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A55965 The history of this iron age vvherein is set dovvn the true state of Europe as it was in the year 1500 : also, the original and causes of all the vvarres, and commotions that have happened : together with a description of the most memorable battels, sieges, actions and transactions, both in court and camp from that time till this present year 1656 : illustrated vvith the lively effigies of the most renowned persons of this present time / written originally by J. Parival and now rendred into English by B. Harris, Gent.; Abrégé de l'histoire de ce siècle de fer. English Parival, Jean-Nicolas de, 1605-1669.; Harris, B. (Bartholomew) 1656 (1656) Wing P361; ESTC R11155 382,320 308

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States to have the total administration of them This man being eminently ambitious hoped to come to be Pope by the recommendation of the Emperour The story of C●●●ina● Woll●y But seeing himselt frustrated of his expectation he turned his hate upon him whispered the King in the ear that his marriage with Katharine of Spain Aunt to the said Emperour was incestuous because she had formerly been married to his Brother O! How great is the wickednesse of such as have for saken God to serve their ambition and revenge This Prelate who ought to have framed the reformation of abuses and opposed Heresies since himself held for such all the Doctrines which checked the Pope was not content with so much honour and wealth as he enjoyed without seeing the Emperour thrown down and buried under the very ruins of that Church the Religion whereof he professed with so great Majesty and under the Purple of so great luster The King intangled in love with a young Lady newly come from the Court of France and disgusted with the Embracements of that most ve●●●ous Princess his Wife was glad of this scruple and sollicited the Pope to grant him a Divorcement upon the aforementioned reason But the Pope temporizes and sends in sine his Legat to examin the matter The King and the Legat sir the Queen being summoned appears and in presence of the chief of the Kingdom makes a Speech in Latin to the King which is able to move a very rock to compassion How is it possible Sir sayes she that after having lived almost twenty yeares together in great concord and having had so many children as we have had it should now come into your thought to repudiate me Your Brother Arthur fell sick the very first day of our marriage and some dayes after dyed I take the great God and your conscience to witness that you found me a Virgin And if you are resolved to separate me from your Bed expect at least so long as till I may have advertised my Nephew Charles thereof to the end that I may know how to behave my self in this affliction since I can hope for no support in the equity of my cause here where you are Absolute King If I have offended God since I have been your wife it has been in being a little too curious to please you Ah Vertue This is not the first time that thy adversary endeavours to suppress thee Thy luster is too bright not to d●●le the eyes of the wicked This poor Princesse in this tribulation had this imperfection that in regard Nature had been sparing to her of her rich gifts of beauty she had had recourse to innocent Art thereby to draw her Husband from the levities to which he was too much inclined as well by his own naturall Passion as by the attractive Charms of his fair subjects Her Speech being ended which produced but faint pitty in the soul of the King and some of the Auditory she retired her self together with her Daughter into a private House where the spake thus to this ambitious Cardinal who came to her in behalf of the King to intreat her to yeeld to his will It is thou said she O wicked and disloyal Minister who returnest●●s this recompence To my Nephew for not advancing thee to the Holy Chayre and to me for not being able to suffer thy impudicity and na●ght●●esse The King divorced himself from the Church of Rome because the Pope would not condescend to his demand and from his Wife by whom he had alwayes been so respectfully loved to conjoyn in publick marriage with Anne of Bolein The King leaves his Wife an I the Church of Rome The Cardinal died in the year 1530 being not long before deprived of all his employments and fallen from the favour of his Prince which he had preferred before that of his God as he restified by these words full of christian and holy repentance which issued our of his dying mouth Ah! I would to God said he I had taken so much pains to serve my Creatour as I have done to serve my Prince He put into the Letanies From the tyranny of the Pope good Lord deliver us whose authority was abrogated thorowout the whole kingdome and the King by Act of Parliament declared Head of the Church of England He seized upon the possessions of the Church by the advice of Cromwell and some others who all ended their dayes unhappily Takes away the possessions of the Clergy He also bestowed part thereof upon the nobility for fear of commotion He hanged such as refused to subscribe that he was Head of the Church as aforesaid and condemned the protestants to the fire In fine after having crushed the Church and lived like a tyrant he died miserable and little regretted by his people Sir Thomas More that great Heroe fell under the rigour of his command and so did an infinite number of other noble persons Luther seeing him in ill tearms with the Pope and encouraged by the King of Denmark very humbly beseeched him Luther writes to the King and receives an affront by a letter which he wrote to him to embrace the doctrine of the Gospel but he received such an answer as he little expected namely that he should forsake his apostacie and his wife and return to his Monastery Now the Church of Rome seeing her head disclaimed and his authority banished out of England felt her self much shaken as well by Peter Martyr as orther Protestant ministers in such sort as that Edward Edward establishes the Protestant Religion son to the said Henry having taken the reines of the English Monarchie had no great trouble to throw her quite our and fixe the Protestant But he dying very young and Queen Mary succeeding him she had an intention to pluck up this tender plant and re-establisheth the old doctrin which yet could not recover its full strength before it was exterminated again Young trees by being re-planted get vigour but old ones wither and dye CHAP. XVI Queen Elizabeth banishes the Romane Catholike Religion again by degrees That of the Protestants passes into Scotland under the bastard Murrey who swayes the Scepter It is called the Congregation and is fortified by the above said Queen and the Hugenots of France QUeen Elizabeth who during the life of her sister Mary feigned her self a Roman Catholike and was like to lose her life by giving some suspicions of her being a Protestant being raised to the royall Throne forthwith unmasqued her self and began to treat of the meanes how to annull the one and revoke the other which was easie to be accomplished For the ignorance of the Priests was great the desire of their possessions greater and the curiosity to check a Religion full of ceremonies which few could solidly defend greatest of all It was represented to the People both here and elsewhere that the doctrine was falsified and in no wise congruous with that of the
four Primitive ages that Lay men were forbidden to read the holy Scriptures that so they might remaine in darknesse and not see the light of evangelicall truth c. The Queen assembled a Parliament which acted to abolish what Queen Mary had done by the authority of the Pope and against the Protestants The Bishops and some secular men also opposed it A specious conference was offered in which there was forced upon them a Judge who was an enemy to their Cause They complained of this proceeding and said that they were very hardly dealt with and that they had been advertised of the Theses or Argument but two days before In fine not being able to agree about the form of the Dispute the Protestants before the combat cried victory and the other When shall we be assured of our Faith if there be always leave to dout and dispute Some of them were so much moved that they would have excommunicated the Queen But others being better advised alledged that the disposal thereof must be left to the Pope See Cambden Reformation in England by degrees The Queen proceeds to a change by degrees She prohibits to speak ill of the Sacrament of the Altar and suffers the Communion to be given under both kindes A little while after both Masse and Pictures were banished out of the Churches and then the Oath of superiority was tendered to the Bishops and other Roman Catholicks and in case of refusal they were dismissed from their charge All this passed without any tumult and hitherto the Reformation was carried on very conform with the Confession of Ausbourgh And in Scotland under the Bastard Murrey who weildes the Scepter About the end of the year 15●8 the Protestant Religion began also to spring up in Scotland and the Authors of it styled themselves the Brethren of the Congregation They carped at the Kingly Authority as much as they did at the lives of the Priests and the abuses of the Church They refu●ed to pay their duty to the Queen-Mother-Regent a most wise and modest woman The Head and Ringleader was James Priour of Sr. Andrews since called Earl of Murrey natural Brother to the Queen who gave very great suspicions of his intending by favouring these changes to make himself Master of the Scepter of Scotland They wanted no pretext to cloak their Design For James protested that he sought nothing but the glory of God and the liberty of the kingdome oppressed by the French and the Queen-Regent who was daughter to the Duke of Guise Hammelton and divers other Gentlemen raised by the Possessions of the Church ranged themselves in their Party Complaints against Religion are ordinarily accompanied by those of the violation of Priviledges They draw up theirs For there will never be wanting such as seek their advancement in the change of the State and implore the assistance of the Queen who alwayes attentive to her profit and fearing the power of France undertakes the defence of the said Congregation promises to expell them out of Scotland and by consequence the Roman Faith with them Whil●st this was in agitation the Queen-Regent died and her Daughter Mary Widow to Francis the second departed from France towards Scotland Her Brother aforesaid who was a meer Bastard both in blood and heart counselled Queen Elizabeth to surprize her at Sea so to secure both her person and Religion But she being arrived at Ede●bourgh made no change at all but expressed great clemency towards her subjects thereby to give the lye to those false reports which those Rebels had dispersed of her and to convince them also of cruelty and treachery But the Queen of England stopped not there For she made a Law by which all were declared guilty of High Treason who refused to make Oath that she had full power and absolute authority in all spiritual things and over Ecclesiastical persons O good God! How little comparison is there between those times and these Was not this to force mens consciences The Hugenots of this present Age would be ashamed to accept such a Law as was received with so much alacrity by these first Reformers The Scots during these Interludes cast the Archbishop in prison for saying Masse and astronted another Priest for the same subject even within the Court and before the very face of the desolate Queen who neverthelesse with teares in her eyes took them out of the hands of their enemies though yet all her clemency mingled with so many sweet charms as accompanied her Majesty was never able to soften the hearts of these mutiners who never left till she had her Head cut off from her shoulders as we shall hereafter shew together with a part of those misfortunes which have since happened to her posterity Now Queen Elizabeth who thought not her authority sure unless she put her helping hand to the supplantation of the Roman Catholick Religion in Scotland as well as in England strengthened so well the party of the Congregation that the Queen no longer able to endure so many indignities nor to disintangle her selt from the snares which the perfidious Crue had laid for her was fain at length to betake her self to flight She also did for the Hugenots in France that which hath been so much condemned in the King of Spain For she took them into her protection assisted them with men and money and shewed her self every whit as zealous for the exaltation of her Religion as the Catholick King did for his So that she rendred her self as odious at Rome and to the Roman Catholicks as he did in the Low-countries amongst the Calvinists and Lutherans The Reformation came into the Low-countries The Confession of Ausbourgh entered on the one side into the Low-countries and the Reformed Religion from Geneva from the Palatinate and from England on the other the one by the communication of German soul-diers and the other by that of the Nobility which had travelled the Ministers who came from France and the Merchants who daily arrived at the Islands opposite to it It slipped in at first very secretly found favour in the Houses of some great persons and affection in the hearts of some people But being at length discovered and the Inquisition of Spain intervening it grew to be much thwarted But Fire and Sword cannot extinguish a doctrine nay rather the patience of such as suffer Racks and Torments begets compassion to them and hatred to their persecutors In fine both parties arm and ambition being the one half of the game the Spaniards regained ten of the Provinces by the sword the others who vaunted themselves to have had recourse to these extremities by the violence and cruelty of the Spaniards for their priviledges liberty of conscience embraced through all the Towns and Villages the Reformed Religion as it is taught at Geneva in some Cantons of Switzerland in the lower Palatinate and in the Distinct of Hass●● The Roman Religion was sent packing contrary to
design drawn from those revolutions Luther writes against the Pope The Rebellion of the Peasants in Germany Page 24. CHAP. XV. The Anabaptists at Munster The Reformates in France A change of Religion in England by what means The King repudiates his wife The Queens Speech He makes himself Head of the Church Luther writes to him His miserable death Page 10. CHAP. XVI Queen Elizabeth banishes the Catholick Religion out of England again by degrees The Protestant Religion goes into Scotland under the Bastard Murrey who swayes the Scepter It is called the Congregation fortified by Queen Elizabeth and the Hughenots of France Page 29. CHAP. XVII Religion gives divers pretexts causes jealousies The Latin and Greek Religion Page 32. THE SECOND BOOK CHAP. I. THe Queen and the States refuse peace The Arch-Duke returns from Spain Henry polishes his Kingdom makes war upon the Duke of Savoy Page 34. CHAP. II. King Henry gives his sister in marriage to the Marquis du Pont. Marries Mary of Medicis wages war against the Duke of Savoy The Enterprise of the said Duke upon Geneva Page 35. CHAP. III. The Jubily Biron put to death The Battail of Flanders La Burlotte killed Rhinbergh yeelds Page 37. CHAP. IV. The Siege of Ostend Maurice endeavours to surprize Boisleducq besieges Grave and takes it Page 38. CHAP. V. Peace between the Spaniards and the English King Henry establishes the Jesuits Father Cotton hurt The war is carried on about the Rheyn Page 41. CHAP. VI. The difference which happened between Pope Paul the fifth and the Republick of Venice and why the peace is made The Duke of Brunswick endeavours to surprize the town The King of Denmark goes into England The continuation of the war in the Low-Countries Page 42. CHAP. VII The taking of Ringbergh The mutiny of the Spaniards The Siege of Grol raised by the promptitude of the Marquis The first overture for a Truce rejected Page 44. CHAP. VIII The defeat of the Spanish Armada The Enterprize upon Sluce failed The continuance of the Treaty Spinola arrives at the Haghe The Treaty being broaken again is renewed at Antwerp where the Truce is made for twelve yeares Page 46. CHAP. IX The State of France The King goes to Sedan Troubles in Austria and Bohemia A Conjuration discovered in Spain and the Mores banished Page 48. CHAP. X. A brief description of the Kingdomes of Spain and France Page 50. CHAP. XI The King of France arms The Spaniards do the same All is full of joy and fear He is killed His education Page 53. CHAP. XII The difference which happened about the Dutchy of Juleers or Gulick Iealousie between the Catholicks and Protestants why A tumult at Donawerdt an Imperiall town about a Procession Gulick besieged by Prince Maurice and the French yeelds The Princes will not admit of a Sequestration Page 56. CHAP. XIII A tumult in Poland and why They suddenly arme The Swedes and Muscovits serve themselves of this occasion against the Polanders who loose Smolensko Treason discovered in England The troubles at Paris appeased Rodolph dies Page 58. CHAP. XIV The war between the Danes and Swedes the reasons why Colmar taken Charles dies The Queen-Regent purchases a double marriage in Spain The town of Aix taken and Newburgh succoured by Spinola Page 60. CHAP. XV. The differences which happened in the United Provinces Barneveldt is beheaded and the Religion of Arminians condemned King Lewis humbles the Hughenots and reduces Bearn Page 62. THE THIRD BOOK CHAP. I. THe Prodigies which preceded the wars of Germany A description of the Kingdom of Bohemia Ancient differences about Religion The warres of Zisca compared to this Page 66. CHAP. II. The Bohemians take Arms and why All the Princes interest themselves in this war Ferdinand elected Emperour Page 69. CHAP. III. The following of the war of Bohemia The Battel of Prague Frederick flies and forsakes the town together with his people Page 71. CHAP. IV. War against the Hughenots and why A new difference betwixt the House of Austria and the Venetians Page 80. CHAP. V. The War of Austria of Lusatia of Moravia and of the Palatinat Page 76. CHAP. VI. The War of Transylvania The King of Poland treacherously wounded War between the Poles and the Turks Page 78. CHAP. VII War in the Palatinat Tilly beaten takes his revenge and defeates the Marquis of Baden The Bishop of Halberstadt makes himselfe known in Westphalia is beaten passes with Mansfeldt through Lorraine and incamps before Sedan Page 73. CHAP. VIII The continuance of the war betwen the Polanders and the Turks The Tragical end of young Osman The Death of some Lords Page 82. CHAP. IX Sadnesse in the United Provinces for the ill success of Fredericks affaires The war begins again between them and the Spaniards Gulick and Pape-mutz yeeld themselves Count Henry suspected and why Page 83. CHAP. X. Berghen is besieged Mansfeldt and his Bishop beaten by Cordua come to succour the Hollanders The Duke of Boüillous death and a summary of his life Spinola quits the siege Mansfeldt goes into Freezland The third war in France Page 85. CHAP. XI Of the Swissers and Grizous and their Government The fall of a Mountain Soubize breakes the Peace The death of the Great Priour and of the Marshal of Ornano Page 88. CHAP. XII Mansfeldt seeks succour every where puts an Army on foot again The marriage of the Prince of Wales with a Danghter of France after his returne from Spain Page 91. CHAP. XIII The siege of Bredà Enterprises upon Antwerp Page 93. THE FOURTH BOOK CHAP. I. The war of Denmark The Allyances of the Kings of England France and Denmark as also of the States of Holland against the Emperour Page 96. CHAP. II. The prosecution of the second war against the Hughenots The Peace is made by the intercession of the King of England the Venetians and the Hollanders War between the English and the French and why The beginning of the third and last war against the Hughenots Cardinal Richelieu makes himselfe known admired and feared The siege and reduction of Rochell Page 99. CHAP. III. The following of the war of Denmark unfortunate to the Danes Wallenstein besiedges Stralsund in vain The peace is made Page 103. CHAP. IV. The war of the Peasants or Country-people of Austria Page 105. CHAP. V. The death of Prince Maurice and of the King of England The siege of Groll The state of Lorraine The Jubily at Rome Bethleem Gabor makes war against the Emperour and obtaines peace Page 106. CHAP. VI. Gustave King of Sweden attacks Broussia or Prussia The Imperialists succour the Poles Truce is made for six years Page 108. CHAP. VII The siege of Boisleducq or the Bosse The Imperialists under Montecuculi joyne with the Count of Bergh who enters the Velaw The taking of Wesel Page 110. CHAP. VIII The following of the last war against the Reformates in France The Duke of Rohan makes his peace All the Townes stoop and throw down their
discovered in his physiognomy that he should one day become the Author of much disturbance to Christendome which afterwards proved true For he caused the Duke of Orleans to be massacred which raised a huge warre between these two illustrious Houses to the great advancement of the English affaires in France But now for the remedy of all those evills a Peace was made and Duke John assassinated in a Conference in the presence of the Dolphin Now this dismal chance this unseasonable revenge and this mad Counsell was the cause why the English assisted by the Burgundians and Flemmings made themselves masters of almost all the kingdome of France For Philip surnamed the Good joyned with the English to revenge the death of his Father against Charles the seventh In fine there happening a civil warre in England between the Houses of Lancaster and York the White and Red Rose and Duke Philip drawing his stake out of the play the English came by degrees to loose all they had gotten in the said kingdome This good Prince instituted and established the Order of the Golden Fleece in the year 1430 and tyed so by succession all those Provinces into one body to which Charles the Combatant annexed the Duchy of Guelders sold to him by Duke Arnolt for the summe of 92 thousand Crowns The pretensions of the Duke of Juleers or Gulick were also granted by consent of the Emperour Frederick in consideration of the summe of eighty thousand Florens in gold He left one only Daughter named Mary of Valois who was a very vertuous Princess and was married to Maxmilian of Austria and her death proved fatall to the Low-countries in respect of the war which followed there Her sonne Philip having renewed his alliance with Henry the seventh went into Spain and married Iane of Castile who brought him Charles of Austria And thus these Provinces being bound first to the House of Burgundy and then to that of Austria came last into the possession of that of Spain which by the discovery and conquest of the Indies happening almost at the same time is become most puissant and terrible as well to other States and Princes as also to the Ottomans themselves who seeing the Romane Empyre governed by a Prince of this Family loaden with so many Crowns and so many potent States take no small pleasure in seeing so many Schismes amongst the Christians Charles being chosen Emperour had Francis the first for his Competitor which kindled great Warres between them The success whereof was that Francis being taken prisoner promised though he performed not to restore the Duchy of Burgundy and renounce the Rights which the Kings of France had had in some Provinces of the Low-countries land Italy so that the Heyres of Charles remained a long time in the quiet and peacefull possession of them France being enough embroyled at home by the tender youth of three Kings all sonnes to Henry the second and by Civill Warre without looking back into old quarrels The House of Austria encreased by Marriages and Navigation And here we may see how by marriages and Navigations the House of Austria is both amplified and elevated which hath maintained her self by arms given jealousies to the Princes of Europe by her victories and struck sear and hatred into the soules of the Protestants who have made Leagues to uphold themselves and put a flea into the eare of France which hath abandoned the interests of Religion to make her self great and check this formidable power From this Knot or Tye of so many Crowns and great States together wherewith the King of Spaines head is burthened sprang that ticklish and indissoluble difference of precedency or preheminency which the Kings of France by the title of Eldest sonnes of the Church and most Christian Kings have alwayes attributed to themselves CHAP. X A Relation of the mischiefs happened in France under the minority of the Kings and by the diversity of Religions The jealousie about the power of the Guilards The Evils in France through State-jealousie FRance by the deplorable death of Henry the second grew in a very short space to sink into calamities which dured to the end of the last Age. The evil began in the minority of Francis the second and under the Regency of Katharin de Medicis through a jealousie which thrust it self in amongst the Princes of the Blood the Constable Montmorency the Counts of Chattillon and Andelot Admiral Caspar de Colligny and other Lords on the one side and the Dukes of Guise the Princes of the House of La●rraine and other Noblemen on the other The Princes complained of the Guisards or them of the House of Guise whom in mockery and to make them odious they termed strangers had the mannagement of all the Affaires of France in their hands They almost all embraced the Reformed Religion which at that time began to encrease much through the whole kingdome whereof they declared themselves Protectors The chief motive of hatred betwixt these two most illustrious and ancient Families grew from a jest which the Admiral de Colligny cast upon the Duke of Guise concerning the taking of Theonnille A prick of a Lance which drew such a deluge of blood as no Chirurgion was able to stench Hatred between these two Houses for a jest The greatest part of the Ecclesiasticks and the most zealous of the Romane Catholicks took the Party of the King and the Guisards Many Battails were fought many Siedges of Townes laid and many Peaces made and no sooner made then broken In fine under Charles the ninth at the Wedding of the King of Navarre at Paris upon the Eve of Saint Bartholomew hapned that abhominable Massacre so much and so justly exclained against by the Protestants and blamed even by the Romane Catholicks themselves In the Reign of Henry the third was made a League called the Holy League for the exclusion of Henry de Bourbon from succession to the Crown as being an Heretick whereof the Duke of Guise a Prince of courage and high esteem was the Head who having routed the Reyters or Germane Horse ented Paris in despight of the King where he was received by the Citizens with excess of honours and when the showes of joy were ended they raised certain Barricadoes which made the King retire himself to a place of safety A Fatall Honour to all subjects how innocent soever they be For redress of these disorders there was a Peace endeavoured betwixt the King and the Duke The place of Treaty was Blois where the King contrary to his Royal Word given him caused both him and the Cardinal his Brother to be treacherously murthered His Children were saved by the Queen-Mother for the King had resolved to extirpate the whole Race thereby to prevent the danger of revenge Paris revolted and in imitation thereof many other Townes besides The King applied himself to the Huguenot Party and sent for the King of Navarre which rendered him still more odious
the first Agrcement and even they who either out of compassion fair promises or hate of the Inquisition had born arms for them were deprived of the free exercise thereof The generall complaints of all such as fought against the Church of Rome were grounded chiefly upon these points Were grounded upon these points First They disclaimed the too great Authority of the Pope that he m●dled too much in Secular Affaires They blamed the disorders of the Court of Rome Prayers made in an unknown language and maintained that every one was to be permitted to read the Bible They cried out against Purgatory Masse Invocation of Saints the superstition of good Works and the like These were demands strong enough to amaze and astonish them who were not versed at all in the Scriptures and understood not even their own Belief but by rote The order of the Iesuits begins in the rise of the Reformation During these emborrasments sprang up the order of the Jesuits who have made it their businesse ever since to defend the Pope and the Rom. Religion to repai●e the loss of Erudition and Sciences and awaken the sluggish Monks and encounter in fine these new Champions But they have met with great repugnance and hatred as well from the adverse party as amongst the Roman Catholicks themselves though not peradventure with so much reason from these latter They are made pass for murtherers of Kings for having a Doctrine discrepant from that of the Catholick Church and to persecute the Monarchy of the whole Universe for the House of Spain Yet they leave not for all this to hold up their heads and despise the calumnies and reproaches of their Adversaries And indeed their Discipline in the Schools is both laudable and profitable In their Disputes they are Aristotles and in their Pulpits Cicero's In fine without them I speak out of the mouth of Reformats the Roman Church would be quickly beaten down And so it is to be seen amongst them painted under the form of a stooping Tower propped by the shoulders of the Jesuits for fear lest it fall The Authour and Founder of their Order was a Spaniard and it was very necessary to speak a word of them by the by because they are made pass for Incendiaries Plotters of all Sedition and Treasons of many perfidies and wickednesses Yet God howsoever hath served himself of them for the conversion of the Indies and China for the restauration of learning and for the illumination and illustration of Sciences wherein they are looked upon with admiration CHAP. XVII Religion affoards divers Pretexts causes jealousies The Latin and Greek Religion IT was expedient for me to make mention in this Treatise of the Religions which existed in the precedent Age and of the Changes they caused the fatal effects whereof are resented even in this of ours We have also added thereto the ambition of many who endeavoured to throw all things topsy-turvy thereby to ascend to the greatnes which they proposed to themselves and which it was most facil to acquire by these Religions Pretexts O God! How are the hearts of poor mortals overwhelmed in darkness under the apparence of Religion And how many are there in the world who whilest they are plotting mischief hide themselves under the maske of devotion Religion indeed was wont to reign in the soules of many as Mistresse of the State and was a just cause of taking arms but at present she is little better then the servant thereof True it is that some years since she hath done wonders both in Germany and France But the conclusion hath manifested that this pretext hath served for the most part Religion serves for a pretext but for interest of State and to cover the martial humour of Princes who incited by the insatiable hunger of honour for the ingrandisement of their power have very craftily made use of the cloak of conscience This therefore is that which causes jeaulousie distrust aversion and hatred and chiesly amongst the people Causes hatred and divides humours who cannot penetrate into the ambition of Potentates This I say it is which causes violent suspicions and divides humours in the same nation in the same Parentage yea and in the very self-same Family too For if it have had force enough to arm particular persons a gainst their own Parents no marvail if it make all that which depends upon humane strength and science contribute to the suppression of any Party of a different opinion and if Princes have occasion to make use of it to cover their irregular appetites But this hatred which proceeds from the diversity of opinions is repugnant to the word of God which commands us to pray for our Brethren and not to persecute and vex them We must let the tares grow till the time of Harvest for fear of plucking up the good corn with them Now let us briefly turn back to seek out the motives which seem to have caused these diversities which have proved so dammageable and pernicious to christian charity as fore-runners to the wrath of God and most undoubted marks of the latter day In the beginning of the fifteenth Age there were in the whole uniuers● but two christian Churches namely the L●●me then under the authority of the Pope and the Greek under that of certain Patriarcks The difference unworthy of such a division was and even yet is about ambition and preference contrary to the advertisements of our common Master and because the Greek maintained that the Holy Ghost proceeds but only from the Father For all the rest is most easie to be rejoyned and reconciled Now the Latine being received throughout all Europe The Latine Church under the Pope and Grek under Patriarchs there have happened from time to time very many complaints against abuses superstitions and the ill discipline of the Priests yea and against the Popes themselves who too much busied with the warres and intrigues of the world have forgotten that command which sayes Feed my Sheep Feed my Flock whereof they are yet apt enough to serve themselves against the checks of their enemies There was no memory left of the Waldenses and Albingenses The Waldenses nor yet of the dangers into which the Bohemians had brought all Germany by the doctrine of Witcliffe and the so prodigiously victorious Arms of Zisca Witcliffe For instead of opening our eyes and eares to the admonitions of Iohn Hus we reduced him into ashes Charles the 8. King of France declared his discontentment and so did some other Kings his Predecessors But it was held for a crime sufficient to convince all men of Heresie who spake of a Reformation by a General Councell So that superstition being swolne big and the world kept in most excessive ignorance as a very great and Orthodox person writes for the space of three hundred yeares by the Franciscans and the Dominicans as also by the carelesnesse of the Bishops there started up a
last King of the race of Valois Now the Royall race of the Valois being extinguished by the death of Henry the third son to Henry the second he succeeded to the Crown though with much dispute and repugnancie but his justice was accompanied by his valour and so by rejecting that which was most prejudiciall to him to wit the reformed Religion he quieted all his subjects and reduced them to their duty CHAP. II King Henry gives his sister in marriage to the Marquis du Pont espowses Mary of Medicis and wages warre with the Duke of Savoy The enterprizt of the said Duke upon Geneva Henry gives his sister to the Marquis du Pont THe King not content with giving the Hughenots all they had ever desired intended besides to obliege the house of Lorraine by allying the Princes thereof with his own And so he matched his sister to the Marquis du Pont who retained the exercise of the reformed Religion lived in most perfect amity with her husband and deceased without issue The Kings marriage being declared null and Madame Gabriell by whom he had many children the eldest whereof is the Duke of Vandosme ending her dayes by suddain death Marries Mary of Medicis he married Mary Medicis sister to the grand Duke of Florence who arrived in France in the moneth of December being the last of the precedent age Upon the delay of the Duke of Savoy to restore him the Marquisat of Saluces he prepared himself for warre And the Duke to divert the storm came to him at Lyons with store of presents and promised to render him the said Marquisat Makes war upon the Duke of Savoy or else the County of Bresses within the term of six moneths But the effect thereof not following the King quickly made himself master of all Savoy There is no amusing or retarding a potent creditor who hath both will and meanes to make himself payd In fine by the mediation of the Pope a peace was made whereby the Duke remained in possession of the Marquisat and the King of the aforesaid Country of Bresses Through this peace Italy was delivered from a great oppression and so the Troops of the Conde de Fuentes marched out of the Duchy of Milan towards Flanders During the civil wars a little before the terrible execution at Blois the aforesaid Duke easily recovered the said Marquisat by vertue as it was believed of Pistolls Gold He caused money to be coined with a Centaur treading under his feet a Gawlish Hercules with this Motto Opportunè But Henry after his Conquest and the accomplishment of his Pretensions stamped another sort representing a Gawlish Hercules treading upon a Centaur with this Opportunius We must never let our hearts be too much puffed up with prosperity but consider that the conquered grow often to be Conquerours We will not leave Savoy till we shall first have spoken of the enterprize Which the Duke had upon the City of Geneva The City of Geneva She is situated upon the Rhine neer a great Lake and was before that reformation the Seat of a Bishop She changed her Religion in the yeer 1535 since when no Romane Catholick as it is published is tollerated there above three dayes Now Charles Emanuel the aforesaid Duke attempred to make himself Lord of her by surprize He secretly listed twelve hundred men under the command of Monsieur d' Aubigny who by meanes of great store of ladders and other instruments got to the number of two hundered into the Town whilest the Duke was following with some Regiments of recruit But being discovered and the Citizens running to their armes they were strucken with terrour and returned the same way they came without having been able to seize upon so much as one of the Gates to let in the forces Thus this great designe so long premeditated so secretly carried so well begun and almost compleatly executed at last failed But whether through the valour of the townsmen or the cowardlinesse of the Savoyers I know not they were so nettled by this fright that Father Alexander a Scottish Jesuite with all his remonstrances and exhortations could never infuse any courage into their hearts But this hot Camisado or assault made them of Geneva stand upon their guard for their own preservation and to this effect they raised some souldiers and implored the assistance of the King who declared them comprized within the Peace of Vervin and gave them a pension since which time they have kept themselves in peace The Princes of the aforesaid family affirm that the said City is seated within the district of Savoy and consequently belongs to them But that which cannot be gotten by force will not be acquired by allegation of right CHAP. III. The Jubile Biron executed The battell of Flanders La Bourlotte killed Rinberg taken The Iubile THe first yeer of this age Pope Clement celebrated a Jubile at Rome whether there flocked an infinite number of people from all parts some out of curiosity and to see Italy and others out of devotion and to gaine the Indulgences But let us now return towards the Low Countries in regard that France grew to be even steeped in delights the fruits of peace and no body in motion but Mareschal de Biron Biron beheaded who attainted and convicted of the crime of high Treason for having kept correspondency with a forraigne Prince was beheaded in the Court of the Bastill Indeed that infinity of brave actions which had crowned his head with lawrell ought methinks to have saved him from this stroake But what Fortune had elevated him very high so to tumble him down headlong into this precipice The Archduke Albert seing it was but labour lost to solicite the States of Holland to a reconciliation and that all the exploits of the Admiral did more sharpen the bordering provinces then fright the confederates and that the enterprize upon Bommel proved as fruitlesse as that of La Bourlotte upon some places thereabouts yea and that one part of his forces mutinied and had taken up their quarter apart under the conduct of one Eelcto The mutiny of the Spaniards he began to lay about him to find money to content them and reduce his Militia to a good discipline but he could never be brought to pardon them who sold the Fort of St. Andrew The States upon the other side and Prince Maurice having shut up their Common wealth by the taking of such places as gave them enterance to the enemy and by consequence deprived him of all meanes of drawing contribution out of the said Provinces resolved to keep one foot in Flanders the most fertile Province of all thereby the more to incommodate the Archduke who hearing that the Prince was entered with a puissant army neer Newport made his troops march with all speed cut off seven or eight hundred Scots who kept the Bridge and being prowd upon this happy encounter advanced to affront his enemies
and giving marks of his royall greatnesse to that glorious nation The principall motive of this enterview could never hither to be truly discovered and whatsoever hath been said thereof hath been grounded onely upon conjectures suspicions and mistrusts Spinola comes from Spain and takes Grol In the spring of the year 1606 Marquis Spinola returned from Spain and brought a vast sum of money with him which is the true sinew of war and the most excellent oil to anoint the dull armes of the souldiers and having therewith put the Militia in good discipline he sent the Count de Bucquoy towards the Rheine himself following shortly after but the continuall rains and the vigilancy of Prince Maurice made him lose the hope of re-gaining any access to Groening and the other places of strength on the way The Count de Bucquoy staying behind attempted to passe the Vehal with Pontons and smal Boats by the favour of a battery but he was repulsed But Spinola took Lothem and seeing then that amongst so many enterprizes none of them all prospered so as to get over the Rivers either neer the Soul or elsewhere he turned his armes against Grol which by furious attacks he quickly compelled to yeeld notwithstanding the Garrison were strong enough And not yet conrent with this Town he caused the Count de Bucquoy to invest Rhinbergh who could not hinder Count Henry from putting fourteen Colours into the place and some Cavalrie besides together with many French Gentlemen Voluntiers The complaint of the Spaniard against the French Catholikes The Spaniards and the most zealous Romane Catholicks of Europe have very often accused the French of levity and especially such of them as are Catholicks in regard that being of the same Law with the Spaniards and in peace with them too they contrary to the Treaty of Vervin embraced the other party not onely to strip their master of his Demaynes but the towns also themselves of the exercise of the Catholick Religion If there went none but Spaniards out of our States said the obedient Towns the passion of the French would be in some sort lawfull but since our Religion is banished together with their government they can alleadge no receivable excuse to exempt them from injustice and blame The Priests maintaining that it was a matter of conscience refused to give absolution to the souldiers as favourers of Heresie and enemies to the Church But they alwayes covered themselves under the cloak of policy and made the same answer which Henry the fourth their Master did to the Spanish Embassador that it was not a war of Religion but of State The complaints often enough made by the Archduke and Dutches upon this subject had no other satisfaction then that there might likewise be found enow in their Armies and that it was free for every one to choose what party he pleased But the French followed rather the inclination of their Prince then scruple in Religion laid more to heart the weakening of the Power of Spaine then the ruine of Hereticks and the interest of their Master then that of the Catholick faith So that the Protestants made use of them and have prevailed much by the jealousie of State which reigns betwixt these two potent nations CHAP. VII The taking of Rinbergh The mutiny of the Spaniards The siege of Grol raised by the promptitude of the Marquis The first overture for a Truce received VVE left Spinola so well intrenched at Rinbergh that the Princes courage was cooled to attack him who bethought himself a little too late of sending his brother to Venlo so to make a powerfull diversion For the Town being battered by a rough and smart assaulter and defended by resolute men Rinbergh rendered was at last forced to render and so the Garrison to the number of three thousand dislodged the second of October Now the taking of so important a place just at the nose of so strong an Army produced such discourses as blinde passion dictated to men of blinde judgement and the Marquis as victorious as he was was not yet able to divert some mutinies in his Army for want of pay and therefore considering the huge inconveniencies they suffered by so many marches sieges enterprizes and the harshuesse of the season he thought fit to refresh them in the County of Gulick Now the Prince who desired to put nothing to hazard but be ever prying upon occasions met at length with this He caused Lochom to be besieged which quickly submitted Maurico besiges Grol Spinola rayses him thence and gives Diet to the inutiners and then went to attack Grol But the unexpected arrival of Spinola made him change the vexations of that siege which bred so many diseases in his army into a most advised retreat and send his souldiers into their winter quarters It is the part of a good Pilot to take his measures well amongst the rocks and of a good Generall to accommodate himself to time and not to struggle against the harshnesse of the season but make his retreat to save his army the conservation whereof is as landable as the hazardous gaining of a battell The Marquis having surmounted many inconveniences to deterr his enemies from the continuing the siege and made them at length dislodge endeavoured besides to sweeten the mutiners by granting Diet for their winter quarters where we will leave them and follow him to Brussels to contrive the first propositions of the Truce Never was there so much trouble to decide a businesse of importance as there was to bring the confederated States to hear of any overanes of Peaces or Truce It seemed more easie to make an agreement betwixt fire and water and all the mettals together then to reconcile these two parties But indeed the distrust was too great the hatred too much rooted and fortune too favourable And whereas other Countries grow poor by war this most rich most potent and most flourishing For on the one side the enemies army could not enter in regard of the frequencie of great rivers and on the other they are guarded by the sea in such sort as that by trafique they are risen to such a height that every body courts their friendship Many assemblies and mediations for Peace and accommodation were made but all vanished into smoak and served rather for a spur to war then a balsom to mollifie the ulcerated wounds of such as make their profit by Alarms For this was the common talk There is no trust to be given to the Spaniards or the Papists for they teach that they are not to keep their faith with Hereticks The fowler sings sweetly to draw the birds into his Nets and many other such reasons which served onely to destroy all propositions of Peace Nay even the Embassies of the Emperours so often reiterated were able to reap nothing but ceremonies and those of other Princes yet lesse The complaints of the neighbours endammadged and oppressed by the souldiers were not
Crown upon the Head of King Henry And he seeing the disorder which happened in that Family and strengthened by the friendship of some Catholick Princes Paxadge demanded of them of Colem as well as most assured of that of the Protestants leaned visibly that way The Magistrates of Colein being intreated by his Deputies to grant Provisions for mony and passage for his Army were fain to avow that it would be temerity to opposeso great a King who had been alwayes victorious Besides the noises which some scattered up and down that he would allow and maintain three Religions to wit the Roman the Lutheran and the Reformed In brief his Designe seemed to be to extend the bounds of the French Monarchy at the cost of the House of Austria and some neighbour-Princes In the mean time the King Don Philip stood not with his arms a cross at the newes of this terrible Preparative The Arch-Duke puts an Army on foot which rejoyced all such as were enemies to his States The Arch-Duke Albert contracts all his old forces raises new and sends a strong Army towards the Consines of France under the command of Spinola who intrenched himselfe near Gambray In fine men talk of nothing but Armes and Horses in the Countries of both Crownes and the Pope sends his Nuncio to divert the King from his Designe but he was dispatched to Monzon Amazement every where Now all Europe stood amazed and the Princes of Italy seeing the Duke of Savoy in allyance with Henry by meanes of the marriage of his Sonne with the Daughter of France begin to think of their preservation The King in the interim confirms his Intelligences gives the Rendezvous of his Troops in Campagne and after having extraordinarily courted the Embassadours of the United Provinces conjures them to to send Prince Maurice with some Troops to attend his coming at the fronteer of Cleveland The Protestant Princes could hardly dissemble their joy The joy of the Protestants and fear of the Cathol●●ks and the Cartholick strangers their fear at the approach of so formidable an Army Infine both friends and enemies were ballancing or staggering in apprehension joy and uncertainty and every one in pain to know what he was either to hope or fear It came so farre as to be published that the King was to march with an Army of forty thousand men and leave as many to guard the kingdome whereof he declared the Queen Regent after her Coronation But he was treacherously murthered in his Coach the fourteenth of May 1610 and this fatall blow put all France in mourning his Corps into the Tomb and his great Designes into Smoak Above all this misfortune was impatiently taken by them of the Religion as also by the greatest part of his Allyes amongst whom his Arms had not as yet moved the least jealousie The most generall opinion was that after having established the Princes in the possession of the Dutchyes of Galick and Cleveland he was to go for Germany And indeed the House of Austria had reason to keep her selfe upon her guard as well knowing how much this Prince was affected to her opposers His death gave matter enough every where for men to inform themselves of who might be the Authour and the Jesuits were not forgotten to be called in question by the Protestants however Ravillia● never confessed any such thing This King was brought up in labour and toyle and noursed in the the Civil Warres His first wife was Margaret of Valois His Life whom when he was come to the Crown he repudiated He had been Head of the Hugenots and wonne many Battails against them of the League When he was become Catholick and after the reconciliation of the Dukes of Mayanne and Mercoenr all stooped and layd down their arms He had a quick wit brave thoughts and excessive high points of judgement had in fine such eminent qualities as would have ranged him in the number of the grearest Kings that ever wore a Crown had ho not been too passionately inclined to handsom women a vicious habit which is familiar to Princes He alwayes loved the United Provinces of the Low-Conntr●es and assisted them with men money and counsell notwithstanding the complaints of the Arch-Dukes He was the Restorer of the French Monarchy which was horribly tottered and obtained by generall consent in regard of his heroick actions in arms the surname of Great He was beloved feared and redoubted and amongst all his Kingly vertues none shined more brightly then his Clemencie VVhy suspected to be a Hugenot Many were in doubts of his Religion for the G●genots believed him of theirs and some others also besides in respect of the favour ge shewed to the Protestant Party and for that it was imputed to him to have said that the Crowne of France was well worth a Masse It is onely God who can judge of the Conscience of Soveraigns and therefore men must be silent and abey However it were he much loved Conferences and Disputes as it appeared by that of Cardinall Peronn● against Du Plessis Mornay The Confederated States had good reason to love him in regard of the care he alwayes took to conserve them though their seeing him expected by Prince Maurice with the forces of the Low-countries near Wesel and a Letter written by him to the Princesse Dowager of Orange intimating that he would come and visit her at the Hague not as a King but as her kinsman thrust a flea into their eare The said Prince of Orange above all impatiently took this strange and unexpected accident But indeed his death freed a good part of Europe from a great terrour filled the other with sadnesse and amazement gave way to the Prince of Conde to return into France with his wife and so the Armies to retire to rest till another season and another conjuncture which afterwards presented it self in the Warre of Gulick CHAP. XII A difference happening for the Dutchy of Gulick Jealosic between the Catholicks and Protestants and why A Tumult at Donawert an Imperiall Towne about a procession Gulick besieged by Prince Maurice and the French yeelds The Princes will not admit the Sequestration VVE have already shewed how the pretext of the Arms of Hebry the Great was the succour promised to the Princes of Brandeabourgh and Newbourgh therefore let us now look upon the justice of the Competitors since the quarrell is not quite consopited yet Sone weeks before the the conclusion of the Truce Death of the Duke of Gulick deceased John Wolliam Duke of Cleveland and Gulick leaving no Children by the Countesse of Baden his former wife no● yet by the sister of the Count of Vandemon his later Now this Princesse passing through Colein was received by the illustrious Magistraces and Citizens of that ancient City with great magnisicence acclamations and wishes of fertility in this match and all this for their interests which are visible enough in themselves without any
Church of Rome and taken up their Quarters apart to be very different from that of the Primitive Christians amongst the Pagans and Gentiles those remaining in the Predicament of Passion onely and these adding also that of Action True it is that ambition and desire of novelty both in the one and other State have been the efficient causes of these great changes If they who have cried out with a loud voice for the reformation of manners had been heard as well as they who have called in doubt many Maximes of Faith we should really now live in the Golden and not in the Iron Age. They assault the Images Zisca tames Bohemia The first warr they made was upon the Images the Prelates the Cloisters and the Magistrates who opposed their unbridled licentiousnesse A Truce was made and no sooner made then broken Zisca that famous Head of the Faction made himself Master of Bohemia and commanded all the Churches dedicated to the Saints to be battered down alleadging for his reason that they must be consecrated onely to God He defeated all the Armies that oppugned his Designes like a Torrent which carries away and destroyes all whiles Fate made him loose that one eye which was left him He marched into Austria and quite blinde as he was left not nevertheless to crush his Enemies and arrived time enough to chastize the Citizens of Prague who were revolted from him because of the demolition of the Churches and Ima●es In fine Fortune by an occult mystery of the great God averted the Prelates from their duty and humbled the Emperour so far as to bring him upon his knees before this blind man yea and constrained him moreover to offer him the Government of the Kingdom and the Militia But that Eternall power having served himself sufficiently of this scourge drew him out of the world by a contagious sicknesse though even at his death His death he signified his martiall humour and the passion he yee had to further mischief for he commanded that after his decease a Drum should be made of his skin saying that his enemies would fly at the very sound thereof Let Divines discourse upon these mysterious chances where they will finde work enough to entertaine themselves The Hussits continued the warr under the orders of a certain person called Procope at the very report of whom whole armies were suddainely terrified yea fourty thousand men being entered into Bohemia and having taken some towns through a certain panick or phantastical fright threw down their arms and betook themselves to their heels Zisca's skin works miracles to save their infamous an I cowardly lives even before the Bohemians appeared Perhaps Zisca's skin wrought all these miracles and would have merited a Temple if he had not demolished those which were dedicated to the Saints It is therefore no wonder if in this last Age there have hapned such strange changes proceeding from causes so little foreseen or wholy contemptible in regard that a handfull of men at that time rendered themselves Masters of a Kingdome and beat the forces of the Emperour as often as they durst encounter them besides that their meer reputation put their enemies to flight as much as their arms Athists open your eyes confess these changes proceed from an infinite power The Turks a barbarous and despicable people have subdued a great part of Asia and destroyed the empire of Greece Tamberlaine from a shepherd Tamberlaine being become a souldier was the instrument whereof God served himself to abate the pride of that great Emperour Bajazet These are revolutions the reasons whereof are not discovered to man It is lawfull to seek the causes of them by probable conjectures but not to pronounce a definitive sentence or conclusion upon them I was willing to relate a part of this History because I find therein a great similitude or resemblance with that of our Age as well in order to Causes and effects though not successes for a proof of this instability of the things of this world CHAP. II. The Bohemians arme and why All the Princes interest themselves in this Warr. Ferdinand chosen Emperour NOtwithstanding the licence granted to the Bohemians by the Fathers of the Councell of Basill to receive their Communion under two Forms or Species there ceased not still to be Factions amongst them against the authority of the Pope and favour to such as oppugned it Now because the greatest Rivers draw their Origin for the most part from some small abstruse and unknown springs just so this deplorable war of Bohemia which being once kindled and diffused in that Kingdome grew to skatter and sly up and down like wilde fire throughout all Europ and is not extinguished even yet began at first from so contemptible a spark as might have been quenched by one single tear had it but chanced to fall right upon it But it must needs draw deluges of blood and general destruction of Christendom Where Sins are great Repentance must be proportionable And why In the year 1616 the Hussits layd the foundations of a Church at Brunaw The Abbor who was Lord of the Place opposed them and complained to the Emperour Mathias who commanded the Magistrates to appear before him and to suspend the building till the Cause were decided but in vain for the Church went on and was finished without answer as if it had suffised that it pleased them who loved novelty to build it Whilest this passed Mathias finding himself without issue by the consent of the House of Austria adopted his Cousin Ferdinand and Crowned him King of Bohemia with the general applause of the Bohemians Which done it was shewed to the abovesaid Hussits that the States onely had power and authority to build Churches and so they were all condemned and such as presumed to resist imprisoned and their Church demolished And this was the first motive of this war and this the leaven which hidden for two years together under the Past of ambition of the chief of that Kingdom made it rise and sharpen so much as that there was nothing expected but onely the hour to put it in the oven The Lutherans Jubily The year following the Lutherans by way of a generall thanks giving to God for having already preserved their Religion the space of an hundred yeares made a Iubily as they also did some Leagues amongst themselves at Heilbron against the Roman Catholicks which proved advantageous to the Bohernians as seeming as it were to give them the Signe or Watch-word to which all their humours were disposed and prepared for in regard that after so many Books composed and so many Disputes held there could be no Accord made in matter of Religion there seemed a necessity to try the strength of their Arms All tends to Warre and come from words to blowes The demolition of the aforesaid Church was of hard digestion to the Hussits and so it caused murmurations Monopolies or private
Crosse on the side and the Half-Moone on the other CHAP. VI. The warre of Transylvama The King of Poland treacherously wounded Warre between the Poles and the Turks BEthlem Gabor having made an allyance with Frederick and seeing Ferdinands forces employed in Bohemia began to consider not onely of making a powerfull diversion but also of winning a Crown We have Ambition and we shall also quickly find Religion He raised a great Army under very abstense and farre-fetch'd pretexts thereby to puzzle and baffle such as had power to resist him This man for a fine beginning oppressed Gabriel Batorius his Lord by the assistance of the Turk and so being grown Master of Transylvania and propped by the Ottomans he possessed it in the quality of Prince thereof He made a League with the Archdukes but seeing them entangled in dangerous Wars he pricked up his ears and raised a potent Army to seize upon the Kingdom of Hungarie Convenience moves men to break ally ances as well as necessity and good successe covers the injustice of the Cause or at least urges the doubt that if Right be to be violated it ought to be onely to winne a Crown War of Transylvania In fine he secretly armed took occasion by the fore-lock and cloathed the Lyon with a foxes skin He got possession of Cassovia before the people thought themselves in danger They whose affections he enjoyed were discovered by their Religion The Romane Catholicks and such others also as had any resentment of their duty being frighted some armed Gaber takes Posen and others fled He took Posen under the title of Prince of Hungarie marched to Vienna and joyned with the Confederates to besiege the Town But the Polanders having defeated his Troops which remained in Hungarie Is declared King of Hungarie made him return and mould his businesse after another form so much did he stand in awe of the King of Poland though he went backwards onely to leap the better For he obtained a Truce which he quickly brake proclaimed himself King by them of his Caball entered again into Austria and if Fortune had not turned her back upon the Confederates in Bohemia it is very likely he might fully have accomplished all his pretentions and ruined the said House of Austria it self There is something wanting we rise either too early or too late The Emperour was shut up in the Town and constrained both to hear and suffer the insolency of some seditions Citizens which was repressed by the Count of Dampiere who departed not long after towards Posen with intention to surprize it but he was killed by a Musket bullet Dampiete killed He was by birth a Lorrain had done the Emperour many most considerable services and was much deplored by the whole Patty Bethlem finding this thorn out of his foot and having bought the amity of the Turk with money brake the Truce but his Letters by which he invited the Tartars and wherein he gave them testimonies of what services he would perform to the Grand Signior at the cost of the Empire and all Christendome by allying himself with the Turk being intercepted he disobleiged the prime Lords of Hungarie who cast themselves into the Emperours armes and fell upon Gabors forces and handled them almost as ill as the Polanders had done the year before The Count de Bucquoy in Hungarie Hereupon the Count de Bucquoy entered into Hungarie took many Townes and amongst others Posen it self and the Tartars coming to relieve Gabor were cut in pieces by the Poses under the command of that great Captain Cotqueviets The Emperour had run great hazard of loosing the Kingdome of Hungarie Is killed had not Fortune saved it by the death of the brave Count of Bucquoy who attempting to repulse the Hungarians when they sallyed out of Newhewsel was layd upon the ground with no lesse then sixteen wounds He could not more generously surrender his soul nor finde a more illustrious bed of honour to crown the greatnesse of his actions had not his souldiers so basely forgotten their duty His A my disbands it self and disbanded themselves so ignominiously For they might by carrying the body of this Mars with as much reason have expected to winne Victories as the Spaniards did by that of their Rodrigues but after the losse of their Generall they found themselves without pulse life and motion And so we may easily think how sensible a losse this was to the Emperour and all his family to whom he had rendered so potent services Thus by the death of this one brave Captaine Fortune changed and the Conquered became Conquerours They who before were reduced to a meer feeble and fearfull defensive Warre regained courage and returned to besiege the places which they had lost But Fortune lighter then the winde made Bethlem know how necessary it was for him to make Peace and Ferdinand desirous to remedy so many evils as surrounded him on every side easily suffered himself to be induced to it by his own naturall inclination And so upon the restitution of the Crown and the relinquishment of the Title of King the Peace was made and Arms laid down for a while though Gabor never cast off the desire of moving nor the hatred which he carried to his Lord the Emperour The King ' of Poland hurr Now since we are gotten so neer Poland let us deliver that which hapned there in the year 1620 The King being at Wartsawe where the Diet was held and going into the Church upon the fifteenth of November a Gentleman gave him two blows with a Pole-axe upon the head and another on his shoulder which very much endangered his life But the Parricide received his reward and the King was heard by the standers by with a faint and feeble voice to pronounce these words What said he do the Polanders learne of the French to kill their Kings Let us go hence till we shall first have related the subject for which Osman the Emperour of Turkie with an Armie of above four hundred thousand men attempted to swallow up all this puissant Kingdome which was this The Waywood of Walachia being revolted from the Grand Signior and calling in the Poles to relieve him was attacked by the Tartars and Turks who in the first fight having the worst and in the last the best of the day the Waywode was killed and the Polish Nobility defeated and this Victory so much inflamed the heart of the Great Turk that he shamefully banished the Poland Embassadour from his Court and declared a war upon the King Fortune is the Mistresse of young Princes for by good successes Osmàn attacks Poland she fills them with temerity to destroy them CHAP. VII The warre in the Palatinate Tilly beaten revenges himself and defeates the Marquis of Baden The Bishop of Halberstadt makes himself known in Westphalia and is beaten passes with Mansfeldt through Lorraine and incamps himself before Sedan THe prosperous progresse
1307. Within a short space after the Emperour Albert was assassinated and his children being more busie about revenging his death then punishing the proceedings of the Switzers left them long enough in peace In fine Germany being divided by the Election of two Emperours Lewis of Bavaria and Frederick of Austria they chiefly out of the jealousie they had of the said House which they had offended constantly adhered to the Party of Lewis notwithstanding he were excommunicated and made no account at all of the Ecclesiastical Counsell which followed Frederick Leopold beaten Leopold sonne to Albert being puffed up by some Conquests and by a fair Army together with the motives of the expelled Lords led his forces against the Villages but they were defeated in the Mountaines near Morgarte● And this victory of theirs produced the perpetual Allyance of the three Villages which take their names from the woods to which the rest have likewise adjoyned themselves since for causes which would be too long to recite yea and very many Imperiall Townes near them have also leagued themselves with them in such sort as that now they have no enemy at all to fear The physick too strong Now it must be avowed that the Physick wrought too much and exceeded the bounds of duty and justice But ordinarily in Civill Warres when subjects exasperated against their Governours grow to get the upper hand they break through all fear and passe to another manner of Policy as egged on by the ambition of some particular men Hatred furnished Arms fury gave victory and fear of chastisement made them shake off the yoke of their Prince whom they accused of having violated their Priviledges Ambition is the moving cause and soule of tumults Revolts and Changes of State and injuries done to particular persons are the pretexts The form of their Common wealth Their Republick is composed of three Classes or Orders the Villages to the number of thirteen the Associates or Confederates and the Towns which depend upon their direction Now these Cantons have divers forms of government for that of the Villages is Democratical and that of the Townes Aristocratical In such sort as that this Whole being contrived of Parts entire of variours humours and conditions may well be called a mixt Common-wealth which is kept in unity by the onely care she hath of her own preservation At their Assembly which is made by a general Convocation to treat of Warre Allyance Peace and other affaires of importance the Embassadours of every Town are to meet A form much like that of the United Provinces which took Arms against their Governours and framed their Common-wealth by the advantage of their situation as well as they the Sea and the great Rivers being the same to those which the mountaines are to these They serve their Allyes with much fidelity but if their wages once fail they take their leave from whence that Proverb so much quoted in France No mony no Switsers They are accused of being clownish and simple but in requitall thereof Their fidelity and their vertue in ar●●s they are not stained with enormous vices except onely drinking as some other nations are Above all they detest cheatery and their fidelity hath been much esteemed in all times their verue in Armes very remarkable as much surpassing that of the rest of the Germans the one appearing about their Prince and the other in the Field however at present all being subject to change it doth not much cutstrip that of other nations and Francis the first made them know by a huge rout in the Dutchy of Milan that they were not invincible as themselves also manifested at the Battail of Pavia where they could tell how to leave Play when the Game did not please them Their Government as we have already said is in some parts Democratical and their Alliance amongst themselves incorruptible though it proceed rather from a common necessity of their own preservation then from perfect amity the Religion Their Religion in some of the Cantons is only and purely Roman Catholick in other Reformed and in some again mingled This Age of ours being the most fatall and most martiall that ever was hath not spared them bloody Mars having as well skip't over their Mountains as through the Seas the Deserts and vast Forrests The same year that that fatall scourge-bringing Torch appeared there happened an accident to the Grisons which sufficiently testified that there is no place secure from destruction The story of the year 1618. For upon the fourth of September 1618. towards the evening one of the highest Mountains fell down by means of an Earthquake and overwhelmed a Burgh Pleura overthrown by a Mountain or little Town called Pleura and crushed the Inhabitants in such manner as that neither their cryes nor groanes could be heard no not so much as any trace or signe at all lest of the place A tumuh in the Valteline Two yeares after the Inhabitants of Valteline being very ill treated by the Grisons in the Exercise of their Religion conspired against them and by the help of Rodolph Plante killed a great multitude and beat the rest out of the Valley and being succoured by the Spaniards for the advancement of their own interest made many Fortresses for their own defence The Venetians jealous to see the Spaniards there But the Venetians jealous of their interest and laying aside that of Religion were terrified by seeing the Gate of Italy shut up and the King of France also advertised by them of the common danger declared his interest by an Embassadour whom he sent to Madrid the fruit of whose negotiation produced a Promise of restitution provided that the Roman Catholicks were entyrely assured of ther Exercise For the Policy of the Spaniards is to tye the interest of Religion to that of State as many other Princes towards the North also do and upon these grounds cold and disinteressed Catholicks endeavour to make them pass for Hypocrites and perswade all the world that under this Cloak they will strip all Princes of their States Who are attacked by the Grisons The Grisons loosing their patience in the long expectation of the departure of the Spaniards fell upon them and were shamefully repulsed The Arch-Duke Leopold and the Duke of Feria hastened thither who compelled the poor Grisons to a peace and thereby acknowledge that themselves alone were not able to expell such Guests as these who were so advantageously lodged Yet this was not enough for the Spaniards though well intrenched for they could not remain there without continual fear and so the quarrel was renewed and Allyances made to force them out Upon which the Marquis de Cocurre entred with some Troops and rooted them out of their Holds On the other side the Savoyers joyned with the French under the conduct of that famous Constable de l' Edigniores brought a warre into the State of Genoa took many Towns
let us leave Scotland in teares let us leave the different opinions concerning the successe of this war for those of our Continent call us speedily back and especially the difference which happened in Cleveland Wars between the Electour of Brandenburgh and the Duke of Newburgh The Electour of Brandenburgh in full peace sent four thousand men into the Duke of Newburghs Country who attacked the strong House of Angremont and performed all acts of hostility without having denounced the war This invasion much displeased the Emperour and much more him whom it more nearly concerned Religion served here for a pretext and this affront put a flea in the ear of the bordering parts which yet by the intermission of the Emperour and the States of Holland was soon taken out the Lorrainers who went to succour the Duke of Newburgh sent back the forces casheered and the Princes returned to their former good intelligence This war gave Colem much apprehension and no small distrust to the United Provinces which feared lest if the fire increased it might grow to burn their Neighbours houses according to the Latin Proverb Tum tu●res agitur paries cum proximus ardet When thou seest the next house burn Be sure the next will be thy turn Let us go seek out Cardinal Mazarin in his disgrace CHAP. XI Cardinal Mazarins retreat into the Province of Liedge The Princes make their entry into Paris The joy for both the Dutchesse of Longuevilles and the Marshall of Turennes repasse into France The Baptisone of the young Prince of Orange and the dispute about his tutelage The Damme broaken near Waguening Uleseldt accused of having intended to poyson the King of Denmark Berghen St. Weynock taken by the Spaniards THe Queen being very often petitioned by the Members of Parliament to set the Princes at liberty for the Kings service and the kingdoms quiet and seeing the Resolute run up and down the streets of Paris requiring their deliverance condescended to it but the Kings Counsell on the other side was not a little staggered to hear the importunate voyce of the people Live the King Live the Princes no Mazarin His eminence finding France disgusted by his Ministery retyred himself as we have have already said and the Princes made their entry into Paris the 16. of February where they were received by the Duke of Orleans and all the great ones with very strong resentments of joy The conditions upon which they were released were that the hostility of Stenay and Turenne should cease The Cardinal departs out of France and takes an order for his banishment The Cardinal not being able to prevent or hinder this return of theirs so prejudicial to his Authority and seeing the Duke of Orleans who had consented to their detention so urgent now under pretext of the kingdoms good for their releasement got the King and Queen to approve of his retreat The joy for his departure was incomprehensibly great for every one gave him a wipe and acccused him of having exhausted the Finances or Exchequer nor is there in fine that wickednesse in nature wherewith he was not branded in such sort as it was believed that his absence would bring back the golden Age. But his banishment touched him much more to the quick His enemies had now their time and he not long after had his It is better to laugh at last then at first His departure was ignominious but his return was glorious The Spaniards offered him all kindness of favour in his disgrace which he discreetly refused upon the consideration of a former obligation The Parliament of Roüen Decreed also against him All the world yea even the Pope himself hated him And yet for all this the mischiefs whereof he was held to be the Authour ended not by his retyrement The King and Queen made a Manifest wherein they declared the Princes innocent Goes to Dinant and then to Bruel and approved all that which was ordered against Mazarin who passed by Perone Sedan and Dinant where he stayd some days and then went to Liedge and in fine retyred to Bruel to the Electour who received him according to his qualities Thus was he exiled cryed down and hated by all his services were forgotten and even they themselves who shewed him some courtesie in his retreat were made guilty thereby None but great spirits make their magnanimity appear in misfortunes The Vice-Count returns into France The Dutchesse of Longueville the Marshal of Turenne and the Count of Grandpre returned into France with their Troops where they were welcom leaving the care of finishing the work to the Spaniards who could not sufficiently wonder at this change however the Princes sent to Brussels to thank the Arch-Duke for his care of their deliverance Wilhelmus Henrious Prince of Orange nassau sonn of the Princis Royall London Printed sould by P Stent The great assembly at the Haghe In the mean while the great assembly persevered in the care of making the union stronger then ever and repayting some disorders in relation to which it was judged necessary to grant an Act of oblivion to put the Militia into good method to maintaine the Reformed Religion to keep the bitt in the Roman Catholicks mouthes and exclude such as followed that Doctrine from all Publick employments Separates All being concluded the Assembly sent for a Minister to give God thanks and parted with most perfect intelligence A day of prayer was held and alms was distributed and the Firewords and Ordnance made a concert for the Simbole of the union The Bank broken The yeare of 1651 towards the end of Winter the Snowes melting by a thaw the Waters of the Rheyn swol up in such sort that the Bank between Rhene and Waguening brake and put the inhabitants about Amerssort into great perplexities Indeed Many Inundations this year deserved to be called the yeare of deluge for there were very few Rivers in Europe which did not by the continuall raines exceed their bounds and bear down their banks The Scourge of God as water fire and sword are every where felt Let us go to the septemptrion where we shall finde one of the greatest Lords yea the high Steward of the House of the King of Denmark himself suspected and accused of having intended to poyson the King A wickedness unknown heretofore in the colds of the North. Ulefeldt the high Steward of the Kings houshold accused of having intended to poyson him It was Mons. Vlefeldt a man of great experience and much renowned for the Embassayes wherein he had rendred the King and Common-Wealth great services who was accused of this treason by a lewd woman who not being able to prove the said accusation was beheaded One Colovel Walter was also suspected who having defended his innocence summoned the said Vlefeldt but he in stead of appearing before the King departed secretly with his wife into Holland afterwards into Sweden His flight was extreamly ill