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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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LICENS'D By COMMAND this 23d of July 1688. JA. VERNON 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 Doctor in Physic Fellow of His Majesties College of Physicians in London Pereunte Obsequio etiam Imperium Intercidit Tacitus 1 Histor LONDON Printed by Henry Hills Printer to the King 's Most Excellent Majesty for His Houshold and Chappel And are sold at his Printing-house on the Ditch-side in Black-Fryers 1688. TO THE Judicious Reader AS soon as His Majesty had been pleased to lay His Commands upon me to Collect materials for this Subject I could not but reflect that it was to Treat of a matter that I knew not any had Writ upon before and of such a largeness that it takes in not only the Case of Magdalen College but regards all other Corporations and Societies of that Constitution and spreads it self into some branches of the Prerogative Royal Wherefore the nature of the Thing requires a Treatise of me not altogether unsuitable to the Dignity of the persons concerned viz. The King and the Universities which would induce persons of all Ranks to peruse it who desire satisfaction in a matter of such importance both to the Prince and Subject This suggested to me a necessity of enquiring into Records of preceding ages and to render the Work at least a Collection of various instances in several Cases of Visitations Therefore finding no compleat History of any Visitation of our Universities except that of the long Parliament I judged it necessary to give an Impartial account of the proceedings from the Kings Mandate for Mr. Farmer to the close of the Visitations by the Lords Commissioners whereby this and after ages might have an Authentic Precedent if any occasion should happen of this kind and that people concerned might know their Boundaries and in this part I followed the Registers Original Papers Authentic Copies of Letters and Orders or the Diaries accounts of such as were present and actors in the disquisition and in this particular I have used as much diligence as I could not to be imposed upon and had finished most of this before the Oxford Relation was Printed and wherein I differ from that I have done it upon the best Intelligence I could obtain After the finishing of this I judged it not improper before I entred upon Answering the Objections I found urged by the Vice-President and Fellows of St. Mary Magdalen College to clear the Kings Prerogative over the Universities in making and Abrogating their Statutes or dispensing with them and placing or dis placing of their Members which obliged me to consider the matter not only in General but also to descend to many particulars and shew who by the Kings Authority or sufferance have exercised the like Authority In which I have endeavored to follow the most approved Authors and surest Records I have the rather enlarged upon this head that I might afford variety of Cases whereby the distinct claims of Right of Visitation might be Illustrated and this Tract might be a Repertory whereby upon emergences the Original Records might be enquired after If some may judge me too tedious I desire them to consider that it was not enough to clear the point of St. Mary Magdalen College but likewise to discover in what other Cases the Kings of England had exerted their Prerogatives The Contemplation of this led me to touch tho' with a trembling hand the Regalia of our Kings and look into the Laws and usages of former times and in what sort the Soveraignty and Supremacy of our Kings in matters of Ecclesiastical cognizance are declared by the Laws in being In which part I treat of the Kings Authority abstractedly from Doctrinal Religion This I the rather have done that the Subjects of all conditions may observe how great the Authority and Prerogative of the King is in dispensing with University and College Statutes since by the plain and direct Laws that Assert the Kings Right in opposition to all Foreign powers his Supremacy is so Established in Ecclesiastical matters and causes that it is applicable to other purposes than at the first view may appear obvious which I leave to the discussion of those better versed in the Laws than I shall ever presume to be Nevertheless I hope in the treating of this subject it will be owned that I have Introduced no Novelty but Copy'd what is found in History or the public Records and brought to light a Prerogative inseparable from the Royal State of our Kings which some for want of consulting the same have not so well discerned It is to caution the Heads and Fellows of our most eminent Universities not to contend with their Sovereign that I have so copiously produced Instances of the practice of former times and have so largely treated of them before and since the Reformation It was for this end solely and not in the least to erect Trophies for any Victory over the unfortunate that I have pointed out these Sea-marks that others may avoid dashing themselves against the Rock upon which the British Monarchy is so firmly placed that no Tempests of open Rebellion or the highest swelling Seas much less any single Billow can be able to shake It is far from my Intention in this to enter into any dispute about the limits of Ecclesiastical or Secular power It is sufficient that I shew it in some particulars of known practice without examining the grounds any more than as declared by the positive Laws or practice of the respective Sovereigns I know some may look upon this as a matter treated of ex superabundanti yet I thought my self obliged so far to enter into a dissertation upon it as I might thereby make it appear that by the extensiveness of the Sovereignty Universities much more private Colleges both which the Law accounts among the Creatures of the Crown must own a subjection of themselves and their private Statutes to the King as Supreme Neither hath it been any desire to render the Kings Prerogative greater than the Laws and usages of our Kings do manifest that I have shewn how it hath been insisted upon even against some exemptions of the Apostolic See or to Establish any Paradox but only to Assert the just Rights of the Crown at least according to my Reading and do with all deference submit what I have composed to the Judgment of the Learned in our Laws But to leave this I desire the Candid Reader will peruse the Contents of the Book in the following Pages before he enter upon the whole whereby he may see the connexion and sequences of the matter and he must not expect that those Contents are exactly according to the
your selves will be of opinion that they who are too Tall to stand and too stubborn to bow deserve to be broke One would have thought that His Majesties Patience after so many and great Provocations as these should have made a way to your Hearts through your Brains and made you ashamed of your obstinacy and in love with obedience before now But you have deceived his and all good Mens expectations still Insomuch that on Sunday the 4th of September His Majesty sent for you to Attend him at Christ-Church and Commanded you to Admit the Bishop of Oxon your President without any further delay or pretence you say it was to Elect him which sounds like the rest of your Sophistry for you well knew that admission would have satisfied him for which you had his Written Mandate lying by you which would have determined that Scruple But the truth of it was you resolv'd as time the best Expositor of Mens intentions has discover'd to persist in your obstinacy till you had convinced him and others that you were none of the good Centurions Servants for instead of complying with His Majesties Pleasure you went back to your Chappel where you should have learned and paid more Devotion and Signed a Paper containing a direct and dis-obedient refusal Which peevish carriage of yours to your Prince from one end to the other is such a Composition of folly and frowardness as was little deserv'd by so good and Gracious a King. There ever went a Miraculous Power of Conversion with his Royal Presence where ever he came in his whole Progress but here he convinced all such as he had discoursed with of the Justice and equity of his Proceedings your selves excepted no body of Men ever departed unsatisfied from him but that they departed from the blessing of enjoying his Royal presence no longer And I must confess I do not see how it is possible to do any thing more in point of Honor Conscience Clemency Justice and Royal Tenderness for the preservation of this Society and every Member of it than what His Sacred Majesty hath already done in spight of your Dis-obedience and Contumacy and yet he was and is still resolved to continue his Princely Piety and Goodness to all those who shall no longer pretend to make it a sin against Conscience to return to their Obedience to him and to those whom he has set in Lawful Authority over them of which I gave you a full account at the first opening of our Commission on Friday the 21st of October in your College Hall as you may well remember On Saturday the 22d of October we required you to Admit and Instal my Lord of Oxon according to the Kings Mandate to you before directed which all but three of you refused again to do and gave your pretended Reasons for it in the Morning and in the Afternoon Dr. Hough tho' before Expelled came in without leave but not without Attendance and Followers unbecoming his Circumstances and Appealed from what we had done or should do as Illegal Vnjust and Null by word of Mouth and not in Writing nor with the decent salvo's of all other Appeals which was applauded by a loud Tumultuous and Insolent Hum to affect the Populacy to the espousing of your cause for which open breach of the Peace Dr. Hough was bound over to the Kings Bench and if most of you had not been better pleased with that Insolent behavior than became you and indeed Accessaries to it if not Actors in it you might and would have discovered the Turbulent persons who had been guilty of it On Tuesday the 25th of October we our selves caused the Bishop to be Installed by his Proxy and we then askt you whether you would submit to the Bishop as your President now Installed by the Kings Mandate In lieitis honestis To which all that were present except Dr. Fairfax gave in an Answer in scriptis in the Affirmative and requested us to represent you as Dutiful to His Majesty in the highest degree But from this good Resolution you quickly fell for on Friday the 28th of October when we advised you to make an humble submission to His Majesty according to the Nature of the Offence it had so ill an effect upon you that after an hours consideration or more you brought us down a Paper Signed by all but two or three of the Fellows then present which seemed to us to be rather a protestation against your former submission than a begging of the Kings Pardon for your past offences and that you might clear your selves at least from any the least suspition of that which lookt like Repentance or Obedience you desired to withdraw or expound your Submission which you made in writing the Tuesday before and to limit the word submission to the Kings Authority telling us plainly that you did not nor could not submit to the Bishop of Oxon as your Lawful President With the Insolent Justification of your continued dis-obedience we were deeply affected and astonished and tho' we might then justly have Expelled you yet we forbore and went back to London to acquaint His Majesty with your carriage who resented it according to your Demerits He who is too proud to ask God and the King Pardon deserves neither I am sure the best of us need both I wish it had been in our Power to have persuaded you then so to have moderated your selves as to have Sacrificed the most disingenuous Arts of Contention to the safety and honor of the Christian Religion and not to have pursued your little scruples and great Animosities to the evident hazard at least of bringing a scandal on it I hope I have said enough to convince you that the Fig leaves which you have stitched so Artificially together will not cover your Nakedness you pretend Conscience of your Oaths among which that of Allegiance and Supremacy ought not to have been forgotten But partiality in Duty is a great Symptom of Hypocrisie You Dispense with your own Oaths your selves and make too bold with some parts of your Founders Statutes in which I have instanced and could do in more as in that wherein you are bound to be served solum per Masculos for want of which we found some scandals to have been brought upon the College by Bastard Children and will you not suffer the King who alone hath Power to do it to give you a Dispensation in others Can he who is so tender of his Honor put up such Indignities as these And can we who are intrusted with the vindication of it suffer this to go unpunished I wish you had half so much kindness and Charity for your selves and so great a consideration of the happiness of this Foundation as His Majesty and his Commissioners have already exprest in their dealings with it The Justice and Equity whereof if you do not all good Men will Proclaim I need not remind you of putting in some Papers under your hands which
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
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
§. 6. An account of the whole matter as in the Parliament Roll. I shall now give an account of the matter as it appears in the Parliament (d) Rot. Parl. 13 H. 4. N. 15. Roll. First there is the Arch-Bishops Petition to the King that with the Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons Assembled in the said Parliament the Schedule Annexed might be confirmed Which Schedule contains the Declaration of King Richard the Second as it is to be found in Mr. Pryn wherein it appears that the ground of the Contest and differences was about a Bull of Exemption pretending to exclude the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and his Successors and all other Ordinaries and Founders of the said University and Colleges from Visiting and all other Ordinary Jurisdiction which Bull by a venire facias was brought into the Chancery at Westminster and the Chancellor and Proctors shewed a sufficient Warrant under the Universities Seal to produce the Bull in Chancery and to answer there and to do and receive what should be ordered and determined by the late King Richard the Second and his Council as appears by the Records of the Chancery and after the Chancellor and Proctors for themselves and the University submitted themselves in the foresaid matters (a) Ordinationi definis ioni dicti nuper Regis to the Ordinance and Determination of the said King. ☞ The King after mature and fuller deliberation with his Council clearly considering that the Bull was procured in prejudice of his Crown and to the revoking or enervating of the Laws and Customs of his Realm and in favor and emboldning of Heretics and Lollards Murtherers and other Malefactors Ordained and by his Breve or (b) In fide Logeancia dilectione quibus sibi tencbantur Ac sub poena amissionis privilegiorum Universitatis praedictae sub forfeitura omnium aliorum quae sibi foris facere potuerunt ne dictam Bullam in aliqua sui parte exequi seu excercere seu Beneficium quoddam Exemptionis per Bullam illam aliqualiter reportare seu recipere presumerent Mandate Commanded and forbid the Chancellor Masters Doctors and Scholars of the said University on their Faith Allegiance and the love that they ought him and under the penalty of losing the privileges of the said University the forfeiture of all other things which they could forfeit that they presumed not to execute or exercise the said Bull in any part of it or any ways to presume to enjoy or receive any benefit of Exemption by the said Bull But to renounce all the Exemptions and Privileges contained in it before Richard Kendall the Kings Clerk and Notary and should transmit an Instrument for that purpose under the Seal of the said University by the said Clerk under the Penalties aforesaid After which follows the Kings Sentence as before In this part it may be observed how the King discovers his Authority and Prerogative over the University in injoyning them to renounce the Popes Bull and not to Execute c. The King may deprive the University of all privileges for disobedience it under the penalty there mentioned which demonstrates that for contempt and dis-obedience the King may not only Suspend and Deprive any Member of the University but take away all their Privileges c. which would be well considered by those who obstinately refuse to obey the Mandate of a King of England §. 7. The account of the latter Visitation Then follows the account of the later Visitation of the Arch-Bishop in the 12th 12. H. 4. of Henry the Fourth as before related where Richard Courtney the Chancellor and Benedict Brent and John Birch the Proctors opposed him and he and the University submited themselves to the Arbitrament Judgment Ordination and Decree of the King and the King Summoned them to appear before him at Lambeth upon the 17th of September where hearing all things and having consideration of the Submission made to King Richard and the Ordination Judgment and Determination of the same the King Confirmed and Ratified the same And further ordered if they obeyed not the Arch-Bishop c. all their Franchises Liberties and all the Privileges of the same University should be seized into the hands of the King and his Heirs till they performed it and the Chancellor and Vice-Chancellor and Proctors of the University for the time being and their Successors and the University shall pay to the King and his Heirs 1000 l. Then follows that this Schedule being seen and examined and understood with mature and diligent deliberation Note here the Kings peculiar power in passing an Act of Parliament The King in full Parliament affirmed and declared that all and every thing contained in the same Schedule were done Arbitrated Ordered Considered Decreed and Adjudged by him And the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in the said Parliament who had full deliberation likewise of the same approved ratified and confirmed it Upon the whole matter of this great contest about the Arch-Bishops Visitation I think the King and the Parliament were at that time the more Inclined to confirm the Arch-Bishops power because that kept the Visitatorial power within the Kings Dominions and Excluded Exemptions which the State of England was rarely inclined to favor as being mostly as prejudicial to the Crown as the Bishops And Wickliffs Doctrin spreading the King was more willing the Arch-Bishop should Visit the University because it was his proper Office to see to the preservation of the Establish'd Religion and if the University had been left to the Visitation of the Chancellor the opinion of Mr. Wickliff might have the more encreased since the temper of the Members might have been changed from the Doctrin professed since so many in the University were then said to have embraced it §. 8. The reasons why the Author hath given so large an account of this I have insisted the longer upon this particular for two Reasons first to shew that the Government ordering and reforming of Universities were then Judged to be of Ecclesiastical Cognizance especially in those matters which appertain to the Doctrins taught in them which even in their Philosophical Disputes in some measure effected Religion even the taking of Degrees except in the faculty of Physic was in Ordine ad Spiritualia as appears in those Constitutions which prohibit any from having Benefices but such as had taken Degrees in Universities a further Illustration of the former of these Inferences I shall clear when I speak of Bishop Rippingdons Visitation Secondly The misapplication of Mr. Pryn. To shew the mis-application of Mr. Pryn who finding by the Transactions of King Richard the Second and King Henry the Fourth and those of King Charles the First concerning Arch-Bishop Lauds Visitation that those Kings determined the matter in favor of the Arch-Bishops thereby would Infer that the Visitation of the University of Oxford appertained to the Black
Parliament and neither to the King even when there was no Arch-Bishop in being nor to any other but the Committee and Delegates of that Parliament whereas he ought to have considered that the true reason why the first two Kings determined for the Arch-Bishops Visitation was because the Universities were at that time favorable to the Doctrin of Wickliff which it was the Interest of the Church to oppose and might very well induce the Kings to Commit the care of suppressing it rather to the Arch-Bishop than the Chancellor and if we consider that the suppressing the Non-Conformists was the care of King Charles the First that Arch-Bishop Laud was so bent to effect it we are not to wonder that His Majesty determined in favor of the Arch-Bishop as Arch-Bishop rather then as Chancellor especially when it was known that the Earl of Holland then Chancellor of Cambridge was a favorer and Partron of Non-Conformists And Mr. Pryn ought further to have noted that in the two-Roman Catholic Kings times the Original of the Controversie was whether by the Exemptions of the Pope the University should be Visited by the Chancellor only or by the Arch-Bishop as Metropolitan who by the Canons had the Visitation of his whole Province as also the Dioecesan had in matters at least of Religion as in Bishop Rippingdons Visitation I shall shew so that the Cardo Controversiae was upon the validity of the Popes Exemption and in all the Cases there is a Salvo of the Kings Right and such application was made to him as shews that the last resort was to the Sovereign even to Judge of the Popes Bulls as before I have hinted §. 9. The King gives Sentence for the Arch-Bishop of York against the Aruch-Bishop of Canterbury about Queens College ☞ I shall now proceed in the Series of my History About Anno 1412. 14 H. 4. Great contests (a) Rot. Parl. Westm Crastino Anima 13. H. 5. N. 15. arose betwixt the Arch-Bishops of Canterbury and York about Visiting Queens College the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury affirming it to be his Right as Metropolitan and by the Grant of King Richard the Second And the Arch-Bishop of York claimed it as his peculiar Right as Local Visitor The Decision of this was referred to the King who having heard the Arguments on both sides gave Sentence for York By which instance it is apparent that this King determined the point against the Judgement of his Predecessors and abridged the Metropolitan Anno 1414. 2 H. 5. The King gives leave to the Bishop of the Lincoln to Visit According to the example of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury Philip Rippingdon Bishop of Lincoln the King giving him leave Published his Programma of Citation much after the Arch-Bishop's Form Dated Feb. 12. To which the University Answered Who is admited to enquire by Visitation about Heresie but not in other matters that they intended to make personal appearance to his Summons at the time and place appointed to receive only those things which are known to appertain to the Office of Inquisition of Haeretical pravity but notwithstanding under that Protestation that by that personal appearance they intend not to consent to the Visitation of what Articles soever this is Dated the 4th of March following §. 10. How both the Visitations by the Metropolitan and Dioecesan were excercised by Ecclesiastical Canons By this it seems clear that the Univensity was Subject to divers Visitors for several purposes and tho' the Metropolitical Visitation was owned yet their Dioecesan was submited to in point of Haeresie which further appears in that I find this very Year 1413. Arch-Bishop Arundél (a) Parkers Antiq. Eccl. Brit. p. 309. made certain Statutes for the Government of the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge ☞ That this power of Visiting by the Bishops was a settlement by Ecclesiastical Canons is very manifest so that the general occasion of Contests about it was by reason of some privileges granted by Popes or restrictions laid upon the Universities by their Sovereigns or some Exorbitances in the Visitors in Rescinding useful Statutes or altering old ones or Customs Therefore in the first Council of Aquileia I (b) Nec in his ubi de Visitatione ac morum Correctione agitur exemptio aut ulla Inhibitio Appellatio seu Querela etiam ad sedem Apostolicam Interposita Executionem eorum quae decret a aut Judicata fuerint quoquo modo Impediunt aut suspendunt Binnius To. 9. fol. 709. c. 2. A. find it thus Decreed Let Bishops have the Right and Power even as Delegates of the Apostolic See of Ordering Moderating and Executing according to the Sanction of the Canons those things which in their prudence to them shall seem necessary for the amendment of their Subjects and the profit of their Dioecess Neither let Exemptions or any Inhibition Appeal or Complaint even to the Apostolic See in any manner hinder or Suspend the Execution of those things Commanded Decreed or Adjudged in those things which appertain to their Visitation and the correction of manners The Council of Trent likewise (c) Idem fol. 424. c. 2. B. Decreed that all those to whom the Visitation and Reformation of Universities and General Studies did appertain should diligently take care that the Universities should receive their Canons and if any thing in the Universities was worthy of Correction and Reformation they should be amended and appointed by those to whom it appertained for the increase of Religion and Ecclesiastical Discipline These things I only note to clear the point that in former Ages the Inspection into the Government of the Universities was Judged to be of Ecclesiastical Cognizance and by consequence fall under the Kings Visitatorial power by his Commissioners CHAP. V. Concerning the Visitations of the University of Oxford since the Renouncing the Popes Supremacy in England SECT I. Concerning the Visitations in the Reigns of King Henry the 8th and King Edward the 6th § 1 AFter the Bull of Pope Sixtus the 4th was granted to the University Anno 1479. the 19th of Edward the 4th whereby it was Exempted from Archiepiscopal or Dioecesan Visitations all power of Regulation of it seemed to be Lodged in the Chancellor and Senate and other Visitations to lie asleep till King Henry the 8th had cast off the Popes Supremacy some while before which as I have before related their Statutes were delivered to Cardinal Wolsey to be corrected and altered Cap. 3. Sect. 2. §. 8. and afterwards all their Charters and Bulls surrendred to the King so that I find nothing material in this matter during his Reign besides what I have there related but in these two particulars following Anno 1535. 26 H. 8. 30. Jan. The King appointed Dr. William Tresham (a) Lib. conc Civit. Oxon. fol. 59. Commissioners Survey all the Temporal and Spiritual Lands belonging to the University Vice-Chancellor William Freer Major of Oxford William Barentyne Simon Hare-court Walter
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