVCCESSION OF THEIR KINGS VNTO EGBERT WITH THEIR ISSVES AND RAIGNES CHAPTER VII THe Kingdome of the West-Saxons though in time later then the two former yet in circuit and fame surmounted them both whose Monarch was the Maull that first brake the Scepters of the other six Kingdoms in sunder and made one Crowne of these their seuerall Diadems more glorious then they all and that first worne vpon Egbert the West-Saxons heads and the Scepter swaied in his Imperiall hand vntill whose time and person wee will continue the succession of their Kings beginning with Cherdik that first made it a Kingdome and briefly shew their Acts whilest it so stood in the Saxons Heptarchie THis Cherdik is said to haue brought a second supply of Sax●…s forces into Britaine in the yeere of our Lord 495. and fifth of the Monarchy of King Ella his landing being at a place on that occasion called Chederik-shore who with his sonne Kenrik was encountred by the Britaines vnder the conduct of Natanleod a British Prince whose Country was then called after his name whom he slew in Battell with fiue thousand more of his Britaines the fortune of which field gaue resolutions and hopes of better successe it was fought neere vnto a Brooke vpon that euent called Cherdiks-ford now by contraction Chard-ford Heereupon establishing his new erected Kingdome which contained Cornwal Deuonshire Dorsetshire Somersetshire Wiltshire Hantshire and Barkshire he inlarged the same with the conquest of the I le of Wight the gouernment whereof was by him giuen to Stuffe and Withgar his Nephewes which later slew the Britaines there inhabiting and named the place of his victory Withgarbirg assuming the name of King and was buried at his Citie Withgar in the same I le About seuen yeeres after Cherdiks entrance Porth a Saxon with his two Sonnes Megla and Beda landed in the West at the place from him called Portesmouth whose aid with Kent and Sussex assisted Cherdik in his Conquests His raigne is set to be thirty three yeeres and his death in the yeere of grace fiue hundred thirtie fiue hauing had two sonnes Kenrik and Chelwolf the one of which died before his Father and the other succeeded him in his Kingdome Chelwolf had issue Cuthgils whose sonne was Kenfridd and his sonne Kensy the Father of King Eskwin who was the Successor of King Kenwalk and predecessor of King Kentwin in the Kingdome of the West-Saxons KEnrik the eldest Sonne of King Cherdik hauing formerly made proofe of his prowesse in the assistance of his Father was after his death also verie fortunate in obtaining two victories ouer the Britaines the one at Searesberige and the other at Beranbrig whose raigne beginning Anno 534. continued twenty six yeers ending in the yeere of our Redemption fiue hundred sixty He had issue three Sonnes of which Cheaulin the eldest succeeded him in his kingdome Cuthwolfe the second assisted his Brother in his Warres and was partaker with him of his victories who died Anno 672. leauing issue one onely Sonne named Chell or Cearlike who proued nothing so vertuous and dutifull a subiect as his Father had beene for he rose in rebellion against his Vncle and by strong hand expelled him his kingdome The third Sonne of King Kenrik was Cuth famous in his issue though mentionlesse for action in himselfe for hee had three sonnes of which Chelwolf the eldest was King of the West Saxons as shal be declared Chell the second was father to Kingils the sixt and first Christian King of the West Saxons and Grandfather to Kenwall and Kenwin the seuenth and ninth Kings of that Kingdome and Ched the yongest was father of Kenbert Grandfather to Chedwall the most renowned King of the West Saxons of whom we are presentlie to speake and of them all in the succession of th●… English Saxons Monarchs and now to returne againe to the issue of King Kenrik CHeaulin his first sonne entred vpon the gouernement ouer the West-Saxons Anno 561. and euen at the first began to disturbe the quiet peace of his neighbour Prouinces taking aduantage at the young yeeres of Ethelbert who was made King of
resisters Neither is it to be doubted but that many others there were of that Nation no lesse carefull for transferring the remembrance of their Ancestors actions to posteritie no Nation liuing being more zealously deuoted in that kinde though their writings haue in Times ruines beene buried and their remembrances preserued onely by perpetuitie of traditions and although wee haue shewed the ancient Coines of the Britaines and obserued a series thorow the Romanes succession yet be not offended that I leaue onely Blanks for these latter Princes as also the first Saxons wanting the Monies of their owne seuerall Mintes Such therfore as I haue found of any Kings stamp raigning whilest the Land was diuided and enioied amongst them I haue in the margent of their remembrances affixed with the Armes attributed to euery seuerall kingdome and hence will obserue the same order without any inuention or fained inscription which howsoeuer wee want to furnish their successions yet this am I sure of no Nation in Europe can shew the like or can come to so true a series of their Soueraignes Coines as England is able at this day to doe VORTIGERN 1. Vortigern among the many molestatiōs of the Scots and Picts was ordained the supreme Gouernor of these affaires and to that end with the Britaines full consent was elected their King For as touching that Monkish Constantine the sonne of Constantius who is said to be the brother of Aldreonus King of Little Britaine in France sent for and made King by these Britaines whose simplicitie this Vortigern is said to abuse and lastly to cause his murther and death I rather thinke the storie to be the same that happened aboue fortie yeeres before in the daies of Honorius the Emperor when Constantius among other Conspirators was raised vpon a hopefull expectation conceiued in his name This Constantius indeed had a sonne that bare his name a man of a soft spirit and no deepe reach and therefore in his youth was made a Monke But his Father risen to his aspiring honour created him first his Caesar and next Augustus till Fortune turned those smiles into frownes and stained their purple robes in both their own blouds For not only the same names induceth this doubt but the place which was Winchester and Abbey Amphibilus where this Imperiall Monke was shorne doth not a little confirme the same the remaines of which Colledge by that strong and thicke wall standing to this day at the West gate of that Cathedrall Church doth not a little confirme But wanting better directions to our proceedings we must follow for these times men of latter yeeres and not without some suspect of vncertaintie The rather for that the Saxons as then the chiefe Actors in this Land haue purposely concealed all Victors and victories against themselues neither but sparingly haue recorded their owne This Vortigern howsoeuer attaining the Crowne was ouer-awed saith Ninius by the Picts Scots stood in feare of the Roman forces and dread much the returne of Aurelius Ambrosius with his brother Vter surnamed Pendragon and therefore wanting strength of his owne to maintaine his standing sent for the Saxons as wee haue said He saith the British Story was Earle of Cornwall of an honourable Familie and noble descent his Lady euery way answerable to both by whom hee had three sonnes Vortimer Catigern and 〈◊〉 His second wife or rather Concubine hauing cast off this first was Rowena the daughter of Hengist which Pagan mariage prooued not only the bane of the Land but so ruinated the Church of Christianity that a Prouinciall Councell of the 〈◊〉 was 〈◊〉 sembled in Ann. 470. to repaire those things that this mariage had decaied By this Heathen Damosell he had a daughter who against the law of God and Nature was his third wife that Kings as he pretended to excuse his ●…est might be descended from the right issue of Kings vpon whom he begot his sad lamenting sonne Fausius a vertuous Impe of those impious parents that spent his life in a solitarie place neere to the Riuer Llynterrenny as wee haue said who abandoning the companie of men among those mountaines serued God in continuall teares and praiers for remission of the fault committed in his incestuous generation for the recalling of his parents to a better life and for the restitution of his Country to her former libertie This Vortigern raigned first sixteene yeeres and then deposed for his fauours to the Saxons was retained in durance all the raigne of Vortimer his sonne after whose death reestablished but oppressed by his Saxons and pursued by Aurelius he withdrew himselfe into Wales and among those vast mountaines built a Castle by Merlins direction wherof we haue spoken and more we would speake were those fantasticke fictions vnderset with any props of likelihood or truth which Rand. of Chester in his daies vtterly reiected In this Castle Vortigern with his incestuous wife after hee had secondly raigned the space of six yeeres was consumed to ashes by the iust reuenging hand of God by fire from heauen as some haue written or else kindled by Aurelius and Vter as his Ministers to execute his wrath VORTIMER 2. VOrtimer the eldest son of King Vortigern through the abuse of his fathers gouernment for which he was deposed by his owne subiects was erected King of the Britaine 's the yeere from Christs birth 454. a man of great valour which altogether hee imploied for the redresse of his Countrey according to the testimonie of William Malmesbury whose words are these Vortimer saith hee thinking not good to dissemble the matter for that hee saw himselfe and Countrie daily surprised by the craft of the English set his full purpose to driue them out and from the seuenth yeere after their first entrance for twenty yeeres continuance fought many Battles with them and foure of them with great puissance in open field in the first whereof they departed with like fortune and losse of the Generals brethren Horsa and Catigern in the other three the Britaine 's went away with victorie and so long vntill Vortimer was taken away by fatall death Huntington Monmouth Randulphus and Fabian name both the places and successe of those Battles The first was in Kent and vpon the Plaine neere vnto Ailsford where the memoriall of Catigern to this day remaineth Horsted doth as yet relish of Horsa there interred The second Battle was fought likewise in Kent at Crocanford now Craford where many perished as well Britaines as Saxons The third was at Weppeds Fleet with great losse to the Britaines and the fourth vpon Calmore where many of the Saxons after long and sore fight were slaine and more drowned in flight and lastly driuen into the I le of Thanet their first assigned habitation if not ouer the Seas so that small hope rested for them so long as this valiant Vortimer liued who had now dispossessed them of
thongs out of other mens Leather his Conquests of thirty Kingdomes and killing of Denabus the huge Spanish Giant his combat with Frolo Gouernor of France and with Lucius Hiberus the Roman Legate whose slaine body hee sent to the Senate for the tribute of Britaine by them demanded seeing that others before mee farre more rip●… Historians haue made both doubts and obiections against them And therefore I conclude with this Arthur as Saint Augustine with the Athenians whose men saith he were euer greater in fame then in deeds And with Ninius will end with his saying Arthurus pu●…a bat contra illos in diebus illis licet multi ipso no●…res essent ipse tamen duodecies Dux belli fuit Victorque bellorum Arthur made warre against them in those daies and though many were more noble then be yet was hee twelue times Generall in the Field and returned Conquerour But more constant is the memorie of his death and place of his buriall both which are reported vpon warrantable credit for Mordred the sonne of Lotho whereof wee haue spoken affecting the Crown vpon a pretence of right from King Vter and supposed bastardise of Arthur gaue many attempts through the aid of his Picts and assistance of the Saxons to dispossesse him of that wherein he was seated and lastly at Kamblan or Cambula in Cornwall saith Leland this British Hector encountring Mordred slew him out-right and receiued of him his owne deaths wound The witnesse of this Field as yet are those peeces of Armour horse-harnesse and other habiliments of Warre which are daily digged vp in tillage of the ground vnlesse those reliques of Battle be the seales of that fight which Marianus writeth to haue beene in this place betwixt the Britaines and Saxons in the yeere of our Lord eight hundred and twenty If then it bee true that Arthur heere died this place we may say seemeth to be consecrated vnto Mars for Tindagell Castle standing hard by first brought into the world this glorious Prince for one of her nine Worthies and Cambula againe receiued his last bloud But from this place he was carried vnto Glastenburie in Somerset-shire where he died the one and twentieth of May in the yeere of our Saluation fiue hundred forty and two after he had most victoriously raigned twenty six yeeres His body was there buried and six hundred yeeres after was taken vp and found vpon this occasion When Henry the second and first Plantagenet had swaied the English Scepter to the last of his raigne it chanced him at Pembrooke to heare sung to the Harpe certaine Ditties of the worthy exploits and acts of this Arthur by a Welsh Bard as they were termed whose custome was to record and sing at their Feasts the noble deeds of their Ancestours wherein mention was made of his death and place of buriall designing it to be in the Church-yard of Glastenburie and that betwixt two Pyramides therein standing whereupon King Henry caused the ground to be digged and at seuen foot depth was found a huge broad stone wherein a leadden Crosse was fastned and in that side that lay downeward in rude and barbarous letters as rudely set and contriued this inscription written vpon that side of the Lead that was towards the stone HIC IACET SEPVLTVS REX ARTVRIVS IN INSVLA AVALONIA Heere lieth King Arthur buried in the I le of Aualonia And digging nine foot deeper his body was found in the trunke of a Tree the bones of great bignesse and in his scull perceiued ten wounds the last very great and plainely seene His Queene Guineuer that had beene neere kinswoman to Cador Duke of Cornwall a Lady of passing beautie lay likewise by him whose tresses of haire finely platted and in colour like the gold seemed perfect and whole vntill it was touched but then bewraying what all beauties are shewed it selfe to be dust Giraldus Cambrensis a worthy Author and an eie-witnesse is the reporter of this finding of Arthurs bones and the Crosse of Lead with the Inscription as it was found and taken off the stone was kept in the Treasurie or Reuester of Glastenburie Church saith Stowe till the suppression thereof in the raigne of King Henry the eight whose forme and rude letters we haue here expressed to thy sight The bones of King Arthur and of Queene Guineuar his wife by the direction of Henry de Bloys Nephew to King Henry the second and Abbat of Glastenbury at that present were translated into the great new Church and there in a faire Tombe of Marble his body was laid and his Queenes at his feet which noble Monument among the fatall ouerthrowes of infinite more was altogether raced at the dispose of some then in Commission whose too forward zeale and ouer hastie actions in these behalfes hath left vnto vs a want of many truths and cause to wish that some of their imployments had bin better spent CONSTANTINE 6. Constantine the sonne of Cador Duke of Cornwall and cosen to King Arthur by his alliance in mariage at his death was appointed by him to succeed in his Dominions and most ioifully receiued of the Commons as the man in the opinion of this worthy elector and themselues accounted most fit to defend the Land from the many oppressions of the Saxons who now beganne to spreade the wing as farre as to Tyne in the North and to set downe the limits of their seuerall Kingdomes which notwithstanding these strangers daily enlarged vpon the home-bred Inhabitants the ciuill warres of the Britaine 's giuing way to the same and that not onely among themselues but by the Picts also in the behalfe of the two sonnes of Mordred that sought to dispossesse him of the Crown In which quarrel many battles were fought but with such successe to the attemptors that these two Competitors were forced for refuge into London and Winchester whither Constantine pursued them they taking Sanctuarie in the Churches and not farre from the Altars he slew them for which deede the Priest Gyldas that flourished in those daies in his inuectiue reprehensions thus writeth Britaine hath Kings saith hee but they are Tyrants Iudges it hath but they are wicked pilling and harming the innocent people reuenging and defending but whom Such as be guilty and robbers They haue many wiues yet breake they wedlocke many times swearing yet periure themselues vowing but for the most part with dissembling lies warring but stillmaintaining vniust and ciuill broiles abroad pursuing theeues and yet at home cherish them euen at their owne Tables and sometimes also reward them They giue large almes indeed yet heape they vp sinnes high as the Mountaine They sit in the Seat of sentence yet seldome seeke the rule of right iudgement despising the humble and innocent persons and extolling vp to Heauen proud and bloudie Murderers Theeues and Adulterers yea and if he would permit them the very enemies of God Many they keepe in prison
vomit and became worse then he was before for despising his first mariage he became enamored vpon the wife of his brothers sonne whiles he was liuing and after that he had kept her a certaine time murthered them both In these sinnes hee continued the terme of fiue yeeres and dying without issue left his Crowne to another By these reprehensions of Gyldas it should rather seeme that these Princes liued all together at one and the same time vnto whom hee spake personally and mouth to mouth which could not be if such successions and such yeeres had beene expired as heere is laid downe And therefore not without cause some haue affirmed that these Captaines vsurped authoritie together in diuers parts of the Iland and not successiuely one after another neither indeed as Kings but rather Tyrants polluted with these greeuous sinnes as you haue heard and are so termed by their own Historian that bringeth one more to tyrannize whom neither Monmouth nor hee of Westminster hath spoken of which is Cuneglasus whom hee calleth a Lion tawney Butcher a Beare a Contemner of Religion an Oppressour of the Clergie that fought against God with his many grecuous sinnes and warred vpon man with his martiall weapons Hee saith hee did put away his lawfull wife prouoked the godly with many iniuries was proudly conceited of his owne wisdome and set his whole hope in vncertaine riches If then the head was so sicke could the body be sound that as Beda saith were so set to breake all orders of truth and iustice that scant any token or remembrance thereof remained And for witnesse against them calleth their owne Historian Gyldas that accused them of many impieties and this not the least that those Britaines neglected the preaching of the Gospell to the Saxons For these sinnes assuredly God gaue their Land to another Nation and themselues to exile or to the swords of their enemies Howsoeuer some latter Britaine hath rather excused their sinnes by the ouer-rash zeale of Gyldas whom he tearmeth a Pulpit-Priest but no perfect Historian that beat down sinnes with an ouer-sharpe censure of the sinners as the maner of many Preachers is at this day But saith hee let the true renowne of the Britaine 's appeare to the world and surely so shall it doe for me And againe I returne to my intended purpose CARETICVS 10. CAreticus succeeded Malgo in the gouernment of Britaine as destitute of vertue and fluent in vice as any of these his preceding Kings for it is recorded that hee was a nourisher of dissensions and sowed ciuill warres among his subiects a sinne odible to God and Man and vnto the vnconstant Britaines gaue occasion of his hatred which when the Saxons perceiued was further instigated and with the assistance of Gurmund an Arch-pirate and Captaine of the Norwegians followed against the King who not able to resist them fled into the Towne of Chichester for safety but by the deuice of his pursuers certaine sparrowes being caught and fire fastned to their feet were let flie into the Towne where lighting vpon straw and other matter fit for flaming burnt in short space the whole Citie and Careticus flying beyond Seuerne secured himselfe among the Mountaines of Wales wherein he died after he had vnprosperously raigned three yeeres and from that time foorth saith Randulphus the Britaines lost their whole Kingdome in the East part of the Iland and were confined in the West by the Riuers Seuerne and Dee CADWAN 11. CAdwan after foure and twenty yeeres ciuill dissension maintained among the Britaines euer since they had forgone their Country and betaken themselues to those vast but securing Mountaines of a Ruler only of North-wales was made Gouernour of all those parts a man deseruing well before hee came to that estate and being risen maintained himselfe and subiects in great honour and peace His first affaires against the Saxons was to reuenge the deaths of his Britaines and harmelesse Monkes of Bangor slaine as we haue said by wild Ethelfrid the mighty King of Northumberland who in Field had assembled all their powers wherein the fatall end either of the Britaines or Northumbrians must needs haue ensued had not the quarrell beene staied by the mediation of friends These Kings then and there reconciled embraced peace with such true friendshippe that they continued amitie together so long as they liued Harding saith that this British King Cadwan honorably receiued and worthily cherished Acca whom this King Ethelfrid had put from his bed for the loue he bare vnto his Concubine but is deceiued in making her the mother of Edwin that was his sister and Cadwan to raigne but thirteen yeeres whereas others allot him two and twentie CADWALLO 12. CAdwallo or Cadwallin the sonne of Cadwan was made King ouer the Britaines the yeere of Christs Incarnation six hundred thirty fiue He warred most strongly against the Saxons and either by Conquest or Alliance ioined amitie with Penda the cruell King of the Mercians a Pagan Idolater himselfe by the report of Beda although a Christian in name and profession yet in minde and manners so rude and outragious that hee spared neither womens weaknesse nor childrens innocencie but put all to death with greeuous and bitter torments to fulfill his cruell and vnmercifull tyrannie wasting a long time and raging ouer the Prouinces purposed to exterminate out of the borders of Britanny the whole Nation of the English and to extinguish the very name of them Neither did he ought esteeme any reuerence or honour to the Christian Religion which those men embraced so that ●…en to this day saith he the Britaines custome is to set light by the Faith or Religion of the Englishmen neither will they communicate with them more then with Heathens or Pagans These two cruell Kings slew the most Christian Edwyn King of Northumberland with his sonne Prince Osfride in a great and bloudy battle at Hethfild the yeere of Christs incarnation six hundred thirty three and the yeere following with wicked force saith Beda but with worthy vengeance Cadwallo the Britaine slew Osrike and Eanfrid Kings of Deira and Bernicia that were become Apostataes from their Christian Faiths and that with crueltie and losse of the Saxons as their owne Historians held it fit neither to mention their names in their monethly Calendar nor register the yeere wherin they were slaine in account of their gouernment but assigned it vnto the raigne of their Successour King Oswald which was so obserued vnto his daies so terrible was this worthy Cadwallo and odious the remembrance of this vnfortunate Battle But this cursed Captaine saith he enioied not this felicitie long for the said Oswald to reuenge his brothers death came with a small power but strongly fensed in the faith of Christ and neere to the Riuer Denise gaue him battle wherein himselfe and late-victorious Host were all slain and confounded But we must rememher that Beda
at the hands of Pope Sergius died soone after in the yeere of our Lord six hundred eighty nine and there was buried in S. Peters Church being the last King of the Britaines bloud after they had held possession therof the space of one thousand one hundred thirty and seuen yeeres before the Natiuitie of Christ and six hundred eighty eight yeeres after his Birth as the Chronicle of Wales with other Britaine Writers haue calculated though as is said after the largest size But howsoeuer this sudden alteration was wrought in Cadwallader yet whiles he continued a King in health hee raigned saith Geffrey in great magnanimitie the terme of three yeers and fought many Battles against the Saxons whose sword was euer sheathed with victorie for Lothaire King of Kent he slew in the Field and Edilwach also King of the South-Saxons with the ruine of his Country as the British Historians report and would haue it But Beda vnto whom more credit is heerein to be giuen telles vs that Lothaire was slaine by Edrik his Nephew and Successour declaring the manner and day of his death and that Ceadwall a young man of the West-Saxons bloud royall being banished from among them fell vpon the South-Saxons harrying the Country and killing their King But afterwards lamenting the bloud he had spilt whereat euen Nature her selfe seemed to bee offended in great repentance abandoned his Kingdome and pilgrim-like went vnto Rome where of Pope Sergius he was baptized vpon Easter Euen the yeere from Christs Natiuitie six hundred eightie nine The times thus agreeing their names so neere their deuotions alike Sergius the same ghostly father to both their sepulchers in one and the same Church doe strongly confirme that they both were the same and one only man as we formerly haue said But with this man Cadwallader wheresoeuer he died lay buried the last bloud of their Kings their gouernment and immediatelie the very Name of Britaine for many hundred yeeres ensuing as in the sequell of this Historie Christ assisting shall bee shewed And now at last according to my first intendment I am come to speake of the succession of Great Britaines Monarkes from which vpon the fore-shewed occasions of the Ilands diuision the Saxons possessions and these Britaine Resisters I haue beene ouerlong staied and am forced to returne againe to King Hengist the first of the Saxons that I may shew their succeeding succession in this English Monarchy wherin of necessitie I must desire the patience of my Reader if some things be againe touched that formerlie haue beene spoken the Matter of Historie so much requiring and the Method that to my proceeding I haue herein proposed enforcing it THE SAXONS SVCCESSIONS IN THE MONARCHY OF GREAT BRITAINE WHEREOF HENGIST THE FIRST KING OF KENT BECAME THE FIRST MONARCH OF THE ENGLISHMEN CHAPTER XIII HEngist a Prince of the English-Saxons hauing the Command ouer certaine forces planted in the Low-countries of Germany in the yeere of Christs Incarnation foure hundred and fiftie transported them ouer into Britaine where the fifth yeere after his arriuall he began his Kingdome in Kent hauing surprised his son in law King Vortigern slain his Britaines and seized into his possession the best of the Iland he laid the foundation of a Monarchy and deserueth to be reputed the first Monarch of the English Nation 2 He as all the Saxon Kings besides doth claime his originall from Prince Woden and his wife Fria by Wechta the eldest of their ●…uen sonnes being the fifth in issue from them as thus Himselfe was the sonne of Withtgils who was the sonne of Witha and he the sonne of Wechta the eldest sonne of the Deified Woden This Prince held the supreme Scepter of this Iland for thirty foure yeeres continuance and therein died honorably saith Marianus Scotus But Peter de Ikham Polydore and others say that he was slaine in battell or else taken by Edol Earle of Glocester and beheaded at Conesborow Hee left issue behind him two sonnes and one daughter whose names were Hatwaker Eske and Rowena 3 Hatwaker his eldest sonne is reported by Petrus Albinus of Wittenberg a great Genealogist and Hitoriographer also to be Duke of the Saxons in Germanie and there left to gouerne the people at his Fathers departure for Britaine And if Albinus authority be sufficient he was the Father of Duke Hatwegat and grandfather of ●…erik King of the Saxons ancestor to the valiant Witikindus the principall progenitor of the most noble Familie of the Dukes of Saxony 4 Eske the second sonne of King Hengist came ouer with his Father into Britaine and was his assistant in all his warres wherein he gaue worthy testimonie of his valour whose Kingdome of Kent after his death he enioyed and gaue name to that Countries Inhabitants who were from him called Eskings ouer whom he raigned peaceably twenty yeeres 5 Rowena the daughter of King Hengist was borne in Germany before her Fathers departure and afterwards sent for by him into Britaine to further his designes At whose surpassing beautie and feature Vortigern so lawfull and louing w●… to Paganish bed and to the and griefe of the Nob●… cond wi●…e and the struction By her he had a all lawes either of God wife by whom he had i●…ue ly spent the daies of his life as he was got in that wicked bed This Rowena whom some call Ro●…a by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is accounted the Neece and not the Daug●… 〈◊〉 ●…gist But seeing his opinion is grounded vpon 〈◊〉 youth of Hengist as not sufficient in yeeres to 〈◊〉 a daughter so mariageable I rather thinke and hold this bare testimonie vnable to turne the great streame of other Writers out of their vsuall course and 〈◊〉 chanell ELLA THE FIRST KING OF THE SOVTH-SAXONS AND SECOND MONARCH OF THE ENGLISHMEN CHAPTER XIV ELla a noble Saxon being sent for by King Hengist about the three and twentith yeere of his raigne brought a fresh supply of those Germans to the reliefe of his Countrymen who with his forces landed at the hauen now called Shoreham in Sussex where putting backe the Inhabitants in many skirmishes lastly chased them into a great wood then called Andredflege whence often being assailed by the sudden assaults of the Britaines wherein as may bee thought he lost the liues of his two elder sonnes was so hardly beset that hee sent for more aid of his Saxons who came to his supply 2 His strength thus augmented and ambition still increased he fought three cruell and bloody battels but the last of them most fatall against the Britaines in the place then called Macrodes-burne and besieging the ancient and famous City Anared-Chester situated in the said great forest and chiefe defensible fortresse in all those Southern parts intercepted the Britaines that came to their reliefe and entring the same by an assault put to the sword all that were found within it After which great
losse the Britaines sought rather to prouide for their owne safety by flying into desert places then by making open resistance to procure their owne too apparant destruction 3 Ella in this state continued the time of fiue yeeres before he assumed the name of King o●… the limits of that Prouince assigned vnder his gouernment but then without any shew of resistance laid the foundation of this Kingdome which was the second of the Saxons and as Hengist held Kent so he had Sussex and Surrey for his Possession wherein for six yeeres space with Hengist he liued and that with such approbation of valour as that after his death he became the second Saxon Monarch of the Englishmen in the yeere of grace 488. 4 He is said to be the elder sonne of Osa whose genealogie Florentius of Worcester thus deriueth Osa saith he was the sonne of Ether●…ert and he the sonne of Ingengeat who was the sonne of 〈◊〉 whose father was Alusa the sonne of Ingebrand the sonne of Wegbrand the sonne of Beorn the sonne of Beornus the elder sonne of Brand the sonne of Bealdeag the sixth sonne of prince Woden and of Lady Fria his wife 5 His issue were Kymen Plenching and Cissa three valiant sonnes that came ouer with him and assisted him in his enterprises for Britaine From Kymen the port wherein they arriued was called Kymenishore by the Britaines Cuneueshore which time and seas hath both shortened and altered and now is it called Shoreham a well knowne hauen in Sussex This Prince came to his graue before his Father either by the stroke of warres or by the course of nature without further mention of his acts and his succession cut off by his death 6 Plenching his second sonne was borne vnto him in the Lowe countries of Germany and with his brethren assisted his Father to the attaining of the South-Saxons Crowne but being cut off by vntimely death whether by the hand of the enemy or by natures appointment is vncertaine 7 The yongest sonne of king Ella was Cissa whom death spared to liue a long life but fame as sparing to adorne it with memory of his acts for nothing of him is left memorable besides the building of Chichester Fortune indeed set his fathers Crowne on his head but kept the Imperiall Diademe in her owne hand to adorne the head of a worthier bearer which was Cherdik the West-Saxon vnto whom Cissa gaue yeerely contribution to secure him from the Britaines as before and after hath been and shall bee shewed 8 This Ella his entrance and erection of his Kingdome for time is vncertaine but his raigne therein as also in his Monarchie is more certainelie knowne for hee was King of the South-Saxons the space of thirty two yeeres and Monarch of the English-men six and twenty dying in the yeere of Christs Incarnation fiue hundred and foureteene which was the thirty sixth after his first arriuall into Britaine CHERDIK THE FIRST KING OF THE VVEST-SAXONS AND THIRD MONARCH OF THE ENGLISHMEN CHAPTER XV. THe Saxons Sunne thus risen and high ascended vpon the South of Britaine began now to spreade his beames towards the West for Kent being quietly possessed by King Eske and South-Saxia with all the subdued at the dispose of great Ella Cherdik a valiant Captaine of the Low Country Germans thought himselfe as sufficient in warres and as able to reach at to weare and to weld a Crowne of Estate as either of them that had so done before him and seeing that Britaine was now the seede-plot for Diadems set his affection and preparation that way 2 He with his forces entred in the West of that Iland where he in his first battell so danted the Inhabitants that apparāt signes of approching glory were added to his aspiring hopes for therein hee slew Natanleod otherwise called Nazaleod a mighty King of the Britaines whereby an easie entrance was laid open to his desired Empire and a more easie warre left to his posteritie This battle chanced about the yeere of Christ Iesus fiue hundred and eight and was fought in the region of Natanleod which Country bare the name of the King and neere vnto a brooke of water in the West of Hampshire which from Cherdik began to be called Cherdiks-ford where now a Towne of the same name standeth but by contraction and shortnesse of speech is called Chardford 3 Florentius of Worcester the Saxons Genealogist as I may well terme him bringeth this Cherdik as he doth the rest of the Saxon Kings from the ancient Prince Woden and that in this manner Cherdik saith he was the sonne of Elisius and hee the sonne of Esla the sonne of Gerisius the sonne of Wigga the sonne of Friairin the sonne of Freodegar the brother of Beorn the progenitor of Ida the first King of Bernicia and both of them the sonnes of Brand the sonne of Bealdeag the fift sonne of the foresaid Woden 4 In the seuenth yeere of Ella his Monarchie was his arriuage and six yeeres after hee beganne his Kingdome of the West-Saxons seating himselfe and foundation therof betwixt the Britains and the South-Saxons for whose further securitie Cissa King of that Prouince gaue him an yeerely contribution towards the maintenance of his charge in warre wherein hee got such reputation that after the death of Ella and the thirteenth of his owne raigne hee assumed the Monarchie vnto himselfe and was both the first King of the West-Saxons and the third Monarch of the English-men wherein he continued the space of twentie one yeeres and deceased in the yeere of our Lord fiue hundred thirty fiue being the three and thirtieth of his Kingdome and the fortieth after his first arriuall 5 His issue were two sonnes Kenrik and Chelwolfe the one immediately and the issue of the other collaterally attained to the same possession and title that Cherdike heere first laid 6 Chelwolfe his second sonne for of Kenrik the eldest wee are hereafter to speake hath little mention made among our writers more then that hee was the Ancestour of Eskwin the eight King of the West-Saxons that is to say the father to Kenfrid the father of Kensy which Kensy had issue the said Eskwin who was the Successor of king Kenwalk and predecessor of King Kentwin in the kingdome of the West-Saxnos KENRIK THE SECOND KING OF THE WEST-SAXONS AND FOVRTH MONARCH OF THE ENGLISHMEN CHAPTER XVI KEnrik the eldest sonne of King Cherdick as is said being borne in Germanie and following his father into Britaine valiantly serued vnder him as well in the Battle fought against King Natanleod the first day of his arriuage as in other battles against the Britaines in other places namely at Cherdiksford Cherdisley and in the Conquest of the I le of Wight Immediately vpon the death of his Father he succeeded in his whole dominions and was ordained the second King of the West-Saxons and the fourth Monarch of the Englishmen beginning
his raigne ouer both at one and the same time the yeere of Christ his Natiuitie fiue hundred thirty foure 2 And enlarging his confines vpon the Territories of the Britaines gaue them two great ouerthrowes the one at Searesbery in Wilt-shire and the other at Banbury in Oxford-shire which was fought the two and twentieth of his raigne whereby his fame grew more renowned and his Kingdome in more quiet after He raigned the space of twenty six yeeres and left this life in the yeere of our Lord God fiue hundred sixty 3 He had issue three sonnes Chenl●…e C●…thwolfe and C●…th Chelwin the first succeeded his father in the Monarchie and West-Saxons Kingdome 4 C●…thwolfe the second assisted his brother in many victories as presently in his raigne shall follow And C●…th the third brother famous in his issue though mentionlesse for action in himselfe whereof more largely hath beene spoken in the raigne of Kenrik as he was King only of the West-Saxons CHEVLINE THE THIRD KING OF THE VVEST-SAXONS AND FIFTH MONARCH OF THE ENGLISHMEN CHAPTER XVII CHeuline the eldest sonne of King Kenrike serued with great commendations vnder his father in all his warres against the Britains and is specially mentioned at the Battle of Banbury in Oxford-shire and after his fathers death became the third King of the West-Saxons and the fifth Monarch of the Englishmen Hee much enlarged the bounds of his Kingdome and increased the power and glorie of the West-Saxons 2 For continuing the warres where his Father left did not onely subdue the Britaines in many Battles but also set himselfe against his owne Nation the Saxons and sought to impose the scope of his power vpon the South of the Riuer Thames for entring Kent whose King was then a childe by name Ethelbert the sonne of Imerik at Wiphandun or Wilbandun in Surrey in a set and sore Battle defeated all his forces whence the young King was chased and two of his greatest Captaines bearing the names of Dukes were slaine as we haue said 3 Not long after this victory he set his minde to inlarge his West-Saxons Dominions vpon the possession of the declining Britaines and to that end furnished forth a great Band of his Souldiers whereof he made his brother Cuthwin chiefe Generall These marching to Bedford gaue Battle to the Britaines where they slew them downe-right and surprized soure of their chiefest Townes at that time called Liganburge Eglesbourgh Bensington and Eusham which they fortified to their owne strength and the Britaines great losse 4 And following the Tract of his fore-going fortunes about six yeeres after sent forth againe his Saxons vnder 〈◊〉 conduct of the foresaid Cuthwin who encountred the Britaines at Di●…th or Deorham with such valour and successe that besides great slaughter of the British Souldiers three of their Kings whose names were Coinmagill Candidan and Farimnagill fell in the Field with the surprizall of these three Cities Glocester Bathe and Cirencester Then saith Gyldas euidently appeared the Lands destruction the sins of the Britaine 's being the only cause when neither Prince nor People Priest nor Leuite regarded the Law of the Lord but disobediently wandred in their owne waies 5 But no greater were the sinnes of the Britains then the vnsatiable desires of the Saxons were to conquer for Cheuline about the last of Malgoe his gouernment met the Britaines at Fethanleah in the face of a Field which was fought out to the great slaughters of them both and with the death of Prince Cuth King Cheulins sonne notwithstanding the victorie fell on his side with great spoiles obtained and possessions of many Prouinces which himselfe no long time enioied 6 For growne proud through his many prosperous victories against his enemies and tyrannizing ouer his owne Subiects the West-Saxons fell into such contempt that they ioined with the Britaine 's for his destruction The greatest against him was disloyall Chell or Cealrik his nephew the sonne of Cuthwin his most loyall brother whom both the Nations had elected for Generall Vnder him they muster and march into Wilt-shire and at Wodnesbeothe now Wannes-ditch pitch downe their Standards Cheuline that thought hee lead fortune in a lease with confident boldnesse built his present proceedings vpon his former successe and in the face of his enemies displaied his colours But the Battles ioined and the Field goared with bloud the day was lost vpon the Kings side and he in distresse saued himselfe by flight Heere might you haue seene the world as it is vnconstant and variable for he a Mars that had ouer-borne the Britains in so many Battles and had raised his Saxons vnto so great a height is forced to flee before his conquered Captiues and to exile himselfe from the sight of his owne Subiects after he had gloriously raigned thirty one yeeres or as some will thirty three and as a meane man died in his banishment the yeere of grace fiue hundred ninety two 7 He had issue two sonnes which were Cuth and Cuthwin the elder whereof had valiantly serued in his fathers warres namely at Wimbledone in Surry against King Ethelbert and his power of Kentishmen in the yeere of Christ fiue hundred sixty seuen and lastly in the Battle at Fethanleah where the Britaines receiued a great ouerthrow Notwithstanding as hee was valiantly fighting among the thickest of his enemies hee was there slain in the yeere of our Lord fiue hundred eighty foure being the fiue and twentieth yeere of his fathers raigne and that without issue 8 Cuthwin the younger sonne of King Cheuline suruiued his father but succeeded him not because of his young yeeres or else and that rather for the hatred that his father had purchased of his Subiects which they repaied him in his owne expulsion and in this his sonnes depriuation But although the wreath of the West-Saxons did not adorne this Cuthwines head yet shone it more bright and stood with greater maiesty vpon the browes of Ina the warlike and zealous King of West-Saxons and of Egbert the victorious and first sole absolute Monarch of the English Empire both of them in a right line issued from this Cuthwin as in the seuenth Chapter we haue said ETHELBERT THE FIFTH AND FIRST CHRISTIAN KING OF KENT AND THE SIXTH MONARCH OF THE ENGLISHMEN HIS WIVES AND ISSVE CHAPTER XVIII THe flame of the West-Saxons for a time thus quenched the Lampe of Kent began againe to shine and to assume the Title of the Monarchie after it had beene suppressed in them through the raignes of these foure last Kings for young Egberts entrance with the great losse of his Kentish ouerthrowne by King Cheuline gaue rather inducements to a tributary subiection then any apparant hopes to purchase an Empire 2 But such is the dispose of God in his hidden Counsell that things of least appearance many times become the greatest in substance as in this Prince it was euidently seene who making
Ensigne as that which here is called Tufa Iustus Lipsius in his Commentarie vpon that place in Vegetius lib. 3. cap. 5. where the seuerall Ensignes of the Romans are recited doth declare correcting that place of Vegetius where Rufa was set for Tufa by this place of Bede and in the same shewing that Tufa signified a Ball as the Ball by the example of Augustus was an Ensigne of Monarchie or absolute gouernment 9 But as the Sunne hath his rising his height and descent and euer is moouing in the circle of his celestiall orbe so man hath his birth time being and death and till then is neuer staied in one certaine point Kings therefore as they be Kings are the Suns of their owne world but as they are men goe to the shadow of death neither can the strength of their power wisdome or policie loue or applause stay the hand heere that holds the fatall knife for so in this King Edwin wee see raised aboue hope to attaine the Diademe and ruling in loue and liking of the people was notwithstanding cut off in the midst of his glorie and greatnesse of strength 10 For Penda the stout Mercian enuying his peace and Cadwallo the Britaine seeking to receiue his right ioined in friendship against this Monarch and met him as his enemies in the face of a Field The plaine was large and called Hethfeild where after a long and most bloudie fight king Edwin was slaine with prince Offryd his sonne his whole Host put to the sword or most shamefull flight which chanced the fourth of October the yeere of our Lord six hundred thirty three the sixth of his Christianitie the seuenth of his Monarchie the seuenteenth of his kingdome and the forty seuenth of his age His bodie was lastly buried in S. Peters Church at Strea●…shall after called Whitby His Wiues 11 Quenburg his first wife was the daughter as Beda reporteth of Ceorle but as all other Writers doe witnesse of Crida King of Mercia She was married vnto him in the beginning of his youth and when he was dispossessed of his inheritance by the Tyrant Etheifrid as we haue said with him shee liued a great part of his banishment and in the Court of Redwald King of the East-Angles deceased before her husband could recouer his Kingdome 12 Ethelburg surnamed Tate was the second wife of this King who was the daughter of Ethelbert King of Kent and of Queene Berta his first wife She was married vnto him in the yeere of grace six hundred twentie fiue being the second of his Monarchy and was his wife six yeeres but suruiuing him and desirous to liue a religious life shee returning into Kent withdrew her selfe to a place not far from the Sea side called Lymming wherein shee built a Monasterie of Nunnes and among them spent the rest of her life and therein died and was there buried His Issue 13 Offride the eldest sonne of King Edwine and Quenberg his first wife was borne in the time of his fathers exile among the East-Angles He was baptized in the faith of Christ by Paulinus the first Archbishop of Yorke and was slaine the same day and in the same battell that his father was He had a sonne named Iffy who was baptized also by Bishop Paulins and after the death of his father and grand-father for feare of King Oswald was conueied ouer the Seas into France to bee brought vp in the Court of King Dagobert where he died in his childhood and was there honourably interred 14 Edfrid the second sonne of King Edwine and Lady Quenberg his first wife was borne in the time of his fathers exile and baptized with his brother Offrid by Bishop Paulinus After his fathers death for feare of King Oswald hee fled to Penda King of Mercia who was his fathers enemie and his mothers kinsman by whom hee was most treacherously murthered He left behind him a son named Hererik who by his wife Bertswith had issue the vertuous learned lady Hilda Abbesse of Streansbalch Queen Hereswith her sister the wife of Ethelbere King of the East-Angles brother to King An●…a by whom shee had issue Ald wolfe Elswold and Beorne all three succeeding Kings of the East-Angles 15 Ethelme the third sonne of King Edwine and the first of Queen Ethelburg his second wife was baptized by Paulinus Arch-bishop of Yorke not long after his father and halfe-brethren but in short space after his baptisme he departed out of this world euen in the time that he wore the white attire which in those daies was vsed to bee worne by such as were newly baptized for a certaine space His body was with all due funerall obsequies enterred within the new Church of S. Peter in the Citie of Yorke which his father had newly founded 16 Vskfrea the fourth sonne of King Edwine and the second of Queene Ethelburg his second wife and the last and youngest of them both bare the name of his fathers great grandfather He was baptized by the Arch-bishop Paulinus at one time with his brother Ethelme After the decease of his father his mother carried him with her out of Northumberland into Kent and from thence conueied him ouer into France with his Nephew Iffy the sonne of his halfe-brother Offrid where hee continued in the custodie of King Dagobert being his mothers cosen-german and there died and was honourably buried in a Church with his Nephew Iffy 17 Eanfled the elder daughter of King Edwine and Queene Ethelberg his second wife was borne the night following that her father was wounded and baptized hee being a Pagan Shee was afterwards married to Oswy the fourth King of Northumberland and tenth Monarch of the Englishmen as shall bee said 18 Etheldrid the younger daughter the fifth and last-borne child to King Edwine and of Queene Ethelburge was baptized at the same time with Ethelwe and Vskfrea her brethren She died an infant the white clothing not yet put off which in those daies was vsually worne at certaine set times after their baptisme and was with like funerall obsequies buried by her brother Ethelwe in the Church of S. Peters in Yorke which their father had founded OSVVALD KING OF NORTHVMBERLAND AND THE NINTH MONARCH OF THE ENGLISHMEN HIS RAIGNE WIFE AND ISSVE CHAPTER XXI OSwald the fifth King of Deira the ninth of Bernicia the third of Northumberland and the ninth Monarch of the Englishmen began his raigne the yeere of Christs incarnation six hundred thirty foure He with Eanfrith and his brethren the sonnes of wilde Ethelfrid and Osrik also the sonne of Alfrid King Edwins Vncle had been secured in Scotland all his raigne and among the Red-shanks liued as banished men where they learned the true religion of Christ and had receiued the Lauer of Baptisme But Edwines death wrought and divulged these Princes returne again to their Country and the Northumbrians Kingdome lately gouerned by one was now againe diuided into two seuerall parts as formerly it had been 2
rights whereupon the King gaue the same to his sonne Iohn whose Coronation stung with the like before his father onely did delay at such time as two Cardinales offered to celebrate that solemnitie 92 At Windsor therefore his father giuing him the Order of knight-hood at which time hee was about twelue yeeres old sent him foorth with into Ireland where the Arch-bishop of Dublin and the State entertained him but by reason of such parsimonie toward his souldiers as was vsed hee returned the same yeere without doing much but not without hauing wasted the most part of his Armie in skirmishes with the Irish. His Stile in his seale of Ireland though Houeden saith his father made him Regem a●…king was onely Sigillum Iohannis filij regis Angliae Domini Hiberniae Lord of Ireland 93 King Henrie hearing now that his martiall sonne Earle Richard had fortified in Poictou against him and vanquished Geffrey Earle of Britane prepares a puissant armie vpon terror whereof Richard came in rendring vp Poictou to his mother Elienor whose inheritance it was at his fathers commandement The same yeere wherein the West was thus defiled with vnnaturall diuisions the East was likewise polluted with the cursed Apostasie of one Richard de S. Albane whom wee shame to thinke was English who renouncing the Christian beleefe vpon the Patriarcks discomfortable returne became a principall Commander vnder the Sultan of Babilon Saladine whom the Christians draue with losse and slaughter of his armie from Hierusalem But on the other side reuenge of disobedience still pursued Gef frey sonne of King Henrie who was in a Torneament at Paris troden to death vnder the horse feete A miserable end and a fearefull 94 About which times betweene the French and English all things stoode vnsure now warre then peace and warre againe by reason that Philip who had been crowned King some yeeres before during the life of Lewis challenging the custodie of Arthur the Posthumus sonne and heire of Geffrey Earle of Britane and sometimes one thing and sometime another could not haue his will Whiles Earle Richard turning to Philip against his Father but obtaining a truce for two yeeres such amity if there be any amity among mighty Princes grew between king Philip and Earle Richard Heire apparant of England and Normandy c. that one bed and boord serued both The Father perplexed cals his sonne home who pretending many griefes as the detention of Alice his Spouse the doubt of disinherison and other things stood out againe and againe after a while submits to his Father Then bursts forth Philip into Armes and things so standing the heauy newes of Ierusalem lost flew into Christendom When this City was formerly recouered by Godfrey of Bolein an Vrban was Pope a Fredericke was Emperour an Heraclius Patriarch so now when it was lost an Vrban was Pope a Fredericke was Emperor and an Heraclius Patriarch 95 Vpon these news Henry and Philip meet and for the honour of God laying downe displeasure in presence of William Archbishop of Tyre at which time some say a Crosse appeared in the aire take vpon them as Souldiers of Christ the badge of the Crosse and there the better to distinguish themselues it was agreed that the French should weare read Crosses the English White and the Flemish Greene. And this determination was seconded with warlike preparations leuies of money and institution of martiall Discipline all which notwithstanding nothing went forward 96 At Richard began the breach of this honourable confederation who taking reuenge vpon certaine Rebels of his in Poictou who brooked not his hard hand one mischiefe drew another and at the last both the Kings of England and France became parties to the quarrell greatly against the minde of K. Henry whose heart was firmely 〈◊〉 as it seems to reuenge the cause of Christ vpon Sultan Saladine for that in his answere to the Patriarch of Antioch imploring aide he concludes That among other Princes himselfe and sonne reiecting this worlds glory and despising all pleasures whatsoeuer and setting behind all things which were of this World would in their owne person with their whole Forces by the fauour of the Lord speedily visite him And sure the state of those parts required it Saladine hauing slaine many of the Knights Templars and Nobles and aboue thirty thousand footmen with innumerable other in Cities and Townes by him subdued Among all which grieuous accidents we cannot to season sower therby with sweet omit one noble protestation made by the chiefe crossed Lords Philip Earle of Flanders the Earle of Bloys and other who being required to take parts made answere That they would not contrary to their promise to God put armour on against any Christian till they had done their deuoire against Saladine 97 In the treaties therefore between Henry and Philip the demaunds of Philip on the behalfe of Richard were such and so vnsafe for the King as that all his subiects should sweare fealty to Richard during the Fathers life but yet reseruing their allegiance to the Father that Richard apparantly fell off and became Liegeman for Normandy c. to Philip King of France and at a new Treaty by mediation of a Cardinall Legate the demaunds of Philip being more hard then before as that King Henry should not onely settle the Kingdome vpon Richard but take Iohn also with him into Palestine or that otherwise Richard would not goe being iealous of his brothers grace with his Father Henrie would consent to none of those insolent propositions but disdaining to seeme to be enforced they betooke them selues on all sides to their swords 98 The effect whereof was that former good fortunes forsaking King Henry hee sustained many losses by the Armies of King Philip and Richard was driuen out of Mentz in Main the city where he was born which he loued aboue all other places by firing of the Suburbes before the enemy came being casually consumed hee was glad to yeeld to such conditions as it pleased Philip to prescribe It is written that at the meeting of these two Kings the skie being cleare a thunderbolt stroke betweene them and after a little pause comming together againe it thundered more terribly so that Henry had falne off his horse but that his people sustained him whereupon hee came presently to an end though it were to his vnspeakable griefe his Kingly heart being vsed to giue and not to take conditions 99 Fearefull was the speech which King Henrie when hee abandoned Mentz by reason of the fire vttered against Richard which was That sith he had taken from him that day the thing that hee most loued in this world he would requite him for after that day hee would depriue him of that thing which in him should best please a Child to wit his Heart But after the peace concluded vpon mediation between the sides another thing strucke neerer for finding the name of his
secure and guard his person also bands of Souldiers to attend his commaund amongst which were 200. the choice Knightsof France all which in very pompous Troupes followed him with Philips directions and also supply of great summes of money into Poictou to reduce those partes to his Allegiance which was no hard matter to effect the greater part of Commaunders there being fore-wrought expecting nothing more and the better part suspecting nothing lesse then these perfidious assaults 17 Queene Eleanor Regent of those prouinces attended with a very slender guard yet strong inough for daies of quiet which both her Age did now desire and her Homage done to Philip and Philips faire shewes to her did promise hauing no speedier notice of those incursions then the vnpleasing effects thereof for on Arthurs good successes K. Philip proclaimed him Lord of those Dominions betooke her selfe into Mirabeau one of the most tenable townes in Poictou sending to King Iohn whose force●… were then in Normandy and Mayne repressing or preuenting Philips attempts for present aids Which yet could not so speedily come but Arthur who knew that vpon seisure of such a prize as Eleanour hee might draw her sonne to any conditions had preuented them besieged her and possessed himselfe of her towne though not of her person as some by mis-understanding haue mis-related For she retiring into the Castle made it good against her Grandchilds incessant batterie about which whiles he with his continuall supplies of Poit●…ine and Anio●…ine princes was indefatigably busied King Iohns Army neere at hand for his expedition both by day and night to his mothers rescue is recorded as admirable brought the newes of their owne approch which caused the great Army of the Leagers so industrious before to impeach others no lesse sollicitous now to defend themselues Both Armies martially ranged Arthurs Battalions not onely vndauntedly but also very pompously comming on to the shocke the fight proued most fierce and terrible each side resoluing by reason of both the Competitors presence in the field that the End and vpshot of all their designes depended on that dayes succese which in the end by the fortunate prowesse of King Iohn and his English fell disastrouslie on Arthur his French and other Assistants who after a great slaughter made amongst them turning their backs to him from whom they had before turned their Faithes tooke their flight towards the Towne to shelter their liues within those walles which so late the Seat of their triumphes became now the cage of their captiuation and the Toombe of all Arthurs ambitious hopes though himselfe so vnhappy as to suruiue them for together with the tumultuary flyers the victorious King his Armie entred renued a most bloudy fight repossessed the Town freed his mother enthralled his Enemies and recouered all the prouinces which had reuolted 18 This victory was so glorious to King Iohn and so dreadful to his Enemies for King Philips two chiefe confederates Arthur and Hugh Brun Raymund Father to Guido the husband of Constancia all the Peeres of Poictou and Aniou aboue 200. French Knights and others of command besides the vulgar multitudes were taken prisoners that both then King Philip though very hote in the siege of Argues in Normandy presently cooled and confounded with newes thereof brake vppe his fortnights fiege and returned home and since the French fawning fauourites and King Iohns maligners haue sought to extenuate the matter auerring against all truth of record that it was exploited before the French were come to Arthurs aide and when all his Souldiers were both vnarmed and vnordered But as others highly extolling king Iohns valour herein interprete those fore-doomes of Merlin to haue beene ment of him that hee should hee crowned with the head of a Lion should cut out the tongues of Bulles and lay yron chaines on the backes of r●…ring Beasts and indeed hee chained them hand and foot and so conuayed them away in Carts a kind of riding till then vnusuall with them so King Iohn himselfe duely acknowledging the greatnesse of Gods goodnesse therein sent his Letters to all his Barons wheresoeuer thereby to encourage the loiall and hold in awe the tomultuous inciting them so render all prayse vnto God for so admirable a worke and so gratious assistance and soone after hee dispersed his noblest Captiues into sundrie Castles in Normandy and England Arthurs sister Eleanor called the Damosell of Britaine being committed to Bristow Castle where shee long liued with very honour able vsage And though the kings displeasure was iustly incensed against her brother Arthur for so frequent wauering in his faith yet meaning to trie all meanes of winning him who had thus lost himselfe hee sent for him being then at Falaise in the custody of Hubert L. Chamberlain and entreated him very gently promising him all honourable respects if as yet he would resolue to forsake the French kings amity and frame both his mind for hearty loue and his Actions for peaceable obseruance towardes him his vncle and Leege Lord. Which exceeding clemency the ill-aduised young Gentleman for what wisedome is it to shew pride where wee neede mercy and to giue threates beyond possibility of performance requited onely with arrog●…nt and vndutifull language furiously obraiding the king with violent and fraudulent detention of the English Crowne which menacingly he there required of him and allother King Richards Countries as his lawfull inheritance affirming with an Oath that vnlesse he did forthwith restore them hee should not long line in peace With which incorrigible pertinacy the King prouoked as seeing no place left to better hopes committed him to stricter custody vnder Robert de Veypont in the Castle of Roan 19 The Britaines fury and conspiracies which King Iohn hoped to abate by this their Princes durance were thereby much more augmented like Serpents most strugling with their traines when they feele their head in pressure Which moued the King who was now returned into England and in triumph of his late victory wore his crowne againe at Canterbury at the cost of his former host to take aduise of his Councell touching his troubled affaires whose sentence was if wee will credite the reporter that Arthur should loose his eyes But the escaping of such tortures is by some ascribed to the commiseration of Lord Hubert by others to the mediation of Queene Eleanor who interceded with her Sonne for her Grandchild as long as she liued which was not long Deathes vnpartiall hand and griefe of heart some say laying that great prudent Queen the wife of two mighty Kings and mother of three where Princes and Pesants are all equals Her Nephew much behind
August His fame grew principally by martiall deedes in the great warres of France vnder Edward the third but spred and setled it selfe by good workes among which the goodly stone-bridge at Rochester in Kent was one 46 In the meane space the wars of Wales were managed by Prince Henry who tooke the Castle of Aberistwith but Owen Glendowr soone after got it againe by faire fraud and thrust into it a Garrison of his owne Thus Owen prospered for a time but the Earle of Northumberland and Lord Bardolf forsaking Wales and seeking to raise a force in the North were encountred by the Sherife of Yorkeshire who after a sharpe conflict slew the Earle in the field and so wounded the Lord Bardolf that hee died thereof The Earles head was cut off which being first ignominiously carryed through London was fixed vpon the Bridge The King hauing thus vanquished his chiefe enemies went to Yorke where inquiries were made for the Earles adherents of which he condemned ransomed and emprisoned many The Abbot of Hales because hee was taken fighting on the Earles behalfe had sentence to die which was executed vpon him by hanging In fortaine and transmarine parts the Kings affaires had mixt successe for Edmund Earle of Kent at the siege of Briant in Britaine was strucken with a quarrell into the head whereof hee died but yet after he had first taken the said Castell and leueld it with the earth 47 The peace of Christendome hauing beene long tempestuously troubled by a Schisme raised by ambition of opposite Popes wherof the one was chosen at Rome the other at Auinion by contrarie factions of the Cardinals A generall Councel was summoned to bee held at Pisa in Italie whither the King of England sent his Ambassadors and the Clergy elected Robert Alum Chancellour of Oxford Bishoppe of Sarum to signifie that vnlesse both the Popes would giue ouer their Papacie neither of them should thenceforward be acknowledged for Pope The King in his letter then sent to Pope Gregory chargeth him as Platina likewise doth with Pertury and that this Papall emulation had beene the cause of the murther of more then two hundreth and thirty thousand Christians slaine in warres There assembled a great number of Cardinals Archbishops Bishops and mitred Prelates who elected a new Pope Alexander 5. a man trained vp at Oxford where hee tooke degree in Theologie reiecting the two others who long and bitterly had contended for the place The King also cals his Parliament to find out meanes for more money to the custody and charge whereof hee ordained Sir Henry Scrope creating him Treasurer as Thomas Beaufourt the Kings halfe brother Lord Chancellour In which Parliament was reuiued the sacrilegious Petition of spoiling the Church of England of her goodly patrimonies which the pietie and wisdome of so many former ages had congested But the King who was bound by oath and reason to preserue the flourishing estate of the Church detested their wicked proposition and for that cause denied all other their requests The Duke of Burgundies prouisions which he had made to reduce Caleys to the French dominions stored at Saint Omars were consumed with casuall fire to ashes 48 About these times the great and bloudy factions betweene the Dukes of Burgundy and Orleance brake forth The cause was for a murther committed vpon Lewis brother to the French king and father of the said Duke of Orleance as he came late one night from the Queenes lodging who at that time lay in of a child The murtherers to preuent pursuit strewed galthrops behind them The Duke of Burgundie iustified the fact for that Lewis had as hee said laboured with the Pope to put the King from his seat vpon pretence that hee was as vnfit to gouerne as euer Childericke was whom Pope Zacharie pronounced against This prepared the way for that scourge wherwith God meant to chastice the pride and sinnes of France Each partie sought to fortifie it selfe with friends aswel at home as abroad The Duke of Burgundie had the King and the Dolphin on his side the other had the Kings of Nauar and Arragon the Dukes of Berrie and Britaine with many of the mightiest Earles and Lords The Duke of Burgundie who together with the King and the face of gouernment kept in Paris perceiuing his aduersaries strengthes to bee more then his owne offers to the King of England a daughter of France in marriage with the Prince and many great promises so as hee would ioyne in defence of the King send ouer competent forces whereunto hee is said to haue answered Our aduise is that you should not in this case aduenture battell with your enemie who seems to prosecute a tust reuenge for the death of his Father but labour to asswage the displeasure and anger of the exasperated yong man by all the good meanes which are possible If that cannot bee then stand vpon your guard and draw into place of most safety with such force of men as may best serue for your defence After all this if hee will not bee appeased you may with the better conscience encounter him and in such case wee will not faile more fully to assist according as you request For the present he sent ouer the Earls of Arundel and Kyme and many men of Armes with plenty of English Bow-men who came safe to Paris where they in nothing diminished the ancient glory of their nation but behaued themselues valiantly 49 The Duke of Orleance and the Peeres of his faction seeing their successe consult how to draw the King of England from their enemie and thereupon send ouer one Falconet and others with solemne letters of credence whom they made their irreuocable Procurators to entreat agree and conclude on their behalfes with the most excellent Prince Henry by the grace of God King of England and his most noble sonnes c. for the restitution and reall redeliuerie of the Dutchie of Aquitain with all the rights and appurtenances which as is affirmed are the inheritance of the said most excellent Lord the King of England by them to bee made and done c. The Ambassadors hauing shewed forth this Proxie exhibited the points of their negotiation in these Articles by which wee may see how farre the desire of reuenge will transport great minds 1 They offer their bodies to be imployed against all men for the seruice of the King of England sauing their faith to their owne Soueraigne as knowing the King of England would not otherwise desire them 2 Their sonnes daughters nephewes Neeces and all their Cosens to bestow in marriage at the King of Englands pleasure 3. Their Castles Townes treasure and all their goods to be at the seruice of the sayd King 4. Their friends the Gentlemen of France the Clergy and wealthy Burgers who are all of their side as by proofe they said shall well appeare 5. They finally
offer to him the Dutchy of Aquitaine entire and in as full a manner as euer his Predecessors enioyned the same without excepting any thing so as they themselues will hold and acknowledge to hold their lands in those parts directly of the said King and deliuer as much of them as they can into his possession and will doe their vtmost to conquer the rest for him Vpon condition on the other side 1. That the King of England and his Successors should assist the said Lords against the Duke of Burgundy for the murther committed vpon the person of the late Duke of Orleance 2. That he should assist against the said Duke of Burgundy and his fauourers till they had repaired all the losses which they their friends and tenants had susteined through that ●…ccasion 3. That he should help to settle the quiet of the realme c. 50 These Offers being put into the balance with the Articles vpon which the Duke of Burgundy had obteined succours ouerweighed them so farre that about the midst of August before all those which had beene sent with the Earle of Arundel to the contrarie part were returned into England aydes were decreed to the Duke of Orleance to the wonder of all men who vnderstood not the secret so that Thomas Duke of Clarence Edward Duke of Yorke the Earle of Dorcet and very many other principall men with a competent puissance were sent ouer to ayde the Duke of Orleance the Earle of Angolesme remaining hostage in England for the sure payment of one hundred and nine thousand Crownes for performance of the other Articles They came on shore in Normandy but whither the confederates moued with the perill into which their Country Nation should by these meanes be precipitated or for some other causes though none indeed so iust as the sorrow and shame for their so disloyall a combination with the Capitall enemies of France the Duke of Orleance contrary to agreement came not at the appointed time and place whereupon the English burnt spoiled and tooke much riches in the Castles Countrey and good Townes therewith to satisfie themselues till the Duke of Orleance should see them payd At last yet the Dukes of Clarence and Orleance came to a treaty after which the English campe rose peaceably and marcht into Aquitaine there to winter it selfe the Duke of Orleance returning to his owne While these matters were in hand the Lord of Heyle Marshall of France with many other Lords and about foure thousand men of armes layd siege to a certaine strong place in Gascoigne which Sir Iohn Blunt Knight with three hundred souldiers not onely defended but draue them also from the siege taking prisoners twelue of the principall and about sixe score other Gentlemen * The King liued not to see the carriage and fortune of these warres for falling sicke at Eltham in the Christmas time at which our ancient authors begin to draw the circles of their yeeres but recouering himselfe a little he repaired to London about Candlemas there to hold a Parliament the end whereof he liued not to see but vpon the twentieth day of March finished his short but politicke and victorious reigne in peace and honour had not the iniustice of his first entrance left a dishonorable stayne vpon his worthiest actions 51 The vulgar Chronicles tell vs a strange Story the truth whereof must rest vpon the reporters The King say they lying dangerously sicke caused his Crowne to bee set on a Pillow at his beds head when suddainely the pangs of his Apoplexie seizing on him so vehemently that all supposed him dead the Prince comming in took away the Crown which his father reuiuing soone missed and calling for his sonne demanded what the meant to bereaue him of that whereto hee had yet no right The Prince boldlie replied Long may you liue Soueraigne Father to weare it your selfe but all men deeming you were departed to inherite another Crowne this being my right I tooke as mine owne but now doe acknowledge for none of mine and thereupon he set the Crowne againe where he found it Oh sonne quoth hee with what right I got it God onely knoweth who forgiue me the sinne howsoeuer it was got sayd the Prince I meane to keepe and defend it when it shall bee myne with my sword as you by sword haue obtained it Which the King hearing hee entered discourse of aduise shewing him that hee feared some discord would arise betwixt him and his brother Thomas Duke of Clarence who with better respect had borne forth his youth then Prince Henry had done and whose distemper was like to breed great troubles if it were not in time stayed If my brethren quoth Henry will be true subiects I will honour them as my brethren but if otherwise I shall assoone execute iustice vpon them as on the meanest of birth in my Kingdome The King reioycing at this vnexpected answere both prudently and Christianly charged him before God to minister the law indifferently to ease the oppressed to beware of flatterers not to deferre iustice nor yet to be sparing of mercy Punish quoth hee the oppressors of thy people so shalt thou obtaine fauour of God and loue and feare of thy Subiects who whiles they haue wealth so long shalt thou haue their obedience but made poore by oppressions will be ready to make insurrections Reioyce not so much in the glory of thy Crowne as meditate on the burthenous care which accompanieth it mingle loue with feare so thou as the heart shalt be defended in the midst of the body but know that neither the heart without the members nor a King without his Subiects helpe is of any force Lastly my sonne loue and feare God ascribe all thy victories strength friends obedience riches honour and all vnto him and with the Psalmist say with all thankes Not vnto vs Lord not vnto vs but to thy holy name be giuen the laud and praise 52 Vpon what soile these most Christian true and excellent Councels fell the following life will shew being nothing else but a full representation in act of such things as are here in precept only shewing to the world how diuine a beautie Christian goodnes hath His Wiues 53 The first wife of King Henry the fourth was Mary one of the daughters and heires of Humfrey de Bohum Earle of Hereford Essex and Northampton Constable of England c. Shee dyed An. D. 1394. before he came to the Crowne 54 His second wife was Ioane Queene daughter to Charles the first King of Nauarre shee being the widow of Iohn de Montford Sirnamed Streani Duke of Britaine and died without any Children by King Henry at Hauering in the Bower in the County of Essex 1437. the tenth day of Iulie in the fifteenth yeere of Henry the sixt and was buried by her husband at Canterbury His Children 55 Henry the Prince of Wales Duke of Cornewall Earle of Chester and afterward King
Chancellor as being a person very dangerous vnto both 10 The news of these home-contentions comming to the Duke of Bedford into France easily drew him home though the state of that Realme could not well want his presence For Iohn Duke of Britaine notwithstanding his late renouation of league with the Regent at Amiens iealous of the English greatnes turned sodeinely to Charles and with him Arthur Earle of Richmond his brother This puts fresh spirit into the drooping Prince Arthur is by Charles made Constable of his France in place of the Scottish Earle who was slaine at the bloody Battell of Vernoil The Duke of Britaine ouerliues this reuolt but a small time Arthur to declare his forwardnes on the behalfe of Charles assembleth about twenty thousand men and with them sodeinely besiegeth S. Iean a Towne of Normandy vpon the frontier of Britaine which Edmund Duke of Sommerset Gouernour of Normandy had lately fortified and stuft with souldiers The vnexpected arriuall of the French did greatly at the first perplex the English but vpon better aduise they valiantly sallied out vpon them both before and behind which stroke so great terrour into the enemy that with losse of their Artillery and many of their people they forsooke the siege To redeeme this dishonour he turnes his fury vpon the Countrey of Angio●… which in many parts he depopulates and spoiles The Regent being resolued to returne into England leaues behind him Bea●…champ Earle of Warwicke as lieutenant who was lately arriued in France hauing six thousand fresh Souldiers in his company 11 The presence of the Duke of Bedford Regent of France was to the State of England very necessary For the wisdome and authority of so great a Prince being eldest vncle to the King and one whom many great deedes made famous allaied the distemper which he found at his arriual It was a worke worthy of his labour and he also found it to be a worke indeed and not easily effectuable The differences were debated first at Saint Albans then at Northampton lastly in a Parliament at Leicester which continued there till toward the end of Iune The Duke of Bedford himselfe to auoid the note of partiality for that his brother of Glocester was a party did not intermeddle otherwise then as in Generall words to perswade amity but the whole cause was referred to arbitrators of greatest Nobility and prudence by whose endeuours all those differences and greeuances were equally thrust into one sacke to be sealed vp for euer by obliuion and without mention of amends on either side the Duke and Bishop the one hauing sworne by his Princehood the other by his Priesthood truly to obserue the award shooke hands and were fully for that time reconciled After which holy and necessary worke of priuate attonements ensued acts of festiuitie and honor For in the same Towne of Leicester the young King not then fiue yeeres of age was at the high feast of Pentecost dubbed Knight by the Regent of France Immediately whereupon the King honored Richard Earle of Cambridge who by the fatall errour of the Counsell was at this Parliament created Duke of Yorke the same who was father to Edward the fourth with the order of knighthood and about forty more with him This Richard Duke of Yorke was hee who brought vpon this Kingdome and nation most dolefull diuisions to the vtter extirpation of all the male lines of either house that is to say his owne and that of Lancaster whereof the young King was head From Leicester the King was conueighed to Killingworth and Thomas Duke of Excester dying Beauchamp Earle of Warwicke was constituted Guardian and Tutor to the King 12 The Regent hauing thus worthily prouided for the quiet estate of the King and Country returns to his charge in France There went ouer at the same time a choise and great number of fresh men vnder the conduct of that immortally renowmed the L. Talbot whose victories saith Polydor were so many that his name was not onely most dreadfull to the French but most famous through the world euen at this present That yee may know the man not to haue beene studious of fine Phrases vpon the one side of his sword-blade was engrauen Sum Talboti and vpon the other this boisterous blunt sentence Pro vincere inimicos meos The Duke of Alanzon taken at the Castell of Vernoil was set at liberty vpon payment of two hundreth thousand Scutes of gold At Mountarges about Orleance the English receiued an ouerthrow with the losse of about fifteene hundreth of their numbers and in Britaine the French sustained great dammages by a Captaine of the Duke of Sommersets These were petty matters They of Mantz in Maine had drawne in the French by night who massacred the English William Earle of Suffolke Captain of the place sends to Iohn Lord Talbot for succour It came and that so vnexpectedly that the French were alike distrest All but souldiers were spared and many also of them though thrust into prisons The Traitours which had caused so much mischiefe had their deserts by death From hence the Lord Talbot marched to other enterprises The quality of our taske cals vs to the maine 13 Thomas Lord Montacute Earle of Salisbury being with the Regent at Paris and considering what forces of men and all prouisions the English then enioied bethought himselfe of some action which might answere the greatnesse of his owne name and of the publike meanes The siege of Orleance is by him propounded to the Councell The credite of the Motioner was alone an argument of power to conuince the possibility His desires were therefore furnished with all competent prouisions They of Orleance hearing what a storme was comming for the name of this Earle was worthily terrible with great diligence ordaine for their defence The Suburbes answerable in bignesse to a good City they leuell with the earth that the enemie might not from thence annoy them Men victuals munition and constant intentions to fight for their liberty and safegard abounded The Earle of Sarisburie the Lord Talbot and a dreadfull puissance vnder most expert commanders present themselues before it Orleance was and is an Episcopall See a Parliament Towne and Vniuersity richly scituate vpon the riuer of Loir whose best glory it is being the chiefe City which that renowned streame watereth No enemies appearing abroad he approacheth close to the walles Assaults prouing vain he entrencheth about it and to secure his Campe casts vp ramparts and other works one of which by reason of the hugenesse thereof was called London by the name of the chiefe-City of England The Fort which stood at the Bridge foot beyond the Loyr hee seiseth vpon and closeth them vp on euery side Charles of France could minister no sufficient succor God when mans helpe failes interposeth his hand which as all of vs daily feele so is it most conspicuous in the deliuerance of
Needle both of them very short to supply her great wants This vnmercifull and almost vnhumane vsage was the more extremely followed for that Oxford himselfe his father and brother had euer sided with the Lancastrians And her selfe being sister vnto Richard Duke of Warwicke the Capitall obstacle against king Edwards proceedings was held either dangerous if her wealth ballanced her birth and estate or else vnworthy of his fauour whose good fortunes as was suggested shee euer maligned 86 But much more miserable was the estate of Lord Henry Holland Duke of Excester and Earle of Huntington who flourished so long as king Henries pillar stood crowned on his base and the Lancastrians of whose house himselfe was ouerswaid the times he being the sonne of Lady Elizabeth the second daughter of Iohn of Gaunt and hauing married the sister of Edward the then raigning King was notwithstanding driuen to such want as he may serue an example to all how vncertaine Adams sons are of any continuing greatnes For saith Philip Comines I once saw the Duke of Excester runne on foote bare legged after the Duke of Eurgundies traine begging his bread for Gods sake but he vttered not his name he being the neerest of the house of Lancaster and brother in law vnto King Edward and being knowne what he was Burgundy gaue him a small pension to maintaine his estate 87 But when King Henrie was againe restored the Title of the Crowne laid vpon the successe of Barnet-field this man Lord Henrie bare himselfe most brauely against king Edward and in fight was strucke downe and left for dead where in his bleeding woundes he lay most part of the day but yet recouering and got to Westminster he there tooke Sanctuary to saue his life for which he became Suiter vnto the king but his wife Lady Anne sister vnto king Edward sued as earnestly for a diuorce which with great instancy shee lastly obtained against him How he released himselfe from the wrath of the king is vncertaine and how he came by his death no man can tell for his body was found cast vpon the shoare of Kent as though he had perished by shipwracke vpon the Sea 88 Now Edward to finish all factions thought best to lop off both bough and branch that gaue any shadow to the Lancastrians designes to which end he rather picked then found occasion of treason in George Neuill Archbishop of Yorke whose goods lands and Lordships he seized vpon got possession of his rich plate and Iewels whereof one in his Miter was of such valew as the King caused it to be set in his Imperiall Crowne and the Archbishop to be sent ouer Sea to the Castle of Hames where he remained a Prisoner a long time after with no such curteous intertainement as himselfe had vsed to Edward when he was Prisoner 89 But the escape of Pembrooke and Earle Richmond troubled the King not a little the onely men now left to bandy against them and therefore were most followed with a suspicious eye In somuch as Edward wrote vnto the Duke of Britaine their receiuer with promises of heapes of gold to haue them sent backe and deliuered vnto his hands but the Duke that had giuen them his safetie before answered the English Ambassadors that it stood not with honour so to betray these distressed Princes fled to him for relief yet he faithfully vndertook that they should be so followed as King Edward should sleepe quiet from their molestations which being no better Edward notwithstanding made the best of it 90 All now in quiet and Edward raigning without any Competitor or malignant disturber caused a high Court of Parliament to be assembled at Westminster wherein he reestablished those Acts which Henrie had abrogated and abrogated those that were made against his fauourites at which season the Duke of Burgundie sent his Ambassadors vnto Edward crauing his aide against the French King which was the more willingly heard and granted as well for his fauors receiued of the Duke in time of his necessitie as for spleene against Lewis who had aided Warwicke 〈◊〉 dispossesse him of his Crowne And indeed this ●…s a sparke that was likely to set the hearts of the English on fire to recouer France lost by Henrie the last King 91 All things in a readinesse King Edward repaired to Douer and there embarked himselfe for Callis ●…with the greatest Army that euer from England set sailes into France for he had in his Companie fifteen hundred Noble-men and men at Armes all of them mounted and most of them barbed who with the Archers on horsebacke also made vp the number of fifteene thousand besides a great number of footemen and others to pitch Tents to attend the Artillerie and inclose their Campes Before the Kings departure from England he had sent Gartar King at Armes vnto King Lewis with a letter of defiance whose contents demanded no lesse then the whole Realme of France which if he refused ●…ee threatned to inuade his dominions with 〈◊〉 and sword 92 The letter receiued and read in secret by Lewis himselfe he priuately sent for and conferred with the Herald telling him that it was not Edward but Burgundy that raked abroad these dying sinders who as a man discomfited vnfurnished for warre would draw in the English by his slie dealings to their inestimable Charges to supply his defects that Burgundy being of the house of Lancaster hated most deadly the family of Yorke and more for feare then loue married Edwards sister As touching the Constable he told him though Edward had married his Neece yet hee would deceiue him as he had done his owne Master of France who had heaped manie and extraordinary benefits vpon him And lastly with the gift of three hundred Crownes and the promise of a thousand more he instigated the Herald to worke a peace Gartar very thankefullie tooke the French gold and counselled Lewis to send a Herault vnto his Master King Edward to demand a safe-conduct for conference and so openly rewarded with thirtie Elles of Crimson-veluet he departed 93 King Lewis nothing so pompous as other Princes are nor attended with Heraulds continually in his Court was therefore inforced vnto this present shift he caused a seruant of the Lord Hales to be arraied like an herauld in a trumpets banner and sent him in hast into King Edwards Camp where hauing audience he shewed the great desire the King his Master had of peace whose amity with England he had euer held excusing his receit of Warwicke with the necessity of time whom he aided not against Edward but against Burgundy who as he instantly alleaged had now drawne the English to this excessiue charges that he might thereby conclude a better composition for himselfe and to amend the broken state of his owne affaires lastly he desired that the King of England would grant a safe-conduct vnto the Ambassadors
for the loue that our Lord beareth to vs all from this time forward all griefes forgotten each of you loue others which I verily trust you will if you any thing regard either God or your King affinitie or kindred this Realme your owne countrey or your owne surety 115 And therewithall the King no longer induring to sit vp layd him downe on his right side his face towards them who with weeping eyes words as fitted the time recomfited the sicke dying King ioyning their hands and outwardly forgiuing that which inwardly they meant not to forget The King ouer-ioyed to see their willing reconcilements spake not many wordes after but commending his soule vnto God in their presence departed this life at his Pallace of Westminster vpō the 9. day of April and yeere of Christs appearance 1483. at the age of forty one when he had worne the royal Diademe two and twenty yeeres one moneth and fiue dayes and was buried at Windsor in the newe Chappell whose foundation himselfe had layd 116 Of personage hee was the goodliest Gentleman saith Commines that euer ●…ine eyes beheld faire of complexion and of most princely presence couragious of heart pol●…ke in counsell in aduersitie nothing abashed in prosperitie rather ioyous then proud in peace iust and mercifull in warre sharpe and fierce and in field bold and venturous yet no further then wisedome would and is no lesse commended where he auoided then is his manhood when he vanquished eight or nine battels he won wherein to his greater renowne he fought on foote and was euer victor ouer his enemies much giuen hee was to the lusts of youth and in his latter time growne somewhat corpulent which rather adorned his grauer yeeres then any waies disliked the eies of his beholders His Wife 117 Elizabeth the daughter of Richard Wooduill Earle Riuers by his wife ●…aquelana Dutchesse of Bedford who was the daughter of Peter Earle of S. Paul and he the sonne of Peter de Luxembourg was first married vnto Sir Iohn Grey slaine at S. Albans where he was knighted the day before his death by King Henry the sixt vnto whom shee bare two sonnes and a daughter after whose death shee was priuately remarried vnto K. Edward the fourth the first day of May at his mannor of Grafton in Northamptonshire Anno 1464. and in the next yeere following vpon the sixe and twentith of May was crowned Queen at Westminster with al due solemnities Shee was his wife eighteene yeeres eleuen moneths and nine daies no more fortunate in attaining to the height of all worldly dignity then vnfortunate in the murther of her sonnes and losse of her owne liberty For in the beginning of K. Edwards raigne shee was forced to take Sanctuary at Westminster wherein her first sonne Prince Edward was borne and at his death did the like in feare of the Protector and lastly hauing all her lands and possessions seized vpon by K. Henrie the seauenth liued in meane estate in the Monastery of Bermondsey in Southwarke where not long after shee left the troubles of her life and inioied a quiet portion or burying place by her last husband King Edward at Windsore 118 Elianor Butler as we find it recorded vpon the Parliament Role was contracted vnto King Edward but how true considering the occasion and time of the Act we leaue for others to iudge onely this is most certaine that this Lady Elianor was the daughter of Iohn Talbot Earle of Shrewsbury and the wife of Sir Thomas Butler Knight sonne and heire to Ralph Butler Baron of Sudley which Elianor died the thirtieth of Iune the yeere of Christ Iesus 1466. and the eight of King Edward the fourth his raigne His Issue 119 Edward the eldest sonne of K. Edward the fourth by Queene Elizabeth his wife was borne in the Sanctuary at Westminster the fourth of Nouember and yeere of grace 1471. being the tenth of his fathers raigne at that time expulsed the Realme by the powerfull Earle Warwicke but fortune changed and the father restored the sonne the first of Iuly and yeere of Christ was ●…eated Prince of Wales Duke of Cornwall and Earle of Chester and had not the ambitious hand of his vncle beene defiled in his innocent blood he might haue worne the Diademe manie yeeres whereas he bare the Title of King not many daies 120 Richard the second sonne of K. Edward the fourth by Elizabeth his Queen was borne at Shrewsbury and in his infancy was created Duke of Yorke he was affianced vnto Anne daughter and heire to Iohn Mowbray Duke of Norfolke by which he was intituled Duke of Norfolke Earle-Marshall Warren and Nottingham but inioying neither Title wife or his owne life long was with his brother murthered in the Tower of London and in the prison of that Tower which vpon that most sinfull deed is euer since called the bloody Tower their bodies as yet vnknowne where to haue buriall 121 George the third sonne of K. Edward the fourth by Queene Elizabeth his wife was also borne in Shrewsburie and being a yong Child was created Duke of Bedford but liued not long after and lieth buried at Windsore 122 Elizabeth the first daughter of K. Edward the fourth by Elizabeth his Queene was borne at Westminster the eleuenth of Februarie and fifth of her fathers raigne being the yere of Saluation 14●…6 Shee was promised in marriage to Charles Daulphin of France woed and Courted by her vncle Crouchbacke when he had murdered her brothers and vsurped the Crowne but better destiny attending her shee was reserued to ioine the vnion and marriage with the onely heire of Lancaster which was Henrie of Richmond afterward King of England from whom is branched the roiall stemme that spreadeth his beauty in this North-West world euen Iames our dread Soueraigne and great Brittaines Monarch 123 Cicely the second daughter of K. Edward the fourth by Queene Elizabeth his wife was sought vnto by Iames the third of that name to be ioined in marriage with Iames his sonne Prince of Scotland and Duke of Rothsay which match was promised vpon conditions and choise of K. Edward who lastly brake off from further proceeding and the Lady married vnto Iohn Vicount Wels whom shee out-liued and was againe remarried but by neither husband had any issue and therefore lesse noted her body lieth buried at Quarrena in the Isle of Wight 124 Anne the third daughter of K. Edward the fourth by Queene Elizabeth his wife was married vnto Lord Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolke Earle Marshall and high Treasurer of England vnto whom shee bare two sonnes both dying without issue and her selfe without more fruit of wombe left her life and lieth buried at Fra●…ingham in Norfolke 125 Bridget the fourth daughter of K. Edward the fourth by his wife Queene Elizabeth was borne at Eltham in Kent the tenth of Nouember and yeere of Grace 1480. being the twentieth of her fathers Raigne Shee tooke the habite of Religion and became a
it were obliged to them both could acknowledge no lesse Charles more ambititiously then iustly desired exceedingly to annex Britaine to the Crowne of France taking occasion of the time and other circumstances which all seemed to conspire with his affections The Duke old and the father of one onely daughter suruiuing till marriage Maximilian King of Romans and riuall of King Charles in the same desires aswell for the Dutchy as the daughter feeble in meanes and King Henry aswell obnoxious to the French for benefits as busied in his particular at home and the Duke of Britane by succouring Lewis Duke of Orleance and other French Lords whom King Charles reputed his aduersaries ministred to the French an occasion or colour at least of warring vpon Britaine and so by the apt concurrence of circumstances to annexe it by conquest if by treaty hee could not Henrie of England now knowne to bee victoriously setled seemes worth the Courting Ambassadors come from the French who lay open the wrong offered by the Britaines in succouring the enemies of France put Henrie in minde of passed benefits and pray his assistance or at the least a neutrality but altogether concealing the mystery of this warre which was to annexe Britaine to the Crowne of France Howsoeuer Henry though he well enough knew that a King must euer bee the best part of his Councell for what are others opinions if himselfe want the happinesse or iudgement to choose the best propounds the points to his priuy Councell whereupon he Christianly offers himselfe a Mediatour betweene the French and Britaine an office in which it was apparant he might best satisfie all obligations and duties both to God and them The French pretend liking but in the meane time follow their designe hard Henry sends his Chaplen Master Christopher Vrswicke a man * whom he very often imploied The French maske on Things come to some extremities It becomes manifest that King Charles abused the King of Englands credulity for the City of Nant's in Britaine was brought by siedge to point of yeelding while messengers and packets outwardly osled with the name of peace slide to and fro and the French doubt nothing so much as lest the English should stirre before their victorie had made Britain irrecouerable The Lord Wooduile as without the Kings will or priuity slips ouer into Britaine with three or foure hūdred choise men to assist the Duke and came time enough to bee slaine with almost all his Souldiers at the battel of Saint Albin where the French wanne the day notwithstanding that the Britains the rather to appall their enemies had apparelled seuenteene hundred of their owne Souldiers in white Coates with redde Crosses after the English manner and made thereby a shew of two Regiments of English The Britaines had a great losse in that battel wherein they were made fewer by sixe thousand The Duke of Orleance and Prince of Orange who then were British in faction were taken Prisoners in the same fight The French lost about twelue hundreth and their Generall an Italian So that the state of Britaine seemed ripe for a fall 25 But King Henry hauing long since suspected and foreseene what the vttermost marke of the French might be and seeming to haue enough suffered the interest which they might expect in him as a man to be abused by their practises to the preiudice of his other friend the Duke of Britaine who forgate not to sollicit and vrge that point had made the quality of this affaire known to the body of State in open Parliament for that purpose assembleb as meaning by authority thereof to purge himselfe from all imputation if as a King he did that which the reason of Gouernment required which would not assent that Britaine should be made French lest by that accession their Neighbourhood might grow intollerable Britaine hauing so many Sea-townes and Out-lets to mischiefe the English trafficke Himselfe was otherwise also sufficiently resolued that the general good ought to predominate the particular and that his priuate obligations ought not to entangle or preiudice the publike seruice The Parliament therefore considering that which stood for the Common-weale decrees aide of men and money on behalfe of the Duke of Britaine it being besides all other respects a perillous example to suffer the great to deuoure the lesser Neighbour States vpon pretences of iustice or reuenge Forces are leuied but for respect of King Charles and in hope that the shew of preparations would stoope him to equall conditions not yet so roundlie as the Britons necessities expected Meane while that no formality or Princely Ceremony should be vnaccomplished King Henry by his Ambassadours certifies King Charles of his Parliaments decree praies him to desist from farther Hostilitie otherwise that he must assist the Duke but yet for the French Kings sake with this reseruation of pursuing his subiects no where but in Britaine Charles made small account of these ouertures because hee truly perswaded himselfe that the English aides would not arriue in season which fell out accordingly for before that time the French had gotten that victorie whereof euen now wee spake at the Battell of Saint Albin Vpon newes whereof the English Regiments were immediatly sent ouer vnder Robert Lord Broke Generall Sir Iohn Cheiney Sir Iohn Midleton Sir Ralfe Hilton Sir Richard Corbet Sir Thomas Leighton Sir Richard Lacon and Sir Edmund Cornewall Knights and Coronels The whole Army contained eight thousand men These march toward the enemy who acquainted with the temper of the English whiles they are fresh as being then almost inuincible containe themselues within their Campe but yet molest the English with continuall skirmishes on horsebacke in seueral places at once smally to the profit of the French who were alwaies put to the worse the Archers receiued them with such perpetuall stormes In the meane space Francis Duke of Britaine dies leauing in effect one only daughter the Lady Anne for the other being the younger deceased not long after This altered the whole state of the case The British Nobility vnder their young Mistresse immediatly fall at variance among themselues and the English thereby were on euery hand in danger so that God as it appeared by the sequele had destined Britain●… to bee annexed to the Crowne of France for the English after fiue moneths stay were in wisdome compelled to returne the rather for that Winter now was come vpon them and Britaine destitute of competent defence her Rulers disagreeing among themselues was finally by the marriage of King Charles with the Lady Anne made a parcell of the French Monarchy as heereafter will appeare 26 King Henry the while was againe in danger to haue had present vse of Souldiers at home Wee shewed what care was heeretofore taken by him to weede the North and free it from lurking enemies That notwithstanding when the Earle of Northumberland Lieutenant of
lib. 49. Octauians preparation for Britaine Dio. Cass. lib. 53. The Britains appease Octauian Strabo lib. 4. Augustus third preparation against Britanny The Britaines excuses Customes first paid in Britaine The Britaines loyaltie Cunobeline prince of the Trinobantes Malden The first stamped Coines in Britaine Caesar. Com. lib. 5. A generall peace thorow all the world M●…cah 5. 2. Isay 9. 6. Gen. 3. 5. Isav 7. 14. Gal. 4. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 building of 〈◊〉 Temple Ioh. 3. 19. Luk. 2. 14. Paulus O 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Temple is shut ●●rg Aeneid li. ●… The fruits of a true peace Lactan. li. 4 ca. 〈◊〉 D●…ples 〈◊〉 c. 32. Eclog. 4. Sa●…urne whom Virgil nameth was esteemed the father of the Gods 1 Magnum Io●… is incrementum c. 2 M●…tri long●… decem c 3 Nec Deus b●…c ●…ensa c. 4 Assyriu●… vulg●…●…scetur c. 5 Cui non risere parentes c. 6 Paca●… 〈◊〉 reget patri●… c. 7 Soluet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 8 Si qua 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 9 Fall●… herba veneni c. 10 Occidet serpen●… c. Sueton. in vit August Sect. 94. D●…ples veritat Christi 32. sol 518. Niceph li. 1. ca. 17. Iuuenal Sa●…yr 3. Zephan 2. 11. Our Sauiour Christ borne in the fourteenth yeere of Cunobeline Luk. 2. Dan. 2. Augustus described His raigne Tacit. Annal. li. 5. cap. 〈◊〉 His deuotion to Christ. Niceph. li. 1. ca. 17. Suid●… His endowments of bodie Sueton in vitae August●… The moneths of Iuly and Augst Tiberois Nero his parents Sueton. in vit Tiber. His actions and conditions Tacit. Annal. li. 1. cap. 〈◊〉 Tacit. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cap. 3. His plotting against his Nobles Tacit. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cap. 7. Tacit. Annal. li. 〈◊〉 cap. 7. 〈◊〉 his hypocrisie His libidinous ●…esse Tacit. Annal. li. 6. cap. 1. His 〈◊〉 * A wine-●… Carelesse in gouernment The prouinces v●…defended Britaine without forraine garrison or gouernment Tacit. Annal. li. 2. cap. 5. Ieffrey Monm Our Sauiour Christs death Tert●…l in Apolog. ad●…s ge●…es c. 5. Eus●…b ●…ccles hist. li. 2. ca. 2. Tiberius hi●… raigne age and death Tacit. Annal. li. 〈◊〉 cap. 7. 2. Chr. 21. 20. Tacit. lib. 〈◊〉 ca. 12. Tacit. in vitae Agric. Casigula intendeth to inuade Britaine Dion Cass. lib. 59. Sueton. in vita Caligula Adminius banished flieth to Caesar. Caligula his vaine ambition His deluding of the Senate His warring with the Sea Caligula his great victorie Ort●…lius Geograp His ambition Affrighted in his sleepe Pontius Pilate banished killeth himselfe Euseb. lib. 2. cap. 7. Ioseph Antiq. lib. 19. cap. 1. Caligula slaine His personage Sabe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 7. lib. 2. Dion lib. 60. His hatred after death Claudius Drusus chosen by the Pretorian Souldiers Ioseph Antiquit. l. 19. cap. 3. Claudius his Parentage The Britaines detaine their Tribute Dion Cass lib. 60. Anno Domi. 45. Aulus Plautius sent against the Britaines His Souldiers vnwilling Dio. lib. 60. Incouraged by a signe from heauen Tacitus in vit Agric C. Sidius Geta his valour The Britaines retire to places of aduantage Togodumnus slaine Claudius the Emperour commeth into Britain with a great Army Dion Cassius lib. 60. Elephants first brought into Britaine Claudius entreth Britaine He surpriseth Camulodunum His clemencie maketh him to be honoured for a God Claudius returneth to Rome entreth in Triumph Sueton. in vita Claud. Sect. 17. His manner of encamping His animating of his souldiers His resolution Ostorius his care The Britaines put to flight Caractacus wife daughter and brethren taken prisoners Himselfe betraied by Cartismandus Hee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tacit. Annal. 12 cap. 8. Caractacus led in triumph His habit and attire Ex histor magn Britan. His vndauntednesse His Oration to Claudius Caesar. Euents of warre variable Britaines wall Ambition hath no bounds Nature disdaineth seruitude Tocit Annal. li. 12. cap. 8. Ostorius and his fortunes decline The Britaines take heart again Their victory Caesars threats make the Britains more resolute Ostorius dieth Aulus Didius sent Lieutenant into Britaine Tacit. Annal. 12. c. 8. Manlius Valens encountred the Britaines with ill successe Didius for a while keepeth them in awe Tacit. Annal. 12. 〈◊〉 Claudius his own words the occasion of his death * Messalina was his first wife a woman of vnsatiable lecherie who was put to death Tacit. Annal. lib. 12. cap. 13. Ioseph Anti. lib. 20. ca. 5. The continuance of his raigne ANNO DO 56. His indowments of bodie His imperfections Wiues and seruants most misleade great personages Nero assumeth the Empire His parents Suetonius in vita Neronis His excessiue lust and bloodshed Suetonius in vita Neronis Tacit. Annal. 16. cap. 3. Rome set on fire by Nero. Suet. in vita Nero. Tacit. Annal. 15. cap. 10. Christians in Neroes Court. Peter and Paul put to death Euseb. li. 2. ca. 25. Tertul. Apol. ca. 5. A great ouerthrow of the Romans Tacit. Annal. 15. cap. 2. Tacitus in vita Agric. Suet. in vit Nero. Anglesey inuaded Romanes amazed at sight of the British The Receiuer of tribute his oppression Di●…n Cass. lib. 62. Tacit. An●…al 14. cap. 10. * 〈◊〉 * V●…dica Prasutagus his Testament Tacit. in vit Agric. pag. 190. Prodigies daily seene Dio. lib. 62. Other Prouinces shake off the yoke In the battaile against Quintilius Varius Tac. in vit Agric. Their Resolution Queene Boudic●… chosen Leader She surpriseth the Romanes She putteth Petilius Cerealis to flight She forceth Catus to flie into Gallia She sack●…th Verolanium Seuentie thousand slaine by her Army 〈◊〉 in vit Nero sect 39. Di●… C●…ss lib. 6●… London long since renowned Boudicea suruei●… her troopes Her attire Her Oration to her Armie Tacit. Annal. li. 11. The custome of this and other Monarchies to be gouerned by women Iustin. lib. 1. Semiramis Nitocris Tomyris Iustin. lib. 1. Cleopatra Messalina and Agrippina Shee disclaimeth all superioritie Reioiceth in her innocencie The indignities offred by the Romans Dion Cass. lib. 62. Tacit. Annal. lib. 14. cap. 11. Caesar. Com. lib. 5. Britannith vipers Tacitus in vita Agric. Domesticke conspirators most dangerous Caesar. Com. li. 2. Motiues inciting to pursue the Romans Her deuice at concluding her speech The Britaines vanquished Eightie thousand Britaines slaine Boudicea poisoneth her selfe Tacit. Annal. lib. 14. cap. 11. Paenius slew himselfe Tacitus hist. lib. 2. cap. 4. The Britaines miseries Iulius Classicianus a receiuer Promiseth Clemencie Tranquillus in vit Nero. Sect. 40. Polycletus sent to reconcile Classicianus and Suetonius Liberti or Freemen were such as being first bond slaues by their seruice obtained freedome and many of them about the Emperor came to be of great sway Suetonius deliuereth vp his charge Petronius his disposition Petronius Turpilianus giueth vp his charge to Trebell Max. Petronius Turpilianus slaine because true to Nero Iulius Vindex opposeth Nero. Tacit. histor in vit Nero. Proclaimeth Galba Emperour Nero seeketh to fly into Eegypt The Senate send to apprehend him Nero hid●…th himselfe He killeth himselfe
intrusions and King Egbert Egbert the time betweene him and Edward Confessor Normans the time betweene their Conquest and the entrance of our gracious Soueraigne King Iames. Theodosius 2. vnder the Persian King Antigonus his Tutor The di●…ipation of the Romane Empire Valentinian elected Emperour in the West His descent In Chap. 52. sect 8. Placidia Galla her care of Valentinian her sonne Aspar and Actius chosen by her France not knowne to Caesar by that name Britaines sore oppressed with the Scots and Picts Britaines sorrowfull Ambassage to Valentinian Britaines obtaine some small succour Gallia sent to aid them Burgundians threaten Italie Gallio recalled and the Britaine 's quite forsaken of the Romans The Romans kindnesse at their departing from Britaine Beda hist. Angl. lib. 1. cap. 12. Gildas The time of the Romans finall forsaking of their tēporal iurisdiction in Britaine Nicephorus Prosperus Aquitanus Romans vnable to desend their owne Countrey Gildas Tacit. hist. l. 1. 〈◊〉 9. Constantine transported a great power of Britaines Armorica a part of Gallia giuen to the British Souldiers Armorica conquered Armorica changed to the name of Little Britaines It containeth nine Bishops Seas Keepeth as yet the British Dialect Great numbers of Britaines sent to Conan A great multitude of Virgins sent out of Britain to Armorica Matthew Westm. Henry Hunt Ninius Maximus gaue many Countries to the Britaine 's his Souldiers Geruasius Iob. Anglicus Britaines fled into Armorica in the time of the Saxons Constantine who was elected for his name transporteth great multitudes of Britaines Cambden S. Iobn Pays Irpus of Norway transporteth an incredible number of Britaines Britaines one twenty thousand transported into Aquitaine against Caesar. Attrebatij in Gallia and Britaine Britaine accounted the fairest plume of the Romane Diademe Britaine abandoned of the Roman Garrisons Ninius Great troubles in the raigne of Vortigern Bishop German an assister against the Pelagians Gildas * The Irish Sea Scots and Picts the Romans departed seize all the Northerne parts Scoti and Picts catch the Britaines with long hookes Britaines send for helpe to Actius President of Gallia Beda Hist. Angl. lib. 1. cap. 13. Britaines flie into France South-wales North-wales Cornwall Demonshire A great Famine Gildas ibid. Beda lib. 1. c. 14. Britaines trusting in God ouercome their enemies Beda hist. Aug. lib. 1. cap. 14. Great sins among the Britaines Gildas Esay 1. Britaines did all things contrary to their safetie Psal. 106. 40. Britaines heare of an inuasion yet not reclaimed Prou. 29. 19. Esay 22. 13. Britaines iniquitie The Enemie inuadeth the Southerne parts Britaines vnite their powers Vortigern of the British line Earle of Cornwall The Scots and Picts set to murther Constantius Wil. Malms The Saxons 〈◊〉 for Witichindus Martian he meaneth The Romans worke for the Britaines defence raced by the Northerne Borderers Saxons great Warriours and fortunate * Britaines The Britaines Ambassage and speech to the Saxons The Saxons answere to the Petition of the Britaines Saxons good seruice at their first comming Gildas Keeles Saxons prophecie to possesse Britaine for 300. yeeres The Saxons first arriuall on the East part of this Iland Saxons inuent occasions of quarrell Saxons spoiles comparable to the Assyrians vpon the Israelites Psal. 74. 8. Psal. 79. 1. Britaines 〈◊〉 in the Mountaines Psal. 44. 11. 〈◊〉 pursued with all calamities of Warre Saxons the vncertainetie from whence they came Occa Scarlensis Saxons from Saxo a Prince of India Sufridus Petri Crantzius Saxons of the Catti in Germany Saxons from Sacae a people in Asia F. Albinus in Progy●… Mr. Henry Ferrers in his progeny of English Monarchs Ptolemy Geogra in description of Asia Amian Marcel li. 23. cap. 10. Michael Neander Herodotus Ioseph Scaliger Persian Saxon tongue agree in many words Strabo Saxons comming into Europe Verstegan cap. 1. Holt-Saxons Saxons Angles Saxons Iutes Sebastian Munster lib. 3. The time of the Saxons entrance into Germanie Eutropius Beda Saxons fearefull to the Romans themselues The names of these Saxons Tribes Tacit. Descr. Germ. cap. 1. Tacit. Descr. Germ cap. 6. Saxons Angles Iutes Ptolem. Geogr. in de●…r Ger. The place of the Holt-Saxons inhabiting Beda Hist. Angliae lib. 1. cap. 15. Iustus Lipsius and Engelhusius deriuation of the Name Saxon. Saxons weapons called Saisen Seaxen and Seaxes British Nobilitie massacred Scythians so named of Scyttan to shoote Picards for their long Pikes Galloglasses for their Pollax Such as had vowed their voiage to Ierusalem named Crosse-backe Crouch-backe Arianus Zosimus Seneca in lib. de Ira. Egin●…ardus The place of the Iute Saxons inhabiting Iutes called Gutes Gothes or Uues I le of Wight how so named Iohn Maior Verstegan Restit cap. 5. Sebastian Munst. lib. 3. The Anglia Saxon-place o●…nha 〈◊〉 ●…uld-Anglis Crantzius Henr. Rantzouius Lindebergus A Prouince in Dan●… cal●…ed little England Words of affinity with the name Angles Saxo Grammaticus Albertus Crantzius Verstegan Eng signifieth narrow Callepine Beda hist. Eccl. lib. 2. cap. 1. Geropius Becca-Angles so called of a Fishing-hooke Angles stole their name Gen. 27. Saxons both Angles and Iutes descend from Woden Woden esteemed a God Frea the wife of Woden Wodens fiue sons their names and Seignioties Cisner Crantzius Tacit. in descript of Germanie Witichindus lib. 9. cap. 〈◊〉 Sauous described Tacit. descript of Germanie Sidonius Apollin Aegysippus Isidore Saxons excelling all other in Piracies * Baie●… Gregorius Turonensis Sidonius lib. 8. Saxons kill euery tenth Captiue Saxons accept no ransome Act. 17. 30. An admonition to the Read●… Witichindus lib. 9. cap. 2. Tacit. Descript. German The Saxons vesture The homely fashion of the ancient Saxon women in their attire Paul Diacon Witichindus Engelhusius Tacit. in descript Germ. Tacit. bist 4. cap. 6. Tacit. descript Germ. cap. 5. Saxons of all the Germans the valiantest Zosimu●… Marcel li. 28. c. 7. Tacitus The Saxons goe singing to the warres The Saxons vse first to trie by single combat The custome of admitting their souldiers The Saxons wisedome in warre Ioannes Pomarius The Saxons weapons Their Ceremonies in marying Tacitus Amian Marcell lib. 14. cap. 3. Saxons their resolute courage Tacit. descr Germ. Saxons great punishers of adulterie Chron. of Holland Ran. Higd. in Polyer l●…b 6. cap. 23. Queene Emma her punishment Stephen 2. Bishop of Rome The Saxons Virgins maried b●… once The Saxons did highly esteeme of hauing children Saluia●… Tacit. descr Ge●… cap. 6. Mercury worshipped of the Saxons for Woden * An old Manuscript Wodensday dedicated to King Woden Friday dedicated t●… Queene Frea Isis a Goddesse of the Saxons Eoster a Saxon Goddesse Beda de temporibus Esay 40. 25. Crantzius Nor. Hist li. 3. ca. 3. Herald King of Norway his wicked sacrifice Adam Bremensis Vbsola a Temple of the Saxons all of gold The Saxone Gods in their Temple Ubsola and their properties * Hence Thursday seemeth to be named Tacit. in descript Germ. The gouernment of the Saxons Ioannes Pomarius Chron. Sax. Verstegam Restit cap. 3. An. Do. 450. The
was like him in all vertuous conditions by him was ordained to succeed in his Dominions whereby hee became the thirteenth King of the Mercians and the eighteenth Monarch of the Englishmen in the yeere of our Lord seuen hundred ninety seuen At home he was an example of piety peace and religion set the scale of Iustice without respect to all alike abroad temperate humble and courteous without vain ostentation or ambitious conceits in warres hee was stout and victorious in peace studious to enrich his subiects briefly at all times so carrying himselfe that enuie could not touch him with her tongue 2 Whether vpon a new quarrell begun or the old retained as inheritable to the Mercians against those of Kent I cannot say but true it is that in the entrance of his raigne he entred that Prouince with a great host of men and in a fore fought field discomfited the Kentish and carried away prisoner their King whose sirname was Pren. His kingdome hee gaue to Cuthred and kept him captiue in Mercia to his great griefe and his subiects dishonour 3 But Kenwolfe in peace minding the works of true piety gaue himself to the building of a goodly Church at Winchcombe in Glocestershire where vpō the day of dedication in the presence of Cuthred assigned his Viceroy in Kent thirteene Bishops ten Dukes many Nobles and a great concourse of people he led Pren this Kentish captiue vp to the high Altar and there without either his entreaty or ransome for Redemption released and set him free shewing thereby his deuotion to God and the heroicall parts of a magnanimous Prince 4 His raigne was twenty two yeares and death in Anno eight hundred nineteene beeing solemnely buried in the Church of the Monastery at Winchcombe aforesaid which himselfe had founded His Wife 5 Elfryd the wife of King Kenwolfe hath not her parentage certainely reported by any of our Historians yet some later vpon a likelihood of her name the place and time agreeing haue thought her to be the daughter of Off●… affianced to King Ethelbert as hath beene said but in these obscurities coniecture may wander astray His Children 6 Kenelm the sonne of King Kenwolfe and of Queene Elfryde his wife was very yong at his fathers death and succeeded in the Mercians Kingdom but not in the Monarchy of the English King Egbert the West-Saxon King then growne too great And in the same yeare that he beganne his raigne by the treason of his vnnaturall sister hee was murthered and first obscurely buried but afterwards solemnly remoued and reposed neere to his Father in the Monastery of Winchcombe as in the Mercian Kings successions wee haue said 7 Quendred the eldest daughter of King Ken-Wolfe and Lady Elfryd his Queene after the decease of her father ambitiously aspiring to compasse the sway of the Mercian Kingdome wholy to her selfe wickedly conspired the death of her brother King Kenelme which was traiterously acted by Askebert her instrument who had the charge of him but the same turning to her reproch for very shame of so damnable a deed shee within short time after ended her life but not her ignominie 8 〈◊〉 the yonger daughter of King Kenwolfe and of Queene Elfryd hath not been so famous to posterity as her sister Quendred was for her infamous Act notwithstanding she may reasonably be supposed to haue lead a better life and to haue died a better death especially of vs who find her no●… s●…ained with any aspersion of misdeseruing EGBERT THE EIGHTEENTH KING OF THE WEST-SAXONS THE NINETEENTH BVT FIRST SOLE AND ABSOLVTE MONARCH OF THE ENGLISH-MEN HIS ACTS WIFE AND ISSVE CHAPTER XXXI THe Saxon Heptarchy drawing now to a period the spring of an entire Monarchie began to shew it selfe and the glory of the Englishmen more cleerely to arise for thongh they had weakned each other by their own wars yet stood their power strong in the possession of the whole and the ouerborne Britaines held still at the worst 2 But such is the dispose of the sole disposer of Empires that they haue their risings their fuls and their fals neuer staying in one and the same point neither entailed to one and the same Nation how strong politicke or populous soeuer The proofe whereof is apparant in all the Kingdomes of the earth and this of ours as mutable as any whose change of State vnto and in this seuen-fold Gouernment hath hitherto beene seene the seuerall Kings thereof long contending to branch their own fountaines furthest and fairest lastly let them fall into one streame which so meeting made a more famous confluence in this Monarchy then the seauen heads of Nilus in the Egyptian Sea 3 Formerly the Kentish South-Saxons East-Angles Northumbrians and the Mercians through no lesse then eight descents had worne the Emperiall Diademe whose rayes shone now so bright in the West-Saxons eyes that they againe sought to reestate themselues in so glorious a possession For whereas Brightrik was possessed and contented with the West-Saxon Crowne neither that worne without iealousie and feare yet others of the bloud royall from Cherdik raised the wings of their soaring thoughts much higher among whom Egbert was one neither the last nor the least in the opinion of the people or suspect of his Prince 4 This Egbert hauing commaund of some part of that Prouince so carried himselfe that his fame grew fearefull to Brightrik the King and hatefull to the enuious Ethelburg his most proud Queene by whom he was enforced first to secure himselfe with the Mercian Offa and lastly constrained to flie into France where vnder Charles the Great he turned his aduersity into an occasion of his valour by seruing in his warres and learned by his politicke gouernment how to rule a quiet or disturbed State 5 But King Brightriks death acted and his Queene the contriuer banished Egbert is solicited to the wearing of the West-Saxon crowne where hee became the eighteenth King in number and nineteene yeares after the nineteenth Monarch of the Englishmen entring his raigne the yeare of Christ Iesus eight hundreth being the same yeare that Charles was made Emperour of the West and Conwall then ruling ouer the Scots 6 His first warres were against the Cornish and their associats the Welsh both of them a remnant of the old Britaines who had beene oftentimes vanquished but neuer would seeme to be subdued and for foureteene yeares continuance held side against Egbert which their resistance so prouoked his furie that hee enacted a most seuere law against them commanding that no Britaine should presume to passe ouer great Offaes ditch and present death to them that durst set foot vpon any English ground Their great Caer-legion now West-chester hee tooke from them and at London from their West-gate cast downe the brasen Image of Cadwallo there set vp by the Britaine 's for a terrour to the Saxons as we haue said
7 His warres thus prospering his puissance grew dreadfull and his glory much enuied at by the other Princes whereof Bernulfe of Mercia was the first attempter that sought to plucke the wing of this west-Saxon Eagle but thereby wrought his owne downefall for Egbert ioyning battaile with him at Ellenden ouerthrew his power and in that quarrell Bernulfe was lastly slaine 8 Kent was the next and fairest marke in Egberts 〈◊〉 whose 〈◊〉 not gratious in his own subiects ●…ight was the 〈◊〉 to be subdued him he chased ouer Thamisis and added not onely that Countie but also Sussex and Surrey for Prouinces vnto his owne Kingdome next were the East-Saxons the East-Angles and in truth all both vpon the North and the South of Humber gaue him obedience so that the bounds of his Dominion were greatly enlarged and his royall authority by those seuerall Kings acknowledged 9 Then hee to confirme his estate called an assembly vnto the City Winchester where causing himselfe to bee solemnly crowned became the first Saxons absolute Monarch of the whole Iland so reducing the Monarchiall title from the Mercians to the West-Saxons in whose Progeny it continued without reuersement vntill the Danes first got and againe lost it and the Saxons issue failing the same fell to the Normans Duke by Conquest as in continuance of our history Christ assisting shall be seene 10 His Coronation was at Winchester and entrance in the yeare of Grace eight hundred and nineteene at which time by his Edict in that City dated he caused all the South of the Iland to bee called England according to the Angles of whom himselfe came and promising great felicity to his State and Successors was therein not so happy as in his affaires he had beene fortunate 11 For those Saxons that by warre and blood had made themselues Lords of other mens rights and of one Kingdome no lesse then seuen are now endangered to bee made seruants vnto subiection and by warre and bloud their seuen-fold Kingdome brought againe vnto one neither yet freed from the reuenge of bloodie violence for that a fierce and cruell nation the Danes ceased not continually to inuade them till they had subdued and set the crowne thereof vpon their owne heads who in King Brightrick dayes and about the yeere seuen hundred eighty seuen hauing with three vessels landed in the West of England at three seuerall times in so many seuerall places sought the ruine of the land in the raigne of this Egbert 12 The first was in his thirty third yeare when with thirty fiue ships they landed at Lindisferne vpon the North of England where they were met and fought with at Carham but with such losse to the English that two chiefe Captaines Dudda and Osmond two Bishops Herefrid of Winchester and Vigferd of Shirborne with many Souldiers were therein slaine King Egbert himselfe hardly escaping by the couert of the night 13 Their second attempt was in the second yeare following when in West-Wales they landed vnto whom the Britaines there ioyned and in the place called Hengistenton abode the King in field where Egbert with prosperous fortune vanquished and slew both the Danes and the Welsh 14 The third place of their arriuage was Sheepie in Kent which Iland they sacked and with much a doe were expelled in the last of King Egberts raign and but the new beginning of their sauage cruelties 15 This Egbert by Florentius of Worcester is said to be the sonne of Alkemund who was the sonne of Eafa and he the sonne of Eoppa the sonne of Ingils the brother of Ine the eleuenth King of the West-Saxons and both of them the sonnes of Kenred descended from Cherdik the first King of that Prouince he was but ●…ow o●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strong of ●…mme very valiant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 skilfull souldier and as great in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in warre he raigned ouer the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of thirty six yeares and seuen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the whole Iland seuenteene his d●…th 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fourth day of February and yeare of Chr●…s ●…nation eight hundred thirty six 16 His bodie was with all 〈◊〉 solemnly buried at Winchester and his bones sin●… taken vp ●…maine with others in that Cities Cathedral 〈◊〉 bestowed in Chests set vpon the Wall of each 〈◊〉 the Quier with these verses neither ancient nor 〈◊〉 thereon inscribed Hic Rex Egbertus pausat cum Rege Kenulpho Nobis egregia munera vterque tulit His wife 17 Redburg the wife of King Egbert was the first of the West-Saxons that by their new made law was depriued of title authority or place of a Queene notwithstanding it seemeth shee bare a great stroke with her husband in that Iohn B●…uer the Monke of Westminster reporteth that shee procured a law to be made against the Britains the penalty whereof was present death for any of them to set footing within the realme of England or to passe the Ditch that King Offa had made His Issue 18 Ethelwolfe the eldest sonne of King Egbert and Lady Redburg his wife was in his childhood committed to the charge of Helmestan 〈◊〉 of Winchester vnder whom hee was carefully trayned vp in learning and vertue who comming to mans estate proued also a perfect Souldier and had 〈◊〉 leading of his fathers power against Baldred King 〈◊〉 Kent whom he forced to flie ouer the Thamisis and to abandon his Kingdome which he subdued to the subiection of his father and afterwards succeeded him in the Monarchy of the Englishmen 19 Ethelstane the younger sonne of King Egbert and of the Lady Redburg his wife was by his father deputed King ouer the Kentishmen the South-Saxons and the East-Saxons after hee had brought them vnto his subiection which people hee most valiantly defended against the inuasions of the Danes defeating their forces both by sea and land and at Sandwich gaue them a most memorable ouerthrow in the yeare of our Lord eight hundred fifty one being the sixteenth of his brother King Ethelwolfes raigne in whose time hee deceased and is reported to haue left a sonne named Ostride who by reason of his minority succeeded not in his fathers dominions which Ethelbert the second sonne of King Ethelwolfe entred vpon and being Monarch reunited these kingdomes inseparably vnto the Monarchy 20 Edgith commonly called Saint Edith the daughter of King Egbert was in her childhood by her brother Ethelwolfe committed to the charge and bringing vp of a Lady in Ireland greatly renowmed for her holinesse of life named Modewine by whom she was afterwards recommended to a Disciplesse of the said Lady named Athea and made Gouernesse of a Monastery of the Ladies by her planted in a place which the King her brother had giuen her called Pollesworth situated in Arden in the north verge of the County of Warwicke wherein she liued died and was honourably buried and the place in regard of her afterwards called Saint Ediths of Pollesworth ETHELVVOLFE THE