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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A51124 De jure maritimo et navali, or, A treatise of affairs maritime and of commerce in three books / by Charles Molloy. Molloy, Charles, 1646-1690.; White, Robert, 1645-1703. 1676 (1676) Wing M2395; ESTC R43462 346,325 454

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Oath as their firmament though that is not so for the most part of the efficacy of such Leagues rests in the promise it self to which for Religion sake the Oath is added Hence it is that Promises made to a Free-People are in their nature real because the subject is a permanent matter although the State or Republique be changed into a Monarchy yet the League remains for that the body i. e. the power is still the same though the Head be changed And the Person is incerted into the agreement not that the agreement may be personal but to shew with whom it is made for if it be incerted into the League that it shall be perpetual or that it is made for the good of the Kingdom or with the Person and his Successors or for a time limited the same does most apparently demonstrate the thing to be real However in all Leagues which tend to Peace though there may remain somewhat whereby words of ambiguity may arise yet the most pious way of interpreting hath been to account the same rather real then Personal for all Leagues made for Peace or Commerce admit of a favorable construction Leagues defensive have more of favour offensive of burthen XVIII Leagues made with Princes although they happen afterwards to be driven out of their Kingdoms by their Subjects yet the League remains firm and good for the Right of the Kingdom remains with such an unfortunate Prince notwithstanding he hath lost his Kingdom on the other hand Leagues made with the Invader cannot be good for his cause being unjust is odious but if the people will make him King de facto and investe him the question is then out of all controversy for then he is become a King regnant and by the Laws of England if treason by committed against his Person and after he is beaten out and the King de Jure comes to his Crown the King de Jure may punish those Traytours with death The Earl of Warwick having raised an Army in France and Flanders invaded England and within five or six daies after his landing King Edwards Forces betraying him the Earl became Master of the Realm the King flying for protection to his Kinsman the Duke of Burgundy he kindly in his misfortunes entertained him yet while he was in this banished estate the Duke of Burgundy renewed the League with the English it being agreed that notwithstanding King Edwards misfortune the League remained firm and unviolable between the Duke Charles of Burgundy and the King and Realm of England So that for Edward they should name Henry who was newly taken out of the Tower by the Earl of Warwick at his chacing out of King Edward now the true reason that Leagues remain and are firm notwithstanding such a change is because there goes along with them a tacite condition viz. of holding their possessions and therefore the World wondred not that His late Sacred Majesty having sworn a League with the King of Spain expresly as he was King of Portugal did notwithstanding receive two Embassadors from the then new King of Portugal and that without being judged either in England or Spain to have broken his former Oath and League The Duke of Guise having formed the League against Henry the Third which was that in regard the King was so cold in the Profession of the Romish Faith that it was in danger to be extinguisht by the increase which he permitted of the Reformed Religion especially seeing Henry the Fourth then King of Navar was of that Religion and was to succeed to the Crown wherefore by the Mediation of Philip the Second of Spain the Pope qualified the Duke of Guise Head of that Catholique League and which in point of Government was to set him above the King avowed him Protector of the Catholique Faith in the Kingdom of France When Henry the Fourth succeeded the Crown then this League for security of Religion was most violent and the Spaniard without hoped by nourishing thus the division within to carry all for himself at last To avoid which gin and to answer all the King chang'd his Religion and negotiated by d'Ossat to be received by the Pope as a dutyful Son of the Church of Rome demanding absolution for what was past and making large promisses of due obedience for the time to come the King of Spains interest was that he should not be received and thereupon he endeavoured to perswade the Pope that King Henry did but dissemble with him and that under this disguise he would easiest ruine the Romish Religion notwithstanding this the Cardinal obtained his Reception Absolution and Benidiction through the many promises and presents which he made to His Holyness whereupon the Spaniards designes were in a moment all blown over from France but fell heavily upon the United Provinces which were sorely opprest for that they apprehended the loss and ruine of their Countrey and thereupon they implored assistance from King Henry who received their Ambassadours very gratiously and gave them assurance of relief The King of Spain who wanted no good intelligence in the Court of France immediately remonstrates to the Pope that his former inclinations concerning Henry's dissimulations did now appear in the face of all the World and that seeing His Holyness had been so credulous he knew not now whether they should be able to save the Catholique Faith from being subjected to the Reformed Religion or no for whereas the Hollanders had revolted from him only because he resolved to use the true means for the establishment of the Romish Faith among them and that now he was in a fair way of reducing them which conduced so much by his Holiness his opinion to the establishment of the Romish Faith Henry had taken their party against him in that work and that at Paris he had received their Ambassadors to that purpose although he knew they were his lawful Subjects c. This startled the Pope not a little who charged d'Ossat for having betrayed him and put the Church in danger this argument was as subtil on the Spaniards side as changing Religion was on King Henry's and therefore the Cardinal was not a little perplext how to answer it to the advantage of his Master as also coherently to the considerations of his former reception into the Church But at last he replyed That His Holyness needed not wonder how in reason of State those different Religions might joyn together for political ends without hazard of altering Religion Thus David sought protection of the Philistians and Abraham redeemed the sinful Sodomites That he took it to be upon the same ground that His Holyness himself not long before received a Persian Ambassador who was so far from being an Heretick that he never pretended to the Name of Christian that it was a plausible argument which the King of Spain used in complaining of Henry's receiving and avowing their Ambassador especially knowing