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A46989 The King's visitatorial power asserted being an impartial relation of the late visitation of St. Mary Magdalen College in Oxford : as likewise an historical account of several visitations of the universities and particular colleges : together with some necessary remarks upon the Kings authority in ecclesiastical causes, according to the laws and usages of this realm / by Nathaniel Johnston ... Johnston, Nathaniel, 1627-1705. 1688 (1688) Wing J879; ESTC R12894 230,864 400

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Chester Sir Robert Wright Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench and Sir Thomas Jenner one of the Barons of the Court of Exchequer with particular Power to them or any two of them to visit St. Mary Magdalen College in the University of Oxford the Commissioners thought fit to meet at the Council Chamber this day being the 17th of Ooctober 1687. The Commission was Read and the same Officers confirmed as before The Lords Commissioners for Visiting Magdalen College agreed upon the following Citation in Order to their Visitation By Thomas Lord Bishop of Chester Sir Robert Wright Knight Chief Justice of the Court of King's Bench and Sir Thomas Jenner Knight one of the Barons of His Majesties Court of Exchequer His Majesties Commissioners amongst others for Ecclesiastical Causes and for the Visitation of the Vniversities and all Cathedral and Collegiate Churches Colleges Grammar-Schools Hospitals and other the like Incorporations or Foundations and Societies and particularly Authorized and Impowered by His Majesties Letters Patents to Visit St. Mary Magdalen College in the Vniversity of Oxford c. YOu and either of you are hereby required forthwith to Cite and Summon Mr. John Hough the pretended President and also the Fellows and all other the Schollars and Members of the said College of St. Mary Magdalen in the said University of Oxford to appear before Us in the Chappel of the said College on Friday next being the 21st day of this Instant October at Nine of the Clock in the Morning to undergo our Visitation and further to Answer to such matters as shall then and there be objected against them Intimating thereby and we do hereby Intimate unto them and every one of them that We Intend at the same time and place to proceed in our said Visitation the absence or contempt of him the said pretended President or the said Fellows Schollars or other Members of the said College or any of them to the contrary notwithstanding And of the due Execution hereof you are to certifie us at the time and place aforesaid Given under the Seal which we in this behalf use the 17th day of October 1687. Subscribed To Thomas Atterbury and Robert Eddows Or either of them On Wednesday October the 19th the Citation was fixed on the College and Chappel Doors and on Thursday the Commissioners entred attended by the three Troops of Horse that Quartred in the Town §. 2. The Proceedings of the Lords Commissioners at Oxford on Friday morning Octo. 21. 1687. I shall from the Register Original Papers the Bishop of Chesters notes or the Printed Relation give a Faithful account of the First and Second Visitation FRIDAY Morning THe Lords Commissioners appointed by His Majesty under the Great Seal Out of the Register Note the reason why the Commissioners left the Chappel was by reason of the crowd and for that provision was not made for their sitting there for Visiting St. Mary Magdalen College in Oxford met on Friday Morning the 21st of October 1687. In the Chappel of the same College and Adjourned to the Hall where their Commission being Read their Lordships took upon them the Execution thereof and Ordered the Fellows Names to be called over And Dr. John Hough with several of the Fellows and Schollars appearing the Lord Bishop of Chester spoke to them upon the occasion of the Visitation as followeth Gentlemen IF he who provokes the King to Anger sins against his own Soul what a Complicated mischief is yours who have done and repeated it in such an Ingrateful and Indecent manner as you have done and upon such a trifling occasion You were the first and I hope will be the last who did ever thus undeservedly provoke him There is a great Respect and Reverence due to the Persons of Kings and besides the Contempt of his Authority in this Commission you were so unreasonably Valiant as to have none of those fears and jealousies about you which ought to possess all Subjects in their Princes Presence with a due veneration of his Soveraignty over them 'T is neither good nor safe for any sort of Men to be wiser than their Governors nor to dispute the Lawful Commands of their Superiors in such a licentious manner that if they sometimes obey for wrath they oftner disobey as they pretend for Conscience sake The King is God's Minister he receives his Authority from him and Governs for him here below and God resents all Indignities and injuries done to him as done to himself Now God hath set a Just and Gracious King over us who has obliged us in such a Princely manner as to puzle our Understandings as well as our Gratitude for he hath bound himself by his Sacred promise to support our Altars at which he does not Worship and in the first place to maintain our Bishops and Arch-Bishops and all the Members of the Church of England in their Rights Privileges and Endowments No doubt but he will do his own Religion all the Right and Service he can without unjust and cruel Methods which he utterly abhors and without wronging ours which is by Law Established and by his own Sacred and free promises which have been more than once renewed and repeated to us without our seeking or solliciting for them which we under some Princes might have been put to crave upon our bended Knees This is a most Royal and Voluntary Present the King hath made to his Subjects and calls for a suitable veneration from them notwithstanding the pretended Oxford Reasons which were Publish'd by whose means and endeavors you best know to obstruct it As if the King had not Thorns enough growing in his Kingdom without his Universities planting more Now a Prince so exceedingly tender of his Honor as he is so highly Just to all and so kind beyond example to his Loyal Subjects and Servants of what persuasion soever is one under whom you might have had all the ease satisfaction and security imaginable if you had not been notoriously wanting to your selves and under a vain pretence of acting for the preservation of our Religion you had not wilfully against all Reason and Religion expos'd it as much as in you lay to the greatest scandal and apparent dangers Imaginable Your disingenuous disobliging and petulant humor your obstinate and unreasonable stifness hath brought this present Visitation upon you and might justly have provoked His Majesty to have done those things in his displeasure which might have been more prejudicial to this and other Societies then you can easily imagin But tho' you have been very irregular in your provocations yet the King is resolved to be exactly Regular in his proceedings And accordingly as he is Supreme Ordinary of this Kingdom which is his Inherent Right of which he never can be divested and the unquestionable Visitor of all Colleges he hath delegated his Commissioners with full Power to proceed according to the just measures of the Ecclesiastical Laws and his Royal Prerogative against such offenders as shall
be found amongst you and not otherwise 'T is a great grief to all sober Men to see any who would be thought True Sons of the Church of England act like Men frighted out of their wits and Religion as you have certainly done Never any True Son of the Church of England was or will be disobedient to his Prince the Loyalty which she hath taught us is absolute and unconditional Tho' our Prince should not please or humor us we are neither to open our Mouths or lift up our hands against him Yours like all other Corporations is the Creature of the Crown and how then durst you make your Statutes spurn against their Maker Is this your way to recommend and adorn our Religion and not rather to make it odious by practising that in such a froward manner which our Church Professes to abhor Do we not pray for the King as the Head of it under Christ Do we not acknowledge him for the Fountain of Honor And does not Solomon Command his Sons to fear God and the King the one with a Religious the other with a Civil fear Is he not the Lord 's Annointed and not to be toucht but with Reverence either in his Crown or Person And why should we not render then to all their dues Fear to whom Fear and Honor to whom Honor Is not this an Eternal tye both of Justice and Gratitude For where the Word of a King is there is Power And who may say unto him what dost Thou Are we not next to God and his Good Angels most beholden to him for our safety whose Honor and Lawful Authority We are now come to Vindicate Is he not the Father of our Country and ought he not to be more dear to Us than our Natural Parents especially considering how Indulgent he has been to Us and what care he dayly takes to keep us from biting and devouring one another we know not why Is not he the Center of the Kingdom and do not the concurrence of all Lines meet in him and his fortunes and how can we then understand the limits of self love if a tender Sense of his Honor and happiness be not deeply rooted and imprinted in our Souls 'T was neither dutifully nor wisely done of you to drive the King to a necessity of bringing this Visitation upon you And as it must needs grieve every Loyal and Religious Man in the Kingdom to the heart to find Men of your Liberal Education and Parts so Untractable and Refractory to so Gracious a Prince so it will be very mischievous to you at the Great Day of Gods Visitation Who will then be the greatest loosers by your Contumacy For God will Revenge this among your other Crimes that you have behav'd your selves so ungratefully towards his Vicegerent as to oppress his Royal Heart with grief for your Stubbornness to whom by your chearful Obedience you ought to have administred much cause of rejoycing They who Sow the Seeds of Disobedience have never any great reason to boast of their Harvest for whatsoever they vainly promise themselves in the beginning they are in the end ashamed and afraid of the Income of their evil Practices and indeed every sort of disobedience hath so ill a report in the World that even they who are guilty of it themselves do yet speak ill of it in others Let therefore the disreputation and Obloquy which it will inevitably bring upon you make you out of Love with it or if that will not do let the Stings of your guilty Consciences and the fear of Divine Vengeance restrain you or if you are still Insensible of all these yet at least let the present fear of those Temporal Punishments which the Laws of the Kingdom have superadded to the Contemners of Gods and the Kings Authority oblige every Soul that hears me this day to be Subject to the Higher Powers If neither a most Merciful God nor a most Gracious King can please you your wages will he recompence upon your own Heads Were it not for this Serpent of discontent and jealousies which are now so busie in it this Kingdom would be like the Garden of Eden before the Curse a Mirrour of prosperity and happiness to all the World besides but this Serpentine humor of Stinging and Biting one another and of Tempting Men to Rebel against God and the King because others who differ from us in Judgment are as happy as our selves will as certainly turn us as it did our first Parents out of Paradise Our Nation is in greater danger of being destroyed by Prophanness then Popery by Sin then by Superstition by other Iniquities then by Idolatry and I pray God we may not see Sacrilege once more committed under the pretence of abhorring Idols as I my self have seen in this place If there be any among you who have sinn'd with so high a hand against our Gracious Sovereign as the obdurate Jews did against our Saviour saying we will not have this Man to Rule over us such your petulant humor such your shameful Injustice and Ingratitude will deserve the just Animadversions of this Court. What distempers this College is sick of which we are now come to visit by the Kings Commission your selves are best able to tell us We are informed of too many already and yet we suspect there may be more and therefore be but Ingenuous and make a Conscience of giving us sincere Answers and you shall find that we will abate nothing of the just measures of our Duty for fear or favor to satisfie the Importunities of any Man being well assured that God and the King will bear us out I am sorry that you should any of you run so far upon the score of the Kings Royal Patience and Pardon as some of you have already done And that you should be in such vast Arrears of Duty and Respect to him as you are But they go far who never turn The Influence you may have upon other parts of the Kingdom makes me Charitably hope that your future Fidelity and Allegiance will for ever Answer your Duty and the Kings just Expectation And therefore I hope it will not be in vain for me to exhort you in the Bowels of Christ to a more entire submission and obedience because if such Men as you bred in so Famous an University are not thoroughly convinced of the necessity of it the more Popular you become the more pernicious will you be in encouraging your deluded Admirers who have their Eyes upon you from all parts of the Kingdom to be as Disobedient and Contumacious as your selves by which the Honor and Authority of the King may be diminished and the peace both of Church and State come to be endanger'd Obey them who have the Rule over you either in Church or State and submit your selves before it be too late for your contumacious behaviour towards them will yeild you no profit at all but your Obedience much every way the former will
Moderation and Reason how great a scandal to our Religion how great a stain to the liberal and ingenuous Education which this Society would afford you and how very mischievous it will be to your selves at last I endeavored to convince you at the first Opening of our Commission Since which time some of you have been so unreasonably inconsiderate and obstinate as to run yet farther upon the score of His Royal Patience and Pardon for which you are now to receive the just and necessary Animadversions of this Court that the Honor and Authority of the King may be Vindicated and the Peace of Church and State not be endangered by your Impunity or our Connivance at this your petulant humor and contumacious behavior No Subjects can be wise or safe but they who are so sincerely honest as to take all fair occasions of doing their Prince acceptable services and executing his Will Reputation abroad and Reverence at home are the Pillars of safety and Soveraignty these you have endeavored as much as in you lies to shake nor can the King hope to be well served at home or observed abroad if your punishment be not as public as your Crimes No Society of Men in this or the other University ever had so many Male-contents and Mutineers in it as this College your continual clashings and discords sometimes with your President at others with your Visitor and so frequently among your selves ever since his late Majesties happy Restauration have been too public to be concealed I have more than once heard your late Visitor of Pious Memory bewaile the great unhappiness of this Noble Foundation in being over-stockt with a sort of Men whom a wantonness of Spirit had made restless and unquiet who would never be satisfied whose disease was fed by Concession and then most violent when they knew not what they would have You have been long experienced in the Methods of Quarreling with your Visitor President and your selves and by these steps you are at last arrived to the top and highest degree of insolence which is to Quarrel with your Prince which as it dis-honors your Religion so it Proclaims your Pride and Vanity for every dis-obedient Man is proud and would obey if he did not think himself wiser than his Governor You have dealt with His Sacred Majesty as if he Reigned only by Courtesie and you were resolved to have a King under you but none over you and till God give you more self denyal and humility you will never approve your selves to be good Christians or good Subjects whose Patience and Petitions are the only Arms they can ever honestly use against their Prince You could not be ignorant of the Kings being your Supreme Ordinary by the Antient Common Law of this Land of which the Statutes are not Introductory but declaratory you have Read what Bracton says de leg lib. 1. c. 8. ● 5. who was Lord Chief Justice of England for Twenty Years in Henry the Thirds time Nemo de factis suis praesumat disquirere multò minùs contra factum suum venire Now His Majesty the Fifth of April sent his Letters Mandatory to you to Elect and Admit one Mr. Farmer into your Presidents place then void by the Death of Dr. Clark your last President Whom the Tenth of April you represented to His Majesty as incapable of that Character in several respects and besought him as His Majesty should think fittest in His Princely Wisdom either to leave you to the discharge of your Duty and Consciences according to his late Gratious Declaration and your Founders Statutes or to recommend such a person who might be more serviceable to His Majesty and the College This Paper was delivered to my Lord President the Tenth of April and on the Fifteenth of April without expecting His Majesties Answer as your Hypocritical submission would have persuaded all Charitable Men to believe you did and would expect in Contempt of his former Mandate which had the force of an Inhibition you proceeded to Elect Dr. Hough for your pretended President Upon the first notice whereof the Sixteenth of April my Lord President sent a Letter by His Majesties Command to the Bishop of Winchester not to Admit him But they who have ill designs in their Heads are always in hast by which you surprized your Visitor which occasioned my Lord President the 21st of April to Write another to you to let you know how much the King was surprized at your Proceedings and that he expected an Account of it Then were you Cited before the Ecclesiastical Commissioners at Whitehall where upon mature deliberation and a Consultation had with the best Common Lawyers and Civilians Dr. Houghs Election was declared void the 22d of June and he amov'd from the same by their Lordships just Sentence Of this you were certified by an Instrument under the Seal of the Court of the same Date affixed to your College Gates which being dis-obeyed you were once more Cited by an Instrument of the first to appear before their Lordships the 29th of July to Answer your Contempts You pretended when you came before their Lordships that you were deeply affected with the late Sense of His Majesties heavy dis-pleasure and beg'd leave to prostrate your selves at His Royal Feet offering all Real Testimonies of Duty and Loyalty as Men that abhorr'd all stubborn and groundless resistance of His Royal Will and Pleasure So said and so done had been well but you were resolv'd it seems to give him nothing but good words and that your Practice should confute your Profession I wish you had known in time as well as you pretended to do how entirely your welfare depended upon the Countenance and Favour of your Prince it would then have been as great a grief to you to have dis-obeyed His Majesties Commands as it was a guilt and will be a punishment both in this Life and that to come if not repented of in time On the 14th of August His Majesty signified His Will and Pleasure to you by His Letters Mandatory and thereby Authorized and required you forthwith to Admit the Bishop of Oxon into the place of President any Statute or Statutes Custom or Constitution to the contrary notwithstanding wherewith he was Graciously pleased to dispense to which he expected your ready obedience but all in vain for to your shame be it spoken you had done an ill action and resolv'd to set your busie Wits on work to defend it And Conscience the old Rebellious Topick must be call'd in at a dead lift to plead for you But you are not the first who have mistaken an humor or a disease for Conscience your scruples were not such but that they might without sin have been Sacrificed to your Princes pleasure as a Peace-offering to the Father of your Country to your Mother Church and to the good of this and all other such Charitable Seminaries of good Learning and Religion and Men as wise as you perhaps may think
any Act Statute Ordinance Provision Proclamation or Restriction to the contrary so that in this one Instance the Kings dispensing power to be put in Execution by Commissioners is most amply manifested Understand it in matters wherein Mandates have been used and whatever power the King can give to Commissioners he may Execute himself by his Royal Mandate and if he can dispense with the Statute surely the obligation of an Oath to observe that Statute ceaseth as I shall largely shew hereafter ☞ By the Execution of this Commission whereof I shall now treat it will be apparent that the design of this Visitation was to abolish the Catholic Religion there and plant the Reformation in the University which they did by changing the Magistrates or Governing part of the Colleges disannulling the old and making new Statutes censuring and punishing all whom they found culpable according to the Articles which they published to abolish the power of the Bishop of Rome and present Clergy and set up the Kings Supremacy Which Articles I am informed are extant tho' I have not yet been so fortunate as to have procured any Copy of them § 10 I shall now Abreviate the proceedings of the Commissioners in that Visitation by which it will appear What the Commissioners did in this Visitation how merciful our King hath been in this last Visitation comparatively to what was then done ☞ First The King praevious to this Visitation Wood Antiq. Oxon. fol. 269. a. In Turri Schol. N. 17. The Suspension of Elections and College Acts during the Visitation in his Mandate to the University Commanded that no Graduate should proceed to the Election of a President or Fellow of any College or do any Act that should hinder the Visitation so that during the Visitation no Statutes were observed and none of the University could attain any Office without consulting the Visitors and my Author saith that the Commissioners especially Cox put in their Friends and Dependents every where into places as he Instanceth in Maurice Ley an Irish Man Fellows made contrary to Statutes who was made a Fellow of Exeter College contrary to their Statutes and Edmund Cooke Esquire wholly Ignorant of University Learning made Fellow of the same College so George Cartwright Born in Nottinghamshire thereby Secluded by the Statutes was made Fellow of Corpus Christi College And by the Mandate aforesaid the Execution of the Statutes of the University were Suspended The Execution of the Statutes Suspended by which means the Jurisdiction of the Masters of Colleges and other University Magistrates being in a manner Abrogated it might remain in the Visitors power only to inflict punishments When the Commissioners had deprived the Choristers and Singing Boys of their Stipends Id. fol. 270. b. Concerning Choristers and Signing-Boys the Towns-men representing the dammage it would be to them by reason their Children were thereby provided for This was something mitigated Some of the Chantries were converted to Stipends but mostly those in Parish Churches whereof some were of the Patronages of Colleges were sold away But of these things and the change of Divine Service I shall not speak because they were according to the Reformation through the Kingdom after the Book of Common Prayer was Established § 11 ☞ The Visitors made a new Book of Statutes which were called King Edward the Sixth's Statutes Id. fol. 271. a. Anno 1549. The Visitors make a new Book of Statutes which altho' in the most part they were contrary to the Ancient Statutes of the University yet they were in force till those were made which now are used I pass by the great destruction made of Books in the public and private Libraries Id. fol. 271. b. The destruction of Books where few that had any Red Letters or were Writ by any in the two last Centuries escaped the Fire or worse uses tho' they were Books of Divinity Astronomy or Mathematics The Books being brought in great heaps into the Market places and publickly burnt of which the Reader may peruse a sad Account in Dr. Heylin and Mr. Wood. I shall omit the Cases of Ralph Skinner and Gualter Haddon till I come to Treat of the Kings dispensing with Statutes § 12 ☞ The severity of the Visitors continued from the Year 1549. to th Year 1553. 10. Mariae Id. fol. 272.273 274. The severe proceedings of the Commissioners in which time by the absenting themselves or Expulsion of so many Fellows the Colleges were left very thin the Writings Bulls Charters and other Muniments especially those granted from Rome were seized the Registers and Repositories searched the Monies taken from the Chests where lodged in former Ages to be in readiness upon any Streights the Houses might be reduced to Yea they sold four or five public Schools to Towns-men who pulled them down and converted the Materials to their own uses and annexed the Grounds to their Gardens So great was the subversion that the Terms were altered from the periods used in former times Terms and Lectures altered and Degrees neglected the Ancient Exercises c. as Lectures scorned and the taking of Degrees by some thought Anti-Christian and others neglected to take any by the apprehension that there should be no use of them and because the Stipends were withdrawn But says my Author we are not to complain of the Violating of the Honors and Degrees in Learning since Learning it self was Expiring and drawing it's last breath the Schools being ruined and the Philosophy Exercises being taken away Those who have a mind to Read the Ravage then made by the Visitors either by their Covetousness or Connivance may find them fully related in the foregoing Authors For a Reformation being designed by the King there was no place in the University for the Unconformable SECT II. The Visitation in Queen Maries Reign §. 1. Queen Maries Visitation ANno 1553. Wood fol. 274. 275. Wood Antiq. Oxon lib. 1. fol. 274.275 Pat. 1. Maria part 6. When Queen Mary came to the Crown she took great Compassion on the University as appears by her Letter in which she sets forth the grievousness of the former Visitation and she bestowed some Rectories upon it by her Charter May 11.1 o. Regni Neither did she omit to Exercise her Authority in Visiting the University in restoring the Roman Catholic Religion as she did through the Kingdom The first that Visited was Steven Gardiner Bishop of Winchester See for the Visitation of Cardinal Pool Anno 1557. a. who was Local Visitor of New-College and Corpus Christi and St. Mary Magdalen College He appointed for his Deputies Sir Richard Read Kt. and Dr. George Wright Arch-Deacon of Oxford Large account in Fox Act sand Mon. Vol. 3. Edit 1640. fal 762. to 780. Upon the 26th of October they Visited St. Mary Magdalen College and Dr. Haddon the late President of his own accord did quit the Presidentship Thomas Bentham the Dean
appoint Visitors and the giving this power to the King is Cumlative not Privative as appears 2 H. 7.6 B. 5 Coke 5 B. and it leaves a concurrent Jurisdiction as is clear in F. N. B. 21 C. and 51 B. and 80. which is sufficient to Answer the Objection of the Fellows of St. Mary Magdalen College that the Bishop of Winton being their Local Visitor if he were satisfied to confirm the Election they could not be adjudged faulty by any other Visitors Here cap. 7. sect 3. of which point I shall have occasion to Treat hereafter ☞ But to proceed (a) Idem Patricks Case Hill. 18 19 Car. 2. Keebles Reports fol. 164. 2d part Thirdly By 10 H. 7.18 and the Bishop of Winchesters Case the King may exempt any Ecclesiastical Corporation from Ordinary Visitation and consequently hath the power in himself ☞ Fourthly If there be no (b) Idem fol. 166. Visitor properly appointed by the Founder the Chancellor and Vice-Chancellor have the Government of any College who are the proper Officers of that distinct Common-wealth of Learning and they are Established or fortified in that by the Kings Letters Patents Fifthly Altho' King James the First (c) Id. fol. 168. 3 Regni gave the Chancellor of Cambridge power of Visiting Queens College there yet the King remains Visitor as Heir to King H. 6. Husband to Queen Margaret that Founded it as the Judge there Asserts but if it had been a private Founder the King shall not lose the Right of Visitor as Sovereign since the Licence for the Foundation is from the King of what private Foundation soever so if there were no Visitor appointed by the Charter of a Founder the Chancellor is Visitor and Superior to him is the King. Sixthly In the same Case it is laid down (d) Idem fo 169. Statutum de as Argument that there is a Visitor Temporal as the Founder and Ecclesiastical to examin correct and amend things done contrary to the Rules of their Order which were declared by the Canons of the Church whereof the Bishops were the Natural Visitors and it is plain that (e) Asportatis Religiosorum 35 E. 1. Anno 1307. cap. 2. no Abbot Prior Master Warden or any other Religious person of whatsoever condition State or Religion he was being under the Kings power or Jurisdiction should depart into any other Country for Visitation or upon any other color by that means to carry the Goods of their Monasteries or Houses out of the Kingdom It is also in the Argument laid down as the Reason why the claim was made in the time of King Richard 2d and the Act 13 H. 4. for the Arch-Bishop of Canterburies Visitation of the University of Oxford that it was only about matters of Faith by Reason of Heresie and Lollardism But in matters of breach of Statutes c. the Founder or Visitor Communi Jure had the right and tho' the King granted the power which the Founder had yet he never intended to grant away his own Supreme Authority thereby or could grant the Right of his Successors ☞ These matters I have noted in this Case that the Ingenuous Reader may know that what I have discoursed of in this Section is agreeable to the sentiments of the Reverend Judges an expression of (a) Judge Windham Patricks Case fol. 166. ut supra one of whom I find in these words Both Jurisdictions Lay and Spiritual are derived from the King as the Sun and Moon take light of God. I lay no stress upon any Analogy of the comparison further than that it thereby appears how fundamental a matter it is in our Laws that all exercise of Authority Discipline Government and external Oeconomy in Church and State are derived from the King as having a Creative and annihilating power in several things that depend solely upon his good pleasure which if any thing do in his whole Dominions it is in the disposal of matters of the Universities as I now shall make more evident in the following Chapter CHAP. VI. Concerning the Kings of Englands dispensing with the Statutes of the Universities by their Mandates SECT I. Concerning the Kings dispensing Power in General and in several particulars to the beginning of King Charles the Seconds Reign §. 1. Concerning the Kings dispensing power in General HAving given a large account of the Kings power in Visiting the Universities and in Abrogating old and making new Statutes by his absolute and Supreme Authority To clear the point yet more I shall shew by particular Instances wherein our Kings have dispensed with the Statutes of the Universities or particular Colleges For there can be no greater Argument of the Right and Prerogative of any power than the un-interrupted excercise and usage of the same Before I descend to particulars it may be expected that I should discourse something of the Kings dispensing power in General but the point being determined by the Judges and the Arguments for it being so generally known I shall be the shorter upon this head ☞ This power of dispensing seems to be a most necessary Prerogative that no Sovereign whether Ecclesiastical or Civil can want whence we find in a (a) Omnibus autem à nobis dictis Imperatoris excipiatur fortuna Cui ipsas Deus Leges subjecit Legem animatam committens hominibus Novel 105. circa finem Constitution of Justinian de Consulibus a reservation of that power which he thus expresseth from all these things which have been said by us Let the Emperors State be excepted whereunto God hath subjected the very Laws themselves sending him as a living Law to Men as it is Translated from the Greek Agreeable to which is what Aeneas Sylvius (a) Convenit Imperatori Juris Rigorem Aequitatis fraeno Temperari cui soli Inter aequitatem jusque interpositam interpretationem licet incumbit Inspicere de Ortu Authoribus Imperii observes that it is the part of the Emperor or Sovereign to attemper the Rigor of Law with the Bridle of Equity to whom alone it is lawful and a duty to see to the Interpretation which lyeth Interspersed betwixt Law and Equity since no Law can sufficiently Answer the varieties and un-thought on plottings of Mans nature and in Tract of time Laws at first just and equitable become unprofitable and harsh and this moderating of Laws saith he is so annexed to the Prince that by no Decree of Man it can be taken from him This is also agreeable to the Opinion of the most Learned Primate (b) Ushers power of Princes pag. 76. of Ireland whose Judgment most of our Judicious Protestant Divines have ever held in high esteem His words are positive Laws as other works of Men are imperfect and not free from dis-commodities if the strict observation of them should be pursued in every particular Therefore he saith it is fit that the Supreme Governor should not himself only be exempted from subjection
and several others were Expelled as had been done in New-College And the Society of Magdalen College were so averse from the Roman Catholic Religion that not only they got neither Altar or Holy Vestments but none of the Fellows came to Mass and the very Clerks and Choristers would not perform their Offices so that the Visitors were forced to have all Holy Offices performed by their own Priests Ibid. fol. 13. b. they punished the Juniors that refused Punishments inflicted by the Visitors either with striking them out of Commons or Scourging them and one Aldworth Bachellor of Art for Contumelious Usage of Priests and coming in unseasonably to the Mass of the Exequies of King Henry the Sixth was Commanded that every Day he should be at Mass and kneeling at the South Pillar in the middle of the Church should perform his Prayers to the Example of others The same Commissioners found the President of Corpus Christi College Robert Morwent and the Senior Fellow Henry Walsh very observant Id. fol. 276. a. who brought to light the Holy Vestments Cushions Silver Vessels Candlestics and other Ornaments which they had hid in King Edward the Sixth's time and excepting John Juel after Bishop I find none left that College but from the other two besides the Fellows Ejected in Edward the Sixth's time about Eighteen or Twenty this Year and the next were removed §. 2. Cardinal Pools Visitation Anno 1556. Id. fol. 278. b. 3 4 Ph. Mar. Cardinal Pool appointed and entire Visitation of the University of Oxford and the Visitors were James Brooks Bishop of Gloucester Nicholas Ormanet of Padua in good esteem with Julius the Third Pix M. M. n. 22. and Dator to him or Marcellus the Second Henry Cole Doctor of Laws Provost of Eaton Robert Morwent Doctor in Divinity President of Corpus Christi College and Walter Wright Arch Deacon of Oxford These proceeded upon Thirty Two Questions Two Questions proposed by the Visitors First whether their Statutes were observed two of which were the most Material First Whether the Foundations Statutes and Laudable Customs of the University and of every College and Hall were observed by all and singular that were concerned and if it were answered Negatively they were required specially to express which were not observed and for what cause The Second was Second whether after the Reformation any things were used contrary to the Canons c. whether in the time of the Schism any thing was appointed or brought into use which was against the Ancient Canons or Ancient Foundations Statutes Privileges and Customs and to this if they Answered Affirmatively they were to express particularly what they were and for what cause §. 3. The Cardinal appoints Statutes The Visitors following the Example of those that Visited in King Edward the Sixths Reign purged out of all public Libraries all Books which maintained the Protestant Doctrin and those in private Libraries they burnt and either Punished or Expelled the Possessors In E. p. 38. They certified the Cardinal especially of the Defects of the University Statutes and he being Chancellor instead of Mason that laid down the Office sent a Book of Statutes to Mr. Raynolds the Vice-Chancellor and Commanded him that they might be in force till there being joyned with him some in every Faculty they might determin which were to be Antiquated and which to be retained which being so Revised had the Sanction of the Chancellor and Convocation which being strict against the Reformed drove many from the University Our Author Notes that the Lectures were less frequent in this Queens time as well as in King Edward the Sixths and fewer received Degrees which may be Imputed to the Changes made in Religion in their short Reigns but he saith the great care of the Magistrates of the Universities in this Queens Reign was to recover the profits of the Societies and to Repair their Buildings and the Schools In this Third and Fourth Year of King Philip and Queen Mary Cui Papa commisit Visitationem Reformationem Studiorum Generalium Cardinal Pool Visited the University of Cambridge as he was Legate to whom the Pope Committed the Visitation and Reformation of the Universities called General Studies This Visitation the Cardinal performed by Delegates and I find one Robert Brassy Master of Kings College urged that his House was wholly referved to the Discretion of the Bishop of Lincoln not only by the Kings Letters Patents Fox Acts and Monuments Vol. 3. p. 763.766 but also by the Grant of Confirmation of the Bishop of Rome himself under a Penalty if he should suffer any Stranger to Intermedle But the Commissioners Answered that they were fully Authorized for the Order of the matter by the Cardinal out of whose Jurisdiction no place nor person was Exempted So that tho' he persisted the next Day in his Allegation yet he and the Students submitted and were all Sworn and Examined to the Interrogatories propounded to them yet some of them Swore conditionally so as their Faith given to the College were not Impeached thereby Something like the Salvo of some Members of St. Mary Magdalen College that they would yield obedience saving the Right of Dr. Hough which was prudently denyed to be Admitted by the Lords Visitors I now pass to the Reign of Queen Elizabeth SECT III. The Visitations in Queen Elizabeths Reign §. 1. Queen Elizabeths Inhibition ANno 1559. Fol. 281. b. Queen Elizabeth intending to Visit the University of Oxford Writ to the Magistrates of the same not to Elect any heads of Houses Fellows Scholars c. forbidding them to proceed to the Election of any President Fellow or Scholar or of any Officer of the University and forbid all Alienations or Changes of Possessions and all other things to be done by the University except what was necessary for the Cultivating their Lands till the Visitation and this she did because some were so forward to begin a Restoring things to the condition they were in in King Edward the Sixth's time before her Order By which the Queens Authority and Circumspection are clearly discovered §. 2. Queen Elizabeth appoints Visitors After some few Months she appointed her Visitors Wood lib. 1. fol. 282. viz. Richard Cox Bishop of Ely John Williams Baron of Thame but he Died in October John Mason Kt. sometimes Fellow of All-Souls and several Years after Chancellor Thomas Benger Kt. William Kingsmyll Esq John Warner Custos of All-Souls College Walter Wright Doctor of Laws Arch-Deacon of Oxford John Watson Master of Arts Chancellor of St. Pauls London Robert Benger Esq c. to whom she Commands they should Act with all Humanity and abstain from all Roughness These Visitors coming to Oxford cast out of the Chappels of the Colleges and Parish Churches all things that related to Superstitious Worship as it was Styled that is the use of the Roman Worship recalled those that were banished or put out
in Queen Maries time for Religion and Abolished most of the Statutes made by Cardinal Pool and restored those of King Edward the Sixth To omit other things in the Visitation Earl of Arundel Chancellor quits his Office. besides that the Earl of Arundel did quit the Chancellorship these following Heads of Colleges or principal Members were removed and some of them Imprisoned §. 3. The Heads of Colleges and others Expelled of Christ-Church As Dr. Richard Marshal Dean of Christ-Church for denying to own the Authority of the Visitors was not only Expelled but sent Prisoner to London Also Dr. William Tresham Canon of the same for denying the Oath of Supremacy was Expelled as also Dr. Richard Smith Canon there Of Merton College Dr. Thomas Raynolds Warden of Merton College was by the Queen then at Hampton Court deprived of his Wardenship 4 o. September and three Days after the Sentence was declared by three of the Commissioners and after a short time he Died in Prison Thomas Coveney President of Magdalen College was Expelled Of St. Mary Magdalen College for that he was not entred into Orders and Dr. William Cheadsey President of Corpus Christi College was Expelled from that and his Canonship of Christ Church and Robert Banks who had been Ejected in Queen Maries Reign because he was Married was substituted in his place Also Dr. William Wright Of Baliol College Master or President of Baliol College was Expelled and Dr. Babington substituted in his place Mr. John Smith Provost of Oriel College was Ejected Of Oriel College tho' he had liberty to live in the House after but in the next Year he lost the Lady Margarets Lectureship Of Queens College and Mr. Hugh Hodgson Provost of Queens College two Years after either relinquished the place Of Trinity College or was Expelled Mr. Thomas Slythurst President of Trinity College was Expelled and Mr. Yeldard placed in his room Mr. Alexander Belsyre Master of St. Johns College and Canon of Christ-Church was also Expelled Fol. 283. a. St. Johns College and Mr. William Ely lately put in his place a little while after was Expelled so a few Years after Mr. William Marshal Principal of St. Albans Hall was forced to surrender and so Mr. William Alan Principal of St. Mary Hall as also George Ethridge Regius Greek Professor and James Dugdale Master of University College two Years after was Expelled by the Visitors and Thomas Key put in his place Besides these Heads of Colleges in New College Fol. 283. b. two Doctors and three Bachellors of Civil Law one Doctor of Physic one Bachellor of Divinity and fourteen Fellows were Expelled some removing to Religious Houses beyond the Sea and Mr. John Munden returning being discovered to Secretary Walsingham was Executed at Tyburn In St. Johns College seven Fellows were Expelled besides several others Imprisoned at Wisbich and many others not named Those that have a mind to see the Names of Great numbers of the rest Expelled from other Colleges Reg. G. G. fol. .26 Reg. I. fol. 198. 199. Reg. Coll. Magd. fol. 29. and suffering Death for returning into England may consult the Register I shall now give a short account of what Dr. Parker advised from Cambridge concerning the Visitation there §. 4. Paper Office Ecclesiastica 1550. to 1559. I find Two Letters from Dr. Mathew Parker afterwards Arch-Bishop to Sir William Cecyl then Secretary and Chancellor of the University of Cambridge Dated 1 o. March and Endorsed on the back Dr. Parker 1 o. Martii 1559. Among other Expressions he hath these words The Colleges needed a Visitation that Queen Mary immediately upon her quyet gave out Authority to the Chancellor Bishop Gardiner he forthwith sent his Chaplain Watson with Instruction to every College and as then I could gather to report to him in what State every College stood and further peradventure upon cause to have the Masters and others assured de coram sistendo Interim bene gerendo till further Order By this and some other Letters I find to and from Sir William Cecyl who was the great Minister of State in Queen Elizabeths time I observe that what was done in Oxford by the Visitors was likewise pursued in Cambridge and that the Masters Governors and Fellows had a very hard time in the Reigns of King Edward the Sixth Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth Conformableness to the Religion of the Prince being the Touch-stone and the prime Capacitating Qualification that secured Honors and Places in the Universities The other Letter is Dated March the 30th and Ticketed 30 Martii 1559. Dr. Parker to Mr. Secretary Which I shall Transcribe at length that the Reader may take notice of his way of Writing and the Dialect of that Age. Pleaseth yt your Honorables goodnes upon th' occasion of sending up to your Honor for the matter which Mr. Vice-Chancellor Wryteth of I thought it good to signifie to you that the matter which ye have Delegated to us is in hand with as good Expedition as we can make by reason of th' absence of some who were meet to be Commoned with Though some dout is made whether your Authority of Chancellorship extendeth to College Statutes for any beyond Lymitation conteyned in them so may they dout of your Delegatum Though Bishop Gardyner wold not so be restreyned in his doyings whether upon warrant of the Quenys Letters of Commission the Copy * * This I cannot find tho' I have searched diligently whereof I sent to you or by Authorytie of his Office I leave that to your Prudence to Expond Our Statutes and Charters Prescribe here to Officers that they must in Plees proceed summariè de plano since strepitu Judiciali that Scholars may be soner restored to their Bokes Yet here be Wytts which being thereto admitted w'd entangle matters extremis Juris apicibus that Controversies might be Infynyte and perpetual never to have an end but according to our old Ancyent Customys we shall procede to hearyng with cutting of all such superfluous and perplex Solemnyties of their Cavillations and so refer the matter to your understanding to be resolutely determyned as the last Clause of your Letter pretendeth to wil us And yff I shall perceyve any like Incydent to be signified to your Honorable wisdom I shall be bold in secretys to Wright it Less things borne bi parcyalyties might prevayle under your Authorytie not rightly instructed and to avoid som Stomake that ellys might be taken Without dout Sir th' Universitie is wonderfully decayed and if your Visitation entendyd be too stoutly Executed in some like sorts as hath been practised that wil I fear so much rustle the State thereof that it will be hardly recovered in Years and yet Authorytie must bridel willfull and stubborn Natures and hie time it is here I trust the prudence of the Visitors for good wil toward you wil diligently note how ye receyved the Universities after others