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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland (2 of 6): England (5 of 12) + Henrie the Second + +Author: Raphael Holinshed + +Release Date: September 27, 2005 [EBook #16761] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRONICLES OF ENGLAND *** + + + + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Louise Pryor and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<p><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[111]</span></p> +<h2>HENRIE THE SECOND,</h2> + +<p class="center bigger">The Second Sonne of Geffrey Plantagenet.</p> + + +<p style="margin-top:3em;"> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 1.</span> +Henrie the second of that name, a French man borne, the second sonne of +Geffrey Plantagenet earle of Aniou, begotten of Maud the empresse, +daughter to Henrie the first, began his reigne ouer England the fiue and +twentith of October, in the yeare after the creation of the world 5121. +and in the yeare after the incarnation of our sauiour 1154. +<span class="yearnote">1154.</span> + about the +beginning of the third yeare of the emperour Frederike the first, the +second of pope Anastasius the fourth, the seuenteenth yeare of Lewes the +seuenth king of France, and second of Malcolme then king of Scotland. +Immediatlie after he was aduertised of the death of king Stephan, he +came ouer into England, landing at Ostreham about the seuenth day of +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i> <i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +December. After he had got his companies togither, which by tempest were +scattered in his passage, he came first to Winchester, where he receiued +homage and fealtie of the Nobles of the realme resorting vnto him. This +doone he set foorth towards London, where he was crowned king by +Theobald archbishop of Canturburie the twentith daie of December.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i> The archbishop of Rouen.</span> +The archbishop of Rouen, with thrée of his suffragans, the archbishop of +Yorke, and manie other bishops of England: Theodorus the earle of +Flanders, with a great number of other earles, lords and barons were +present there at his coronation. He was at that time about the age of +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +three and twentie yeares, and to win the peoples loue, he spake manie +comfortable words vnto them, to put them in hope (as the manner is) that +they should find him a louing prince. He vsed the lords also verie +<span class="rightnote">Councellers chosen.</span> +courteouslie. And first of all, after his attéining to the crowne, he +chose to him councellers of the grauest personages, and best learned in +the lawes of the realme, with whose prudent aduice he perused those +lawes, and amended them where he thought necessarie, commanding +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ran. Higd.</i></span> +chieflie, that the lawes established by his grandfather Henrie the first +should be obserued: and in manie things he relied vpon the aduice of +Theobald archbishop of Canturburie, at whose sute he admitted Thomas +<span class="rightnote">Thom. Becket lord chancellor</span> +Becket to be his chancellour, which Becket the said archbishop had made +archdeacon of Canturburie the yeare before.</p> + +<p>Moreouer, by the sentence and doome of his councellers, to the intent +that peace and quiet order might take place, and be the better +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 2. <br /> +1155</span> +mainteined, he commanded by waie of publishing a proclamation, that all +strangers (which to get somwhat by the wars had flocked into the realme, +<span class="rightnote"><i>Nic. Triuet.</i> <i>Polydor.</i> <i>Wil. Paruus.</i> +Strangers appointed to depart the realme. Aliens auoid the land.</span> +during the time of the ciuill discord betweene him and king Stephan) +shuld depart home without further delaie: wherefore he appointed them a +daie, before the which they should auoid vpon perill that might insue. +It was a worlds woonder to sée and marke how suddenlie these aliens were +quite vanished, as though they had béene phantasmes. Their abiding here +was nothing profitable to the subiects of the realme, as they that were +accustomed to attempt one shrewd turne vpon an others necke, +<a name="Page_112" id="Page_112" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[112]</span> +and +thought it lawfull for them so to doo. Amongst them was a great number +of Flemings, whom the king hated more than the residue.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">William de Ypres.</span> +By vertue also of this edict, William of Ypres, whom king Stephan (as ye +haue heard) had made earle of Kent, was constreined with others to +depart the realme, king Henrie seizing all his possessions into his owne +<span class="rightnote">Castels ouerthrowne. <i>Polydor.</i> <i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +hands. Diuerse castels were throwne downe and made plaine with the +ground at the kings commandement, which priuate men by king Stephans +permission had builded, or else for that they stood not in such places +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i> <i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +as was thought meet and expedient; yet some he caused to be fortified: +and furthermore, tooke into his hands againe such lands and possessions +as apperteined to the crowne, and were alienated vnto any manner of +person, of what degrée so euer he was. This wounded the minds of many +with an inward grudge, as well enough perceiuing that the king would +looke so néere to his owne commoditie, that nothing should be left for +them that might any way be recouered and gotten to his vse.</p> + +<p>In this yere queene Elianor being then in the citie of London, on the +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i> <i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>Matth. West.</i> +William Peuerell disherited.</span> +last of Februarie was deliuered of hir second sonne named Henrie. About +the same time also, William Peuerell of Notingham a noble man and of +great possessions was disherited by the king for sorcerie and +witchcraft<a name="FNanchor_5_1" id="FNanchor_5_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>, which he had practised to kill Ranulfe earle of Chester, as +it was reuealed openlie, and brought to light. In accomplishing of which +hainous crime and detestable act, many others were of counsell, and +found giltie with him, which escaped not vnpunished.</p> + +<p>On the tenth of Aprill, king Henrie assembled the péeres & great lords +<span class="rightnote"><i>Nic. Treuet.</i></span> +of his realme togither at Wallingford, and caused them to sweare +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>Nic. Treuet.</i> +Hugh de Mortimer. The castell of Cleberie.</span> +allegiance vnto his eldest sonne William: prouiding, that if he chanced +to die, then they should doo the like vnto his brother Henrie. Also +whereas Hugh de Mortimer had fensed his castels against king Henrie, he +besieged the same, and taking the castell of Cleberie, he destroied it. +Wherevpon, the foresaid Hugh shortlie after was at peace with the king, +and surrendred to him the two castels of Wigmore and Bridgenorth, which +<span class="rightnote">Roger Fitz Miles.</span> +hitherto he had holden. Moreouer, whereas there was variance kindled +betwixt the king, and Roger Fitz Miles of Glocester (who was earle of +Hereford) for the lands of Glocester, that variance was also quenched: +for after the same Roger was dead, his brother Walter succeeding him in +the earldome of Hereford, was constreined to depart with the citie of +Glocester, which the king held and reteined in his owne hands.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 2.</span> +In the second yeare of his reigne, king Henrie went to Yorke, and in +<span class="rightnote">The king goeth into the north.</span> +that countrie tooke into his hands diuers castels which had béene long +in possession of priuate men; namelie, +<span class="rightnote">The castell of Scarborough.</span> +the castell of Scarborough, which +William earle of Albemarle held, and now was constreined to resign it +vp, full sore against his will. This yeare William the kings eldest +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i> <i>Nic. Treuet.</i> +The death of the kings son William.<br /> +Geffrey the kings brother rebelleth.</span> +sonne departed this life, and was buried at Reading. The realme of +England was brought on all sides into verie good quiet; but yer long, +word came to K. Henrie, that his brother Geffrey had begun a rebellion +on the other side of the sea. For their father Geffrey (when he died) +left thrée sonnes behind him, Henrie, Geffrey, and William, ordeining by +his testament, when Henrie should haue gotten possession of England and +Normandie, that then the countrie of Aniou should remaine vnto Geffrey, +and in the meane time, he to haue these three townes, Chinon, Lodun, and +Mirabell, to mainteine his estate; and when the time came that the whole +heritage should fall vnto him, he might by possession of these three +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +haue a readier meane to come by all the rest. Furthermore, fearing least +his eldest sonne Henrie (who as then was absent) would not consent to +the performance of this his will, he caused certeine bishops and other +of the Nobles to sweare, that they should not suffer his bodie to be +committed to buriall, till his sonnes had sworne to fulfill his last +will and testament in all other things, but especially in this behalfe, +wherin he iudged not amisse. For though Henrie was loth to take his oth, +yet bicause his fathers bodie should not remaine vnburied, he was +contented to sweare.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_113" id="Page_113" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[113]</span> +But after he had obteined the kingdome of England, his couetous desire, +increasing still with abundance alreadie obteined, found meanes to +<span class="rightnote">Pope Adrian an Englishman borne. A dispensatiō for an oth. +<i>Nic. Treuet.</i></span> +procure of pope Adrian the fourth (who was an Englishman borne) a +dispensation for that oth: wherevpon (hauing got licence to depart from +the office both of right, law and equitie) neglecting his fathers +ordinance, he passed ouer into Normandie, and making war against his +brother the said Geffrey, easilie expelled him out of those places, +which were assigned him by bequest in his fathers testament, and so +tooke the earledome of Aniou into his owne possession. Howbeit, he gaue +vnto his said brother a pension of a thousand pounds English & two +thousand pounds of the monie of Aniou, with the towne of Lodun, and +certeine other lands to liue vpon; who neuerthelesse thinking himselfe +euill vsed at the kings hands, rebelled and died.</p> + +<p>¶ Here we haue to note the lacke of conscience and religion, not onlie +in the pretended successor of Peter in giuing a dispensasion for an oth, +but also in his good ghostlie sonne, who was no lesse forward in +reuolting from his oth, than the other was willing to acquite him from +the force thereof. But if these men had beene profiting scholars in the +vniuersitie of the pagans, as they were arrand truants and ranke +dullards in the schoole of christians, they might haue learned by +profane examples, that as oths are not to be rashlie taken, so they are +not to be vnaduisedlie broken. Herevnto alludeth Aristotle in his +Metaphysikes, shewing the cause why poetrie hath feigned that the gods +in old time vsed to sweare by water, as Jupiter is reported to haue +doone in this manner;</p> + + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ouid. Met. lib. 1. fab. 6.</i></span> +<span class="i6">—— per flumina iuro<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Infera sub terra Stygio labentia luco.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>To signifie vnto vs, that as water is a verie ancient and excellent +element, and so necessarie that without it the life of man cannot +consist; euen so we ought to estéeme of an oth, than the which we should +thinke nothing more religious, nothing more holie, nothing more +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ouid. Met. lib. 3. fab. 8, 9, 10.</i></span> +christian. Herevnto also tendeth the fable of the transmutation of +mariners into Dolphins for periurie: importing thus much for our +instruction, that the breaking of an oth, in a case that may preiudice, +procureth greeuous punishments from God against them that so lewdlie doo +offend. But such is the impudencie of the pope, that he will not grant +dispensations onlie for oths, but for incest, for treason, and for any +other sinne: which he may doo (as he boasteth) by vertue of his absolute +and vniuersall iurisdiction: as we haue latelie in most lamentable sort +séene exemplified. But to the course of our storie.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">1156.</span> +Shortlie after, when king Henrie had dispatched his businesse in +Normandie, and made an end of troubles there betwixt him and his brother +Geffrey, he returned into England, bicause he receiued aduertisement, +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie goeth against the Scots. He wan Carleil and +Newcastell and others.</span> +that Malcolme king of Scotland began to make war against his subiects +that bordered next vnto him, wherevpon he hasted northwards: and comming +first into Cumberland, he tooke the citie of Carleil, seizing all that +countrie into his hands; and going after into Northumberland, he wan the +towne of Newcastell, with the castell of Bamburg, and tooke into his +possession all that countrie which his mother the empresse had sometimes +granted vnto king Dauid, as before ye haue heard: howbeit, bicause he +would not séeme to offer too much wrong, and be esteemed vnmindfull of +<span class="rightnote">The earledome of Huntingtō.</span> +former benefites receiued, he suffered king Malcolme to enioy the +earledome of Huntington, which king Stephan had giuen vnto his father +earle Henrie, sonne to king Dauid, as before is partlie touched.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">William earle of Mortaigne <i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>Nic. Treuet.</i></span> +William also the earle of Mortaigne, and Warren sonne of king Stephan, +were compelled to surrender to king Henrie, the castell of Pemsey, the +citie of Norwich, and other townes and castels which he held, +apperteining to the demeane of the crowne: to whom the king in +recompense restored those lands which his father king Stephan held in +the daies of king Henrie the first.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 3. <br /> +1157.</span> +<span class="rightnote">Theodorike earle of Flanders.</span> +About this time Theodorike earle of Flanders (going with his wife vnto +Jerusalem) +<a name="Page_114" id="Page_114" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[114]</span> +committed his sonne Philip with all his lands, to the +custodie of the king of England. Hugh Bigot also resigned his castels +into the kings hands.</p> + +<p>But whilest king Henrie was about (as before ye haue heard) to recouer +and get backe the portions of his kingdome made away and dismembred by +<span class="rightnote">Rebellion of Welshmen. The king inuadeth them.</span> +his predecessors, he was informed that the Welshmen raised a rebellion +against him; to represse whose attempts, he hasted foorth with all +diligence. Now at his first approch to their countrie, his souldiers +being set vpon in the straits, were verie fiercelie put back by the +enimies, in somuch that a rumor ran how king Henrie was slaine, which +puffed vp the Welshmen with no small hope, and dawnted the Englishmen +with great feare. In déed, diuerse of the English nobilitie were slaine, +<span class="rightnote">Eustace Fitz John & Robert de Curey slaine.</span> +and (amongst others) Eustace Fitz John, and Robert de Curey, men of +great honor and reputation.</p> + +<p>Those which escaped in returning backe, not knowing that the king passed +through the straits without danger, declared to their fellowes that +followed and were approching to the said straits, that (so farre as they +knew) the king and all the residue were lost. These newes so +<span class="rightnote">Henrie of Essex.<br /> +<i>Matth. West.</i> <i>Wil. Paruus.</i><br /> +A combat betwixt Henrie de +Essex, and Robert de Mountfort.<br /> +<i>Matth. West.</i></span> +discomforted the companies, that Henrie of Essex, which bare the kings +standard by right of inheritance, threw downe the same, and fled: which +dishonorable déed was afterward laid to his charge by one Robert de +Mountfort, with whom (by order taken of the king) he fought a combat in +triall of the quarrell, and was ouercome: but yet the king qualifieng +the rigor of the iudgement by mercie pardoned his life, and appointed +him to be a shorne moonke, and put into the abbey of Reading, taking his +lands and possessions into his hands as forfeited: howbeit this combat +was not tried till about the 9. yeare of this kings reigne.</p> + +<p>Now the king, hearing that his armie was discomfited, came to his men, +and shewing himselfe to them with open visage, greatlie reuiued the +whole multitude, and then procéeding against the enimies, his people +were afterwards more warie in looking to themselues, insomuch that at +<span class="rightnote">The Welshmen submit themselues.</span> +length (when the K. prepared to inuade the Welshmen both by water & +land) they sought to him for peace, and wholie submitted themselues vnto +his grace and mercie.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The castell of Rutland and Basingwerke built. +<i>Matth. Paris.</i> Thomas Becket lord Chancelor.</span> +About the same time, king Henrie builded the castell of Rutland, the +castell of Basingwerke, and one house also of Templers. +<span class="yearnote">Ann. Reg. 4. <br /> +1158.</span> +In the moneth of September also +this yeare, the kings third sonne was borne at Oxenford, +amp; named Richard. This yeare was Thomas Becket preferred to be the kings +Chancellor. +The king holding his Christmas at Worcester in great +royaltie, sat in the church at seruice, with his crowne on his head, as +the kings vsed in those daies to doo on solemne feasts: but as soone as +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> The king laieth his crown on the altar.</span> +masse was ended, he tooke his crowne from his head, and set it downe +vpon the altar in signe of humblenes, so that he neuer after passed for +the wearing of a crowne. The same yeare also the king altered his coine, +abrogating certeine peeces called basels. +<span class="rightnote">Coine altered.</span> +</p> + +<p>In the moneth of August he went ouer into Normandie, and came to an +enteruiew with the French king neere to the riuer of Eata, where they +<span class="rightnote">Additions to John Pike.</span> +intreated of a league, and of a marriage, which was after agréed vpon, +betwixt Henrie the sonne of king Henrie; and the ladie Margaret, +<span class="rightnote">The lord chancellor Becket sent into France. <i>Matth. West.</i></span> +daughter to the French king: at which time Thomas Becket (then being the +kings chancellor) was sent to Paris in great araie to fetch hir: who +among other furnitures had nine long charrets (as Matthew Paris +writeth.) Now when this ladie was deliuered to Thomas Becket the lord +chancellor, and brought from Paris, she was appointed from thencefoorth +to remaine in the house of Robert de Newburge, a Noble man of great +honor, vntill such time as the mariage should be solemnized.</p> + +<p>After the two kings were departed in sunder, K. Henrie prepared an armie +against Conan duke of Britaine, who had seized the citie of Naunts into +his hands, after the decease of Geffrey the kings brother, who was earle +of Naunts. At length, the same Conan perceiuing himselfe not able to +resist the king of England, vpon the daie of the feast of saint Michael +the archangell came to king Henrie, and surrendred the citie of Naunts +into his hands, with all the whole countrie therevnto belonging. Soone +<span class="rightnote">Geffrey the kings fourth son born.</span> +after which resignation, +<a name="Page_115" id="Page_115" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[115]</span> +and vpon the 24. of August, Geffrey the kings +fourth sonne was borne of his wife queene Elianor.</p> + +<p>In December following, Theobald earle of Blois was accorded with king +<span class="rightnote">Petroke earle of Perch.</span> +Henrie, to deliuer to him two of his castels. Likewise Petroke earle of +Perch surrendred two castels vnto king Henrie, which he had vsurped of +the demeanes of Normandie in the daies of king Stephan: one of which +castels the king gaue him againe, receiuing homage of him for the same.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Raimond erle of Barzelone. Richard the kings sonne offered to +erle Raimonds daughter.</span> +Moreouer king Henrie and Raimond earle of Barzelone met togither at +Blaime, where they concluded a league by way of allegiance, so that +Richard the sonne of king Henrie should take to wife the daughter of the +said Raimond in time conuenient; and that the king of England should +giue vnto the said Richard the duchie of Aquitane, & the countie of +Poictow. This earle Raimond had married the daughter and heire of the +king of Aragon.</p> + +<p>In the meane time, a secret grudge that had long depended betwéene king +Henrie and king Lewes of France did still continue, and though there was +a friendship agreed betweene them (as ye haue heard) to haue +<span class="rightnote">A fained friendship.</span> +extinguished the same; yet was it but a fained friendship: for vpon +euery new occasion they were readie to breake againe, as it came to +passe shortlie after.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">William duke of Aquitaine.<br /> +Earle of saint Giles otherwise Tholouze.</span> +William duke of Aquitane, grandfather to queene Elianor, married the +daughter and heire of the earle of Tholouze, and going vnto the warres +of the holie land, he engaged that earledome vnto Raimond the earle of +saint Giles, and died before he could returne. His sonne William, father +to quéene Elianor, suffered his earledome to remaine still vnredéemed, +either for want of sufficiencie, or through negligence and carelesnesse: +so that the earle of saint Giles kéeping possession thereof vnto his +dieng daie, left it to his sonne Raimond, who inioyed it likewise. Now +when king Lewes (hauing married the foresaid Elianor) demanded +restitution as in the right of his wife, earle Raimond flatlie at the +first denied to restore it, but after considering his lacke of power to +resist the kings puissance, he plied the K. with humble petitions, and +so preuailed by faire words; that in the end king Lewes granted him his +sister Constance in marriage (which Constance, as ye haue heard, was +married before vnto Eustace the sonne of king Stephan) & with hir +granted him libertie to reteine the earldome of Tholouze as it were by +waie of endowment: whereto the other accorded. Howbeit king Henrie +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 5. <br /> +1159.</span> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris</i> <i>Matt. Westm.</i></span> +hauing married the foresaid quéene Elianor, after the diuorse had +betwixt hir and king Lewes, made claime to the said countie of Tholouze +in the right of his wife. Herevpon earle Raimond, trusting now to the +aid of his brother in law king Lewes, denied to restore it; so that king +Henrie determined to recouer it by force, and entring by and by into +Gascoine with an armie, he drew towards the countrie of Tholouze, & +began to inuade the same with great force and courage.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i> William Trencheuille.</span> +Diuerse great lords of those parties ioyned with king Henrie in his war +which he attempted against the earle of saint Giles, as the earle of +Barzelone, and the lord William Thencheuile, a man of great power in +those quarters, hauing vnder his rule manie cities, castels and townes, +notwithstanding that he had of late lost many of them by violence of the +foresaid earle of Tholouze, but now by the aide of king Henrie he +recouered them all. Malcolme also king of Scotland came vnto king +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i></span> +Henrie, whilest he was foorth in this iournie, to associate him in this +businesse.</p> + +<p>The earle hearing of king Henries comming with an armie, was put in +great feare, and therevpon wrote letters to his brother in law king +Lewes, requiring him with all spéed possible to come vnto his aid. King +Lewes vpon receipt of the letters, & vnderstanding the present danger of +the earle, made such hast in continuing his iournie both daie and night, +that he came to Tholouze, before king Henrie could arriue there. Which +when king Henrie vnderstood, and perceiued how he was preuented, he +changed his purpose of besieging the citie, and fell to spoiling of the +countrie thereabouts: at which time he +<a name="Page_116" id="Page_116" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[116]</span> +recouered certaine places that +latelie before had reuolted from his gouernment, & (amongst the rest) +<span class="rightnote">The citie of Cahors. <i>N. Triuet.</i> The lord chancellor +Becket.</span> +the citie of Cahors, which he furnished with men, munition and vittels, +appointing his chancellor Thomas Becket to the custodie and keeping +thereof: he fortified other places also which he had gotten, placing +capteines and men of warre to looke vnto the defense of the same. +Whilest the king was thus abrode on his iournie in the parties of +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rob. Houed.</i> William earle of Bullongne.</span> +Aquitaine, William earle of Bullongne and Mortaine the sonne of king +Stephan, and Haimon earle of Glocester departed this life, which two +earles went thither with him.</p> + +<p>Finallie, when he had set things at a staie in those parties, he +returned towards Normandie, and comming to the citie of Toures, he gaue +the order of knighthood vnto Malcolme king of Scotland, and so in the +moneth of October he came backe into Normandie, and there augmenting his +<span class="rightnote">The countie of Beauuoisin.</span> +armie with new supplies, entred into the countie of Beauuoisin, burned +manie villages in the same, and destroied the strong castell of +Gerberie, except one turret, which his souldiers could not take, by +reason of the fire and smoke which staied and kept them from it. +Moreouer, Simon earle of Auranches deliuered vnto king Henrie such +fortresses as he held in France, as Rochfort, Montfort, and such like, +which was no small discommoditie and inconuenience to the French king, +bicause the garisons placed in those fortresses impeached the passage +<span class="rightnote">A truce taken.</span> +betwixt Paris and Orleance. But shortlie after, a truce was taken to +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 6. <br /> +1160.</span> +last from the moneth of December, vnto the feast of the holie Trinitie +in the yeare next following.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">A peace concluded.<br /> +A marriage concluded. <i>Matth. Paris.</i><br /> +Legats.</span> +In the moneth of Maie also insuing, a peace was concluded vpon the +former articles and conditions: for further confirmation whereof, the +mariage was solemnized betwixt Henrie the kings sonne being seuen yeares +of age, and the ladie Margaret daughter to the French king, being not +past three yeares old: as writers doo report. The marriage was +celebrated at Newborough on the second daie of Nouember, by the +authoritie of two legats of the apostolike sée, Henrie bishop of Pisa, +and William bishop of Pauia, both preests and cardinals.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i> Certeine of the Ualdois came into England +being Dutchmē.</span> +About the same time came certeine Dutchmen of the sort called Ualdoies +ouer into this realme, to the number of thirtie or more, who held +opinions in religion contrarie to the faith of the Romane church, for +(as one author affirmeth) they which first spred the opinions which +these men held, came from Gascoigne, and preuailed so greatlie in +setting foorth their doctrine, that they mightilie increased through the +large regions of Spaine, France, Italie, and Germanie: simple men (God +wote) they were for the most part, as is written of them, and of no +quicke capacitie. Howbeit, those which at this time came ouer into +England, were indifferentlie well learned, and their principall or +<span class="rightnote">A councell at Oxford.</span> +ringleader was named Gerard. Now also was a councell assembled at +Oxford, whereat these dogmatists were examined vpon certeine points of +their profession. The forsaid Gerard vndertaking to answere for them +<span class="rightnote">The professions of the Ualdoies.</span> +all, protested that they were good christians, and had the doctrine of +the apostles in all reuerence. Moreouer, being examined what they +thought of the substance of the godhead and the merits of Christ, they +<span class="rightnote">Their examination & protestation. The Ualdois condemned.</span> +answered rightlie, and to the point; but being further examined vpon +other articles of the religion then receiued, they swarued from the +church, and namelie, in the vse of the diuine sacraments, derogating +such grace from the same, as the church by hir authoritie had then +ascribed thereto. To conclude, they would renounce their opinions, in +somuch that they were condemned, burned in the forehead with an hot +iron, and in the cold season of winter stripped naked from the girdle +steed vpward, and so whipped out of the towne; with proclamation made, +<span class="rightnote">They are forbidden meat and drinke. They are starued to +death.</span> +that no man should be so hardie as to receiue them into any house, +relieue them with meat, drinke, or any other kind of meanes: wherevpon +it fell out in fine that they were starued to death through cold and +hunger: howbeit in this their affliction they séemed to reioise, in that +they suffered for Gods cause, as they made account.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i><br /> +The first falling out betwixt the K. & Thomas +Becket.<br /> +<i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>Matth. West.</i></span> +The same yeare, Matthew sonne to the earle of Flanders married the ladie +Marie the abbesse of Ramsie, daughter to king Stephan, and with hir had +the countie of Bullongne. About this mariage grew the first falling out +betwixt the king and his chancellor Thomas +<a name="Page_117" id="Page_117" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[117]</span> +Becket (as some haue +written) but none more than the said Matthew was offended with the said +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 7. <br /> +1161.</span> +chancellor, bicause he was so sore against the said contract.</p> + +<p>King Henrie, shortlie after the marriage was consummate betwixt his +sonne & the French kings daughter, got into his hands the castell of +Gisors, with two other castels, situate vpon the riuer of Eata in the +confines of Normandie and France. For it was accorded betwixt the two +kings, that when the marriage should be finished, king Henrie should +haue those thrée castels, bicause they apperteined to Normandie; in the +meane time, the same castels were deliuered into the hands of Robert de +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +Poiron, Tostes de Saint Omer, and Robert Hastings, thrée knights +templers, who vpon the consummation of the marriages before said, and +according to the trust committed to them, surrendred the possession of +the said castels into the hands of king Henrie.</p> + +<p>But the French king was not a little mooued, for that king Henrie had +seized vpon them without his licence, in so much that he raised a power +of armed men, and sent them into Normandie, where they had one cruell +conflict aboue the rest with the Normans, till the night parted them in +<span class="rightnote"><i>Gaguinus.</i> The French & Normans fight.</span> +sunder, by meane whereof the Frenchmen withdrew to Chaumount, and the +Normans to Gisors. The next daie, as the Frenchmen came foorth againe, +purposing to haue won Gisors, they were beaten backe by the Normans, who +issued out of the towne to skirmish with them. Thus was the warre +<span class="rightnote"><i>Nic. Triuet.</i></span> +renewed betwixt these two princes; and by setting on of Theobald earle +of Blois, the matter grew to that point, that the English and French +powers comming foorthwith into the field, and marching one against an +other, they approched so neere togither, that battell was presentlie +looked for, first in Ueulgessine, and after in the teritorie of Dune; +but yet in the end such order was taken betwixt them, that their armies +brake vp.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Thrée knights templers. <i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +The three Templers also ran in displeasure of the French king, for the +deliuerie of the castels before they knew his mind, so that he banished +them the realme of France for euermore: but king Henrie receiued them, +and gaue them honorable enterteinement. Some write that there were but +two castels, Gisors and Meall, which were thus put into their hands, and +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +by them deliuered as before is mentioned.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The death of Theobald archbishop of Canturburie.</span> +About this time Theobald archbishop of Canturburie departed this life, +after he had gouerned that sée the space of 22. yeares, who at his going +to Rome, and receipt of the pall of pope Innocent the second, was also +created legat of the see apostolike, which office he exercised so +diligentlie, and so much to the auaile of the church, that the dignitie +<span class="rightnote">The power legantine anexed to Cant. <i>Wil. Paru.</i></span> +of legatship remained euer after to the archbishop of Canturburie by a +speciall decrée, so that they were intituled Legati nati, that is to say +Legats borne (as mine author dooth report.) This Theobald greatlie +fauoured Thomas Becket.</p> + +<p>This Becket was borne in London, his father hight Gilbert, but his +<span class="rightnote">The authoritie of Becket.</span> +mother was a Syrian borne, and by religion a Saracen: howbeit (no regard +had of his parents) he grew so highlie in fauour with the king, and +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 6.</span> +might doo so much in England, that he seemed to reigne as if he had +beene associat with him also in the kingdome, and being Lord chancellor, +the king sent him ouer into England (Richard Lucie being in his +companie) with sundrie letters in his fauour, thereby to procure his +election to that sée: which was brought to passe according to the kings +<span class="rightnote">He is consecrated archb. <i>Wil. Paru.</i></span> +desire at Westminster. Afterward he was ordeined at Canturburie on +saturdaie in Witsunwéeke, by Henrie bishop of Winchester (although there +be that write how Walter bishop of Rochester did consecrate him) which +<span class="yearnote">1162.</span> +consecration was in the 44. yeare of his age, and in the fift yere after +his first aduancement to the office of Lord chancellor, so that he was +the eight and thirtith archbishop +<span class="rightnote">Quadrilogium ex vita eiusdem Thomæ.</span> +which gouerned in that see.</p> + +<p>Toward the end of the same yeare, Henrie the kings sonne receiued homage +of the barons, first in Normandie, and after in England. In the yeare +<span class="rightnote">The archbishop a better courtier than a preacher.</span> +ensuing, the king his father committed him to archbishop Becket, that he +might sée him brought vp and trained in maners and courtlie behauiour, +as apperteined to his estate: wherevpon the archbishop in iest called +him his sonne.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_118" id="Page_118" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[118]</span> +<span class="rightnote">The quéene brought to bed of a daughter.</span> +This yeare Quéene Elianor was brought to bed at Rohan of a daughter +named Elianor.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 9. <br /> +1163.</span> +In like maner the kings of England and France receiued pope Alexander +the third at Cocie vpon Loire with all honor and reuerence, insomuch +that they attended vpon his stirrup on foot like pages or lackies, the +one vpon his right side, and the other on his +<span class="rightnote">An enteruiew. <i>N. Triuet.</i></span> +left.</p> + +<p>¶ Note here the intollerable pride of this antichristian pope in +assuming, and the basemindednesse of these two kings in ascribing vnto +that man of sinne such dignitie as is vtterlie vnfit for his indignitie. +But what will this monster of men, this Stupor mundi, this Diaboli +primogenitus & hæres not arrogate for his owne aduancement; like yuie +climing aloft, & choking the trée by whose helpe it créepeth vp from the +root to the top. But the end of this seauen horned beast so extolling +and lifting it selfe vp to heauen, is</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">—— Erebo miserè claudetur in imo<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Atque illic miris cruciatibus afficietur.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Homage of the K. of Scots.</span> +In Januarie ensuing, the king returned into England, and the same yeare +the king of Scots did homage vnto Henrie the yonger, and deliuered his +yonger brother Dauid to the king his father, with diuerse other the +sonnes of his lords and barons in pledge, for assurance of a perpetuall +peace to be kept betweene them, with some such castels as he required.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">A councell at Tours.</span> +In the meane time archbishop Thomas went to the councell holden by pope +Alexander at Tours in the Octaues of Pentecost, where he resigned his +bishoprike into the popes hands (as the fame went) being troubled in +conscience for that he had receiued it by the kings preferment. The pope +allowing his purpose, committed the same pastorlike dignitie to him +againe by his ecclesiasticall power, whereby the archbishop was eased +verie well of his greefe, and shortlie after his returne from his +councell, seemed desirous to reduce & cause to be restored such rights +as he pretended to belong vnto the church of Canturburie, whereby he ran +into the displeasure of manie, and namelie of the mightiest.</p> + +<p>Moreouer he required of the king the kéeping of Rochester castell, & the +custodie of the tower of London. He alledged also that Saltwood & Hith +<span class="rightnote">The archbish. practiseth treason secretlie. Homage for the +castell of Tunbridge.</span> +belonged peculiarlie to the seigniorie of his see. He called Roger earle +of Clare vnto Westminster, to doo his homage, vnto him for the castell +of Tunbridge: but the earle denied it through the setting on of the +king, alledging all the fee thereof to apperteine rather to the king +than to the archbishop. Thus was the archbishop troubled, and he grew +dailie more and more out of the kings fauour. For yee must vnderstand, +that this was not the first nor the second, but the eight time that the +king had shewed tokens of his displeasure against him.</p> + +<p>After this, vpon the first day of Julie, Rice prince of Southwales, with +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>Matth. West.</i></span> +diuerse other lords and nobles of Wales, did homage both to the king and +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 10.</span> +to his sonne Henrie at Woodstocke. Hamline the kings bastard brother +married the countesse of Warren, the widow of William earle of Mortaigne +bastard sonne to king Stephan. This countesse was the sole daughter and +<span class="rightnote">Homage of the Welshmen. <i>N. Triuet.</i></span> +<span class="yearnote">1164.</span> +heire of William the third earle of Warren, which went with Lewes king +of France into the holie land, and there died. Soone after, the Welshmen +rebelling with their prince Rice and his vncle Owen, did manie +mischéefes on the marshes: and by the death of Walter Gifford earle of +Buckingham (who deceased this yeare without heire) that earledome came +to the kings hands.</p> + +<p>On the 20. daie of September were three circles seene to compasse the +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +sun, and so continued the space of thrée houres togither: which when +they vanished awaie, two sunnes appeared and sprang foorth after a +maruellous maner. Which strange sight the common people imagined to be a +signe or token of the controuersie then kindling betwixt the king and +the archbishop.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_119" id="Page_119" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[119]</span> +About this time the king called a parlement at Westminster, to treat of +<span class="rightnote">Discord still kindleth betwixt the king and the archb.</span> +matters concerning the commonwealth, wherein great discord arose betwixt +the king & archbishop Becket, about certeine points touching the +liberties of the church. For the king hauing an earnest zeale vnto +iustice, and commanding the iudges to punish offenders without respect, +vnderstood by their information, that manie things by them of the +spiritualtie (against whome their authoritie might not be extended) were +committed contrarie to common order: as theft, rapine, murther, and +manslaughter; in so much that in his presence it was made notorious, +that sith the beginning of his reigne, aboue an hundred manslaughters +had béene committed within his realme of England by préests and men of +<span class="rightnote">Murthers committed by préests.</span> +religious orders. Herevpon being mooued in mind, he set forth lawes +against the spiritualtie, wherein he shewed his zeale of iustice. For as +the cause procéeded from the bishops of that age, so did the fault also, +sith contrarie to their owne canons they permitted préests to liue ouer +<span class="rightnote"><i>W. Paruus.</i></span> +licentiouslie without due correction, studieng onelie to mainteine the +liberties and immunities of the church, and not to reforme the +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +irregularitie of the regulars. Of this crew was one Philip de Broc, a +canon of Bedford, who being arreigned before the kings iusticer for a +murther, vttered disdainefull words against the same iusticer: which +when he could not denie before the archbishop, he was depriued of his +prebend, and banished the land for two yeares space.</p> + +<p>These things troubled the king, who therefore hauing alreadie set downe +such orders as should bridle the spiritualtie from their wicked dooings, +thought that if he might get them confirmed in parlement by consent of +the bishops and clergie, then the same should take place and be receiued +<span class="rightnote">The king meaneth to bridle the spiritualtie frō +presumptuous dealing. The prelats against the king. <i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +for lawes. Wherefore he earnestlie required at this parlement that it +might be enacted against all such of the spiritualtie, as should be +taken and conuicted for any henious offense, they should loose the +priuiledge of the church, and be deliuered vnto the ciuill magistrate, +who should sée them suffer execution for their offences, in like maner +as he might any of the kings subiects being laie men. For otherwise the +king alledged, that they would boldlie presume to doo much more +mischiefe, if after ecclesiasticall discipline, no secular correction +should follow. And likelie it was that they would passe but little for +their disgrading and losse of their order, who in contempt of their +calling would not absteine from committing most mischieuous +abhominations and hainous enormities.</p> + +<p>Unto these reasons thus proponed by the king (to haue his purpose take +effect) the archbishop and his suffragans, with the rest of the bishops, +answered verie pithilie, labouring to proue that it was more against the +liberties of the church, than that they might with reason well allow. +Wherevpon the king being moued exceedinglie against them, demanded +whether they would obserue his roiall lawes and customes, which the +archbishops and bishops in the time of his grandfather did hold and +<span class="rightnote">Their order saued.</span> +obeie or not? Wherevpon they made answere, that they would obserue them, +Saluo ordine suo, Their order in all things saued. But the king being +highlie offended with such exceptions, vrged the matter so, that he +would haue them to take their oth absolutely, & without all exceptions, +<span class="rightnote">The king offended with the bishops.</span> +but they would none of that. At length he departed from London in verie +great displeasure with the bishops, hauing first taken from the +archbishop Thomas all the offices and dignities which he enioied since +his first being created chancellor.</p> + +<p>Howbeit, after this, manie of the bishops séeing wherevnto this broile +would grow, began to shrinke from the archbishop, and inclined to the +king. But the archbishop stood stiflie in his opinion, and would not +bend at all, till at length not onelie his suffragans the bishops, but +also the bishop of Liseux (who came ouer to doo some good in the matter) +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +and the abbat of Elemosina (who was sent from the pope) persuaded him to +agree to the kings will, in so much that being ouercome at last with the +earnest suit of his freends, he came first to Woodstocke, and there +promised the king to obserue his lawes, Bona fide, Faithfullie, and +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +without all collusion or deceit.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">1164.</span> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i> A councell at Clarendon.</span> +Shortlie after, in the feast of S. Hilarie, a councell was holden at +Clarendon, whereto the archbishop, and in manner all the lords +spirituall and temporall of the land made +<a name="Page_120" id="Page_120" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[120]</span> +their repaire. Here the +archbishop would haue willinglie started from his promise, if first the +bishops, and after the earles of Leicester and Cornewall, Robert and +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +Reignald (which Reignald was vncle to the king) and lastlie two knights +templers, had not mooued him to yéeld to the kings will. But (amongst +the rest) these two knights, namelie Richard de Hastings, and Hosteus de +Boloigne were verie earnest with him, & at length preuailed, though not +for conscience of dutie, wherewith he should haue beene touched; yet +with feare of danger, which (by refusing to satisfie the kings will) he +should haue brought not onelie vpon himselfe, but also vpon the other +bishops there present.</p> + +<p>These knights séemed to lament his case, as if alreadie they had séene +naked swords shaken about his eares. And indeed, certeine of the kings +seruants that attended vpon his person after the manner of a gard, went +to and fro, rushing vp and downe the chambers, shaking their bright +battell axes readie appointed, and looking as if they would forthwith +run vpon the bishops. Wherevpon the archbishop being touched with +remorse, and séeming to striue against his determinat purpose, consented +to obey the kings pleasure, and so promised in the word of a préest, +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matt. Paris.</i> The archbishop Becket receiueth an oth.</span> +swering furthermore, that he would obserue the kings lawes and customes, +without expressing these words, Saluo ordine meo, Mine order saued, +which he had vsed before. The like oth did all the bishops take. But the +archbishop refused at that time to seale to the writing that conteined +the articles of the oth which he should haue obserued, requiring as it +were a time to consider of them, sith in so weightie a matter nothing +ought to be doone without good and deliberate aduice, wherefore he tooke +with him a copie thereof, and so did the archbishop of Yorke an other, +and the third remained with the king.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">He repenteth him in that he had receiued an oth. +<i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +Shortlie after, the archbishop considering further of this oth which he +had taken, repented himselfe greeuouslie therof, in so much that he +absteined from saieng of masse, till he had by confession and fruits of +penance (as saith Matth. Paris) obteined absolution of the pope. For +addressing and sending out messengers with all spéed vnto the pope, with +a certificat of the whole matter as it laie, he required to be assoiled +of the bond which he had vnaduisedlie entred into. This suit was soone +granted, in so much that the pope directed his especiall letters vnto +him, conteining the same absolution in verie ample and large manner, as +Matth. Paris dooth report. And thus began a new broile.</p> + +<p>The archbishop in the meane time, perceiuing that the liberties of the +church were now not onelie embezelled, but in maner extinguished, and +being loth to make any further attempt against his former dealings, +would now (without the kings knowledge) haue departed the realme, +wherevpon comming to Romnie, he tooke shipping, to haue passed ouer into +<span class="rightnote">The archbishop Becket would haue fled out of the realme.</span> +France, and so to haue gone to the popes court. But by a contrarie wind +he was brought backe into England, and thereby fell further into the +kings displeasure than before, in so much that, whereas an action was +commensed against him of late for a manor, which the archbishops of +Canturburie had of long time held: now the matter was so vsed that the +archbishop lost the manor, and was moreouer condemned to paie the +arrerages, and thus his troubles increased euen through his owne +malapertnesse and brainesicknesse; whereas all these tumults might haue +béene composed and laid asléepe, if he had béene wise, peaceable, +patient, and obedient. For,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>M. Pal. in suo sag.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Vir bonus & sapiens quærit super omnia pacem,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Vúltque minora pati, metuens grauiora, cauétque,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Ne paruo ex igni scelerata incendia surgant.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The archbishop to appeare at Northampton. <i>R. Houed.</i></span> +In the end, the archbishop was cited to appeere before the king at +Northampton, where the king vsed him somewhat roughlie, placing his +horsses at his Inne, and laid disobedience to his charge, for that he +did not personallie appeare at a certeine place before his highnesse, +vpon summons giuen vnto him<a name="FNanchor_5_2" id="FNanchor_5_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> for the same purpose. Wherevnto though the +archbishop alledged that he had sent thither a sufficient deputie to +<span class="rightnote">Sentence giuen against the archbishop.</span> +make +<a name="Page_121" id="Page_121" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[121]</span> +answere for him; yet could he not be so excused, but was found +giltie, and his goods confiscat to the kings pleasure.</p> + +<p>Now when the archbishop heard that sentence was in suchwise pronounced +against him; "What maner of iudgement (saith he) is this? Though I hold +my peace, yet the age that shall hereafter follow, will not hide it in +silence; for sithens the world began, it hath not beene heard, that any +archbishop of Canturburie hath béene iudged in any of the king of +Englands courts for any maner of cause; partlie in regard of the +dignitie and authoritie of his office, and partlie bicause he is +spirituallie the father of the king and all his people. This is +therefore a new forme and order of iudgement, that the archbishop should +be iudged by his suffragans, or the father by his sons."</p> + +<p>The next daie the king required of him the repaiment of fiue hundred +marks, which he had lent him when he was chancellor. Now although he +<span class="rightnote">The archbish. condemned in fiue hundred marks.</span> +affirmed that he receiued the same by waie of gift, and not by waie of +lone; yet bicause he confessed receit, he was condemned in that debt, +forsomuch as he could not prooue the title the gift.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">An assemblie of bishops.</span> +On the morrow after, the archbishop with his felow bishops being set in +councell, by commandement of the king (& the doores fast locked that +they should not get out) this was proponed against the archbishop, that +whereas he held certeine bishops sées as then vacant, with abbeies, and +other reuenues of his souereigne lord the king in his hands, and had +made none account to him for the same of long time; the king required +<span class="rightnote">The archbish. called to an account.</span> +now to be answered at his hands, and that with all spéed, for he would +haue no delaie. The summe amounted to thirtie thousand markes.</p> + +<p>When the archbishop had heard the variable sentences of the bishops in +this case, he answered after this maner: "I would (said he) speake with +two earles which are about the king," and named them. Who being called, +and the doores set open, he said vnto them; "We haue not héere at this +present to shew whereby the thing may be more manifest: therefore we +aske respit for answer till to morrow." The councell therefore brake vp, +and the multitude of people, which came with the archbishop thither, +being afraid of the kings displeasure, fell from him. Wherefore he +caused his seruants to fetch a great number of poore and impotent people +to his lodging, saieng that by the seruice of such men of warre, a more +spéedie victorie in short space might be gotten, than by them which in +time of temptation shamefullie drew backe. Herevpon his house was filled +full, and the tables set with such as his seruants had brought in, out +of the lanes and streats abroad.</p> + +<p>Upon the tuesdaie, the bishops all amazed and full of care, came vnto +<span class="rightnote">The bishops persuade the archbishop to submit himself to the +kings pleasure.</span> +him; and bicause of the displeasure which the king had conceiued against +him, counselled him to submit himselfe to the kings will, or else in +fine, they told him plainelie, that he would be iudged a periured +person; bicause he had sworne vnto the king as to his earthlie +souereigne, touching all temporall honor in life, lim, and member; and +namelie to obserue all his roiall lawes and customes, which of late he +had established.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The archbish. answer to his brethren.</span> +Wherevnto he answered: "My brethren, ye see how the world roreth against +me, and the enimie riseth vp, but I more lament that the sonnes of my +mother fight against me. If I should hold my peace, yet would the world +come to declare how ye leaue me alone in the battell, and haue iudged +against me now these two daies past, I being your father, though neuer +so much a sinner. But I command you by virtue of your obedience, and +vpon perill of your order, that you be not present in any place of +iudgement, where my person may fortune to be adiudged: in testimonie +<span class="rightnote">He appealeth to the church of Rome.</span> +whereof I appeale to our mother the church of Rome. Furthermore, if it +chance that temporall men laie their hands vpon me, I charge you +likewise by vertue of your obedience, that ye exercise the censures of +the church in the behalfe of your father the archbishop as it becommeth +you. This one thing know ye well, that the world roreth, the flesh +trembleth +<a name="Page_122" id="Page_122" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[122]</span> +and is weake, but I (by Gods grace) will not shrinke, nor +leaue the flocke committed vnto me."</p> + +<p>After this he entred into the church, and celebrated the masse of saint +Stephan (otherwise than he was accustomed to doo) with his pall: which +<span class="rightnote">He goeth to the court.</span> +being ended, he put on his sacrificing vestures, with a cope vpon them +all, and so went to the court. Furthermore, bicause he was afraid, he +receiued the sacrament secretlie with him, and bearing the crosse in his +right hand, and the reine of his bridell in his left, he came in that +order to the court, where he alighted, and entred the place, still +bearing the crosse himselfe, till he came to the kings chamber doore, +the other bishops following him with great feare and trembling. Now +being come thither, the bishop of Hereford would gladlie haue taken the +crosse, and haue borne it before him, but he would not suffer him, +saieng: "It is most reason that I should beare it my selfe, vnder the +defense whereof I may remaine in safetie: and beholding this ensigne, I +néed not doubt vnder that prince I serue."</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">He is reputed a traitour.</span> +At length, when the king had exhibited great complaints vnto them all +generallie against him, they cried that he was a traitor, sith he had +receiued so manie benefits at the kings hands, and now refused to doo +him all earthlie honor as he had sworne to doo. To be short, when the +bishops came to sit vpon the matter in councell, they appealed to the +sée of Rome against the archbishop, accusing him of periurie: and in the +word of truth bound themselues by promise, to doo what they might to +depose him, if they king would pardon them of that iudgement which now +hanged ouer the archbishops head. Then comming to the archbishop they +said: "Thou wast sometime our archbishop, and we were bound to obeie +thée: but sith thou hast sworne fealtie to the king, that is, life +member, and earthlie honor, & to obserue his lawes and customes, and now +<span class="rightnote">The bishops disallow their archbishop.</span> +goest about to destroie the same, we say that thou art guiltie of +periurie, and we will not from hencefoorth obey a periured archbishop. +Therefore we cite thée by appelation to appeare before the pope, there +to answer thine accusors." Then they, appointed him a day, in which they +ment to prosecute their appeale. "I heare you well" (said the +archbishop).</p> + +<p>The princes and péeres of the realme did also iudge him a periured +person and a traitour. Among whome (manie then being present) the earle +of Leicester accompanied with Reignald earle of Cornewall, came vnto him +and said; "The king commanded thée to come and render an accompt of that +which is obiected against thée, or else heare thy iudgement." +"Judgement?" said the archbishop, [and wherewith rising vp said,] "Naie +sonne earle, first heare thou: It is not vnknowne to thée how faithfull +I haue béene to the king, in consideration whereof he aduanced me to the +archbishops see against my will (as God can be my iudge:) for I knew +mine owne infirmitie, and I was contented to take it vpon me rather for +his pleasure, than for Gods cause, and therefore dooth God both withdraw +himselfe and the king from me. In the time of mine election he made me +frée, and discharged me of all courtlie bondage. Wherefore as touching +those things from which I am frée and deliuered, I am not bound to +answer, neither will I. So much as the soule is more worth than the +bodie, so much the more art thou bound to obeie God and me, rather than +any earthlie creature. Neither will law nor reason permit, that the +sonnes should iudge or condemne the father: and therefore I refuse to +stand to the iudgement either of the king, or of any other, and appeale +to the pope, by whome (vnder God) I ought to be iudged, referring all +that I haue vnto Gods protection and his, and vnder the defense of his +authoritie I depart out of this place." Hauing thus spoken, went +incontinent to take horsse.</p> + +<p>Now as he passed on his waie, the kings seruants and others of the court +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i> The stout courage of the archbishop.</span> +did cast out manie reprochfull words against him, calling him traitor +and false forsworne caitife. At which words turning himselfe, and +looking backe with a sterne countenance he said; "That if it were not +for his order of priesthood, and that it were lawfull for him, he +<a name="Page_123" id="Page_123" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[123]</span> +would +surelie cléere himselfe of periurie and treason, in defending and +mainteining his cause against them with weapon in hand."</p> + +<p>When he was come to the vtter gate, he found the same fast locked, +whereat they began all to be amazed: but one of his seruants espieng +where a bunch of keies tied to a clubs and were hanging on a pin, he +tooke them down, & tried which was the right key, by proof whereof he +found it at the last, opened the gate, and let the archbishop out, the +porters standing still as men amazed, and speaking not one word against +it.</p> + +<p>Now when he was got out, a great number of poore, weake and impotent +people met him, saieng: "Blessed be God, which hath deliuered his +seruant from the face of his enimie." Thus with a great rout or +companie, and with the clergie, he was honorablie conueied to the abbie +of S. Andrews: and looking behind and before him, as he passed +thitherward, he said vnto those that went with him; "How glorious a +procession dooth bring me from the face of the enimie? Suffer all the +poore people to come into the place, that we may make merie togither in +the Lord." Hauing thus spoken the people had entrance, so that all the +hall, parlours, and chambers being furnished with tables and stooles, +they were conuenientlie placed, and serued with vittels to the full.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> The archbishop Becket fled awaie in the night.</span> +The verie same night before the cockcrowing he issued foorth by a little +posterne gate, and taking with him onelie two moonks of the Cisteaux +order, the one named Robert Canne, and the other S. Cayman, with one of +his owne seruants called Roger de Broc, he fled awaie disguised in a +white vesture and a moonks coule, and changing his name, caused himselfe +to be called Dereman, & iourneied still all the night, and by daie laie +close in one fréends house or other; till at last he got to Sandwich, +and there taking ship, he sailed ouer into Flanders, and so went to +France, where at the citie of Sens he found pope Alexander, into whose +bosome he emptied whole cart lodes of complaints and greeuances.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Gilbert Follioth bishop of London was sent to the French king.</span> +The king vpon knowledge that the archbishop was fled the realme, sent +Gilbert Follioth bishop of London, and William earle of Arundell in +spéedie ambassage to, the king of France, to signifie vnto him the whole +matter and circumstance of the falling out betwixt him and the +archbishop, requiring him not to receiue the archbishop into his realme, +but this request was little regarded of the French king, as appeared: +for the archbishops cause was fauoured of manie, and the blame imputed +to king Henrie, so that the archbishop found great grace with the French +king, and no small fauour at the hands of the pope.</p> + +<p>Now when king Henrie heard that he was accused by the archbishop vnto +<span class="rightnote">Additions to <i>Iohn Pike.</i> <i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +the pope, he appointed Roger archbishop of Yorke, the aforesaid Gilbert +bishop of London, Hilarius bishop of Chichester, Roger bishop of +Worcester, Bartholomew bishop of Excester, with diuerse bishops, deanes, +archdeacons, & other learned men of good accompt to the number of 15. to +passe in ambassage vnto the pope, that they might excuse his dooings, +and burden the archbishop with the note of rebellion, whereof he had +good proofe.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Roger archbishop of Yorke with others are sent to the pope.</span> +Being admitted to declare their message in the consistorie before the +pope, they opened the whole circumstance of the matter, from the +beginning to the end, declaring that betwixt Thomas the archbishop of +Canturburie and the king there was a controuersie moued, and by both +their consents a daie appointed for the hearing and determining thereof, +as iustice should require. At the which daie (by the kings commandement) +all the chéefest lords of the realme both spirituall and temporall were +assembled, to the end that the more generall the méeting should be, the +more manifest might the discouerie of the fraud and malice of the +archbishop appéere.</p> + +<p>"At the daie appointed (saie they) there came before the catholike +prince his presence, the Nobles of his realme: and amongst other, the +archbishop the disquieter both of the kingdome & church, who (as one not +well assured of the qualitie of his owne deseruings) blessed himselfe +with the signe of the crosse at his comming into the court, as +<a name="Page_124" id="Page_124" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[124]</span> +though +he should haue come before some tyrant or schismaticall person. +Notwithstanding all which contemptuous and ambitious behauiour, the +kings maiestie was nothing offended, but committed the iudgement of his +cause to the faithfull order of the bishops, meaning so to deliuer +himselfe of all suspicion of wrong dealing. Then it rested in the +bishops hands to make an end of the controuersie, and to set a finall +vnion and agréement betwixt them. But the archbishop would none of that, +alleging how it should be a derogation to the sée apostolike and his +metropoliticall dignitie, to stand before the king in iudgement, or anie +other temporall magistrate. And albeit (saie they) some diminution or +eclipse might haue chanced to the dignitie of the church by that +iudgement, yet it had beene his part to haue dissembled the matter for +the time, to the end that peace might haue béene restored to the church. +He further obiected (ascribing to himselfe the name of father, which +seemed to sauour somewhat of arrogancie) that the children ought not to +come togither to iudge the fathers cause, but it had béene far more +necessarie that the humblenesse of the sons should mitigate the pride +and temper the ambition of the father."</p> + +<p>To conclude the kings ambassadors made earnest suit, that two legats +<span class="rightnote">The kings tale could not be heard.</span> +might be sent from the pope, to haue the hearing & discussing of all the +matter betwixt the king and the archbishop without any other appealing. +But the kings tale could not be heard in that court, the archbishop +<span class="rightnote">The archbishop Becket.</span> +hauing alreadie persuaded the pope to the contrarie. For comming to the +pope he vttered his complaint as followeth:</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matt. Paris.</i></span> +"Most holie father, I doo here come for succour to your audience, +lamenting that the state of the church, and the liberties thereof are +brought to ruine by the couetous dealing of kings and princes. Wherefore +when I thought to resist the disease approching, I was suddenlie called +before the king, to render accompts as a laie man about certeine wards, +for whom (while I was the kings chancellor) I had notwithstanding giuen +accounts; and also, when I was made bishop, and entred into the dignitie +of ruling the archbishops sée, I was released and discharged of all +reckonings and bonds by the kings eldest sonne, and by the cheefe +iusticer of the realme: so that now, where I looked to haue found aid, I +was destitute thereof, to my great hinderance and vexation. Consider +furthermore (I praie you) how my lords and brethren the bishops are +readie at the pleasure of the Noble men of the court to giue sentence +against me, so that all men being about to run vpon me, I was almost +oppressed: and therfore am now come as it were to take breath in the +audience of your clemencie, which dooth not forsake your children in +their extreme necessitie, before whom I here stand, readie to declare +and testifie that I am not to be iudged there, nor yet at all by them. +For what other thing should that be, but to plucke awaie the right of +the church? What else then to submit spirituall things to temporall? +This example therefore once sproong vp, might giue an occasion to manie +enormities to follow. The bishops doo say, 'Those things that are +Cesars, ought to be restored to Cesar.' But admit that in manie things +the king is to be obeied, is he therefore to be obeied in things wherein +he is no king? For those belong not to Cesar, but to a tyrant. Wherein +if for my sake they would not, yet ought the bishops for their owne +sakes to haue resisted him. For what should be the cause of such deadlie +and vnnaturall hatred, that to destroie me, they should destroie +themselues? Therefore whilest for temporall things they neglect +spirituall, they faile in both. Weigh then most holie father, my fleeing +awaie, and my persecution, and how for your sake I haue beene prouoked +with iniuries, vse your rigour, constraine them to amendement, through +whose motion this hath chanced; let them not be borne out by the king, +who is rather the obstinate minister, than the finder out of this +practise."</p> + +<p>The pope hauing heard his words, tooke deliberation in the matter, with +the aduice of his cardinals, and therevpon answered the archbishop in +<span class="rightnote">The popes answer to the archbishop.</span> +effect as followeth: "That the lower power may not iudge the higher, and +chéefelie him whome he is bound to obeie, all the lawes both of God and +man doo witnesse, and the ordinances of the ancient +<a name="Page_125" id="Page_125" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[125]</span> +fathers doo +manifestlie declare: Herevpon we (to whome it apperteineth to reforme +disorders) doo clearelie reuerse and make void the iudgement pronounced +against you by the barons and bishops, whereby as well against the order +of law, as against the customes of the church, your goods were adiudged +forfeit, whereas the same goods were not yours, but the churches of +Canturburie, ouer which you haue the onelie cure and charge. But if +those that haue violentlie entred vpon the possessions and goods of your +church, and haue thereby wronged either you or yours, will not vpon +admonition giuen to them, make restitution with sufficient amends, then +may you (if you shall thinke conuenient) exercise ecclesiasticall +iustice vpon them, and we shall allow of that which you shall +reasonablie doo in that behalfe. Howbeit as touching the king himselfe +we will not giue you any speciall commandement, neither yet doo we take +from you any right belonging to your bishoprike office, which you +receiued at your consecration. But the king onelie we will spare, and +exempt from your excommunications and censures." After these and many +<span class="rightnote">The archbish. resigneth his pall.</span> +by-matters were ouerpassed, the archbishop resigned his pall vnto the +pope, but the pope gaue it him againe, and appointed him to remaine at +Pountney an abbeie of moonks Cisteaux in the diocesse of Auxerre, till +the variance were brought to some good end betwixt the king and him. +This was doone in the yeare of our Lord 1164.</p> + +<p>The king hauing knowledge by his ambassadors what answer the pope had +made, became gréeuouslie offended in his mind, and therevpon confiscated +all the goods that belonged to the archbishop and his complices, and +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +seized their reuenues into his hands, appointing one Randall de Broc to +haue the custodie of all that belonged to the see, which Broc was +nothing fréendlie to the archbishop, being his knowne enimie of old, but +fauoured the moonkes, and would not suffer that they should take wrong +or displeasure at any hand.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">1165.</span> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. West.</i> <i>Matt. Paris.</i></span> +In the yeare 1165. queene Elianor was deliuered of a daughter which was +named Joane. Also on the 26. daie of Januarie, there chanced a +maruellous earthquake in Northfolke, in the Ile of Elie, and in +Suffolke, so that men as they stood on the ground were ouerthrowne +therewith, and buildings so shaken, that the belles in stéeples knolled: +the like had also chanced in the Aduent season then last before passed.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The Welshmen make war on the English marshes.<br /> +<i>Wil. Paruus.</i> +<i>Polydor.</i><br /> +The king inuadeth Wales.</span> +The Welshmen this yeare spoiled a great part of those countries that +bordered vpon them: wherewith the king being sore mooued, leuied an +armie with all spéed as well of Englishmen as strangers, and (without +regard of difficulties and dangers) did go against the rebels, and +finding them withdrawne into their starting holes (I meane the woods and +strait passages) he compassed the same about in verie forceable maner. +The Welshmen perceiuing themselues now to be brought into such +ieopardie, as that they could not well deuise how to escape the same, +consulted what was best to be doone. After consultation, casting awaie +their weapons, they came foorth to the king, asking mercie; which +somewhat hardlie they obteined. Few of them were executed in comparison +of the numbers that offended: but yet the capteines and chéefe authors +of this rebellion were so punished, that it was thought they would neuer +haue presumed so rashlie to offend him in like sort againe. For (as some +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> The seuere punishment vsed by king Henry +against the Welshmen.</span> +writers affirme) he did iustice on the sonnes of Rice or Rees, & also on +the sonnes and daughters of other noble men that were his complices +verie rigorouslie: causing the eies of the yoong striplings to be pecked +out of their heads, and their noses to be cut off or slit: and the eares +of the yoong gentlewomen to be stuffed.</p> + +<p>But yet I find in other authors, that in this iournie king Henrie did +not greatlie preuaile against his enimies, but rather lost manie of his +men of warre, both horssemen and footmen: for by his seuere proceeding +against them, he rather made them more eger to séeke reuenge, than +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i> <i>Ran. Cogge.</i> Cardigan castell woonne by the +Welshmen.<br /> +Hubert de S. Clere conestable of Colchester.</span> +quieted them in any tumult. They tooke the castell of Cardigan, and in +besieging of Briges, the king was in no small danger of his life: for +one of the enimies shooting directlie at him, had persed him through the +bodie if Hubert de Saint Clere conestable of Colchester, perceiuing the +arrow coming had not thrust himselfe betwixt +<a name="Page_126" id="Page_126" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[126]</span> +the king and the same +arrow, and so preseruing his maister, receiued the stripe himselfe, +whereof he died presentlie after, beséeching the king to be good lord to +one onelie daughter which he had, whome the king bestowed in mariage +<span class="rightnote">William de Langualée.</span> +vpon William de Langualée, togither with hir fathers inheritance, which +William begat of hir a sonne that bare both his name and surname. ¶ A +president of gratitude & thankfulnes is here committed to memorie. And +surelie the king could doo no lesse, than some way requite the venturous +courage and hartie zeale of the gentleman, who with the losse of his +owne life preserued the king, if not from death, yet from some dangerous +wound that might haue put him to extreame anguish and paine. This may +incite men to be mindfull of benefits receiued, a virtue no lesse rare +than the contrarie is common, and as one saith,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i6">—— inueniuntur<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Quidam sed rari, acceptorum qui meritorum<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Assiduè memores, &c.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>W. Paruus.</i></span> +But to conclude with this iourneie which king Henrie made at this time +against the Welshmen, although by reason of the cumbersome difficulties +of the places, he could not enter within the countrie so farre as he +wished, yet he so impounded and constreined them to kéepe within the +woods and mountains, that they durst not come abroad, insomuch that at +the length they were glad to sue for peace.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">William king of Scots doth his homage to king Henrie.</span> +William king of Scots, successor of Malcolme (who departed this life in +the yeare last past) after he had receiued the crowne of Scotland, came +about this present time into England, and finding king Henrie at London, +did his homage to him as his predecessour Malcolme had doone before. He +made suit also to haue Northumberland restored vnto him, which the king +of Englands mother the empresse had in times past giuen vnto king Dauid. +But king Henrie gaue diuerse reasons to excuse himselfe whie he might +not deliuer that countrie to him at that present, namelie, without +consent of a parlement: wherevpon king William perceiuing how the matter +went, gaue ouer his suit for that present, meaning (when occasion +serued) to attempt the getting thereof by force, sith that by praier and +suit he sawe well inough he should not obteine it.</p> + +<p>Moreouer, the Scotish king being required by king Henrie to go ouer with +him into Normandie, granted so to doo: insomuch that king Henrie, hauing +set all things in order within his realme of England, in the Lent +following passed ouer into Normandie. But before he tooke his iourneie, +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i> <i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +he set foorth a decree consisting of these points in effect as +followeth.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p> +<span class="rightnote">An edict against the archbishop Becket.</span> +1 That no man should bring any letters or commandement from pope +Alexander, or Thomas archbishop of Canturburie into England, conteining +an interdiction of the realme: vpon perill to be apprehended and +punished as a traitour to the king, and an enimie to the realme.</p> + +<p>2 That no religious person or préest should be permitted to passe the +seas, or to come into the relme of England, except he had letters of +safe conduct from the iusticers for passage ouer, and of the king for +his returne from thence.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Appeales forbidden.</span> +3 That no man should appeale to the said pope or archbishop, nor by +their appointment hold any plée: and if any person were found dooing the +contrarie herevnto, he should be taken and committed to prison.</p> + +<p>4 That if any maner of person, either spirituall or temporall, were +obedient to the sentence of the interdiction, the same person should be +banished the realme without delaie, and all his linage with him, so as +they should not conueie with them any of their goods, the which togither +with their possessions should be seized into the kings hands.</p> + +<p>5 That all spirituall persons, which had any benefices within England, +should haue warning giuen to returne into England within foure moneths +after the same summons pronounced, and that if they failed hereof, then +should the king seize vpon their goods and possessions.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_127" id="Page_127" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[127]</span> +6 That the bishops of London and Norwich, should be (and by vertue +hereof were) summoned to appeare before the kings iusticers, to make +answer for that they had interdicted the lands of erle Hugh, and +excommunicated him.</p> + +<p>7 That the Peter pence should be gathered and kept.</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The kings of England and France enteruiew. <i>Cro. Sigeb.</i> +<i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +In the octaues of Easter king Henrie came to an enterview with the +French king at Gisors, where they had conference togither of sundrie +matters.</p> + +<p> +This yeare the quéene was deliuered of a sonne named John, who afterward +was king of this realme. +<span class="rightnote">King John borne.</span> +</p> + +<p>Moreouer, king Henrie calling a councell of his bishops and barons in +Normandie, caused and ordeined a collection +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i> A contribution.</span> +(by their aduise) to be made +through all his countries and dominions of two pence in the pound of +euerie mans lands and goods, iewels and apparell onelie excepted: to be +paid this yeare 1166. and for the space of foure yeares next ensuing, +one penie of euerie pound to be paid yearelie: and those that were not +worth twentie shillings in goods or lands (being housholders +notwithstanding) or bare any office, should paie a penie to this +contribution, which was onelie granted for the releefe of the christians +in the east parts, and those that warred against the miscreants there. +The paiment thereof was appointed to be made in the feast daie of saint +Remigius, or within fiftéene daies after. It was also ordeined, that all +such as departed this life, within the terme that this collection was in +force (their debts being paid) should giue the tenth part of the residue +of all their goods vnto this so necessarie a contribution.</p> + +<p>King Henrie remaining now in Normandie, and vnderstanding that diuerse +lords and barons of Maine, and the marshes of Britaine, would not in his +absence shew themselues obedient vnto his wife quéene Elianor, but were +about to practise a rebellion, raised an armie, and went against them, +<span class="rightnote">The castell of Foulgiers. <i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +easilie subduing them whom he found obstinate: and besieging the castell +of Foulgiers, tooke and vtterlie destroied it.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Uizeley.</span> +Soone after the archbishop of Canturburie came from Pountney to Uizeley, +and there (on Ascension daie) when the church was most full of people, +<span class="rightnote">The archbishop Becket accursed those in England that +mainteined the customs of their elders.</span> +got him into the pulpit, and with booke, bell, and candell solemnelie +accurssed all the obseruers, defenders, and mainteiners, with the +promoters of such customs, as within the realme of England they terme +the custome of their elders: amongst others that were accursed, was +Richard de Lucie, Richard the archdeacon of Poictiers, Jocelin de +Bailleuille, Alane de Neuille, and manie other. But they being absent, & +neither called nor conuinced (as they alleged notwithstanding they were +thus excommunicated) sent their messengers vnto the archbishop, and +appealed from him, and so feared not to enter into their churches.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houe.</i></span> +He had before this also written certeine letters vnto his suffragans, +denouncing some of these and other persons by expresse name accursed, +not onelie for mainteining the matter against him, touching the ancient +custome of the realme: but also for the schisme raised in Almaine by +Reignald archbishop of Colein, for the which he accursed one John of +Oxford. Moreouer, he accursed Ranulfe de Broc, Hugh de S. Clere, & +Thomas Fitz Bernard, for violentlie seizing vpon and deteining the goods +and possessions belonging to his archbishoprike, without his consent or +agréement therevnto.</p> + +<p>The king on the other part banished out of England, and all parts of his +other dominions, all those persons that were knowen to be of kin vnto +the archbishop, both yoong and old: and furthermore sent aduertisement +to the abbat of Pountney and to his moonks, with whom the archbishop by +the popes appointment remained, that if they kept him stil in their +house, he would not faile to banish all the moonks of their order out of +England. Now the archbishop, after he had remained there scarse two +yeares, departed from thence of his owne accord, and came to the king of +France, who courteouslie receiued him, and sent him to the abbeie of +saint Columbes neere to the citie of Sens, where he remained a certeine +season, as shall be shewed hereafter.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i><br /> +Legats from the pope.</span> +Shortlie after this, two legats named William of Pauia, and John of +Naples both +<a name="Page_128" id="Page_128" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[128]</span> +cardinals, came from the pope to Montmiriall, whom the +archbishop suspected rather to fauour the kings cause than his: yet he +was contented that they should haue the iudgment thereof committed vnto +them: so that first (according to the rules of the church) restitution +might be made both to him and his, of such goods as had beene taken from +them. For being spoiled, as he was, he would not stand to any iudgement, +nor could not be compelled thervnto by any reason (as he said.) Now when +the two legats saw that they could not bring any thing to passe, they +departed without any thing concluded.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Comes Sagiensis. <i>N. Triuet.</i> Alerium.</span> +About this time William Taiuan earle of Sagium (by the consent of his +sons and nephues) deliuered into the hands of king Henrie the castels of +Alerium, and Roch Laberie, with all the appurtenances to the castels +belonging.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Conan duke of Britaine deceasseth. <i>Matt. Paris.</i></span> +About this season also Conan the duke of Britaine departed this life, +leauing behind him no issue, but one onelie daughter begot of his wife +the dutchesse Constance, the daughter of the king of Scotland, which +succéeded him in the estate. Wherevpon king Henrie made earnest suit to +<span class="rightnote">A mariage concluded betwixt Geffrey the kings son and the +Duchesse of Britaine. <i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +procure a marriage betwixt hir and his sonne Geffrey, which at length he +brought to passe, to the great comfort and contentation of his mind, in +that his sonne had by such good fortune atteined to the dukedome of +Britaine.</p> + +<p>At that season in Britaine were certeine Noble men of such strength and +power, that they disdained to acknowledge themselues subiect to any +superior, in somuch that through ambitious desire of rule and +preheminence, they warred continuallie one against an other, to the +great destruction and vtter vndooing of their miserable countrie, so +that the land sometime fruitfull by nature, was as it were a wildernes. +Wherevpon, those that were the weaker, perceiuing themselues too much +oppressed by the stronger, submitted themselues vnto king Henrie, and +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 13.</span> +required his aid and succour. King Henrie reioising to haue so good an +occasion and opportunitie to reduce them to reason, with all speed aided +these supplicants and subdued the resistants, notwithstanding their +great puissance, & the strength of the places which they kept.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">1167.</span> +In the meane while Henrie came ouer to his father, and found him at +Poictiers, from whence (shortlie after Easter) he remoued, and with an +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i> King Henrie inuadeth the erle of Aluergnes +lands.</span> +armie entred into the lands of the earle of Aluergnes, which he wasted +and spoiled, bicause the said earle had renounced his allegiance to king +Henrie, and made his resort to the French king, séeking to sow discord +betwixt the foresaid two kings: which was kindled the more by a +challenge pretended about the sending of the monie ouer into the holie +land, which was gathered within the countie of Tours: for the French +king claimed to send it, by reason that the church there apperteined to +his dominion: and the king of England would haue sent it, bicause it was +gathered within the countrie that belonged to his gouernement.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i> The earle of Bolongne prepareth 600. ships to +inuade England.</span> +This yeare a great preparation of ships was made by the earle of +Bullongne, to haue inuaded England, but by the warlike prouision of +Richard Lucie, lord gouernour of the realme, the sea-coasts were so +prouided of sufficient defense, that the earles attempts came to +nothing. The cause why he made this brag, was for that the king withheld +from him certeine reuenues which he claimed to haue here in England, and +<span class="rightnote">The deceasse of the empresse Maud. <i>Matth. West.</i></span> +therefore he ment to recouer them by force. The empresse Maud mother to +the king of England (a woman in stoutnesse of stomach and warlike +attempts more famous than commonlie any of that sex) deceassed this yere +the 10. of Septem.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The sée of Lincolne void 17. yeares. +An ambassage from the emperour.</span> +Also Robert bishop of Lincolne departed this life, after whose deceasse +the sée of Lincolne was vacant by the space of seuentéene yeares, the +king in all that meane time receiuing the profits. The elect of Colein +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 14.</span> +came ambassadour from the emperour + vnto the king of England, requiring +to haue one of his daughters giuen in marriage vnto the emperours sonne, +and an other of them vnto Henrie duke of Saxonie: which request the K. +did willinglie grant, and therevpon was the queene sent for to come ouer +into Normandie, and to bring hir sonne the lord Richard and hir daughter +<span class="yearnote">1168.</span> +the ladie Maud with hir: which ladie was married vnto the duke of +Saxonie, in the beginning of the yeare next +<a name="Page_129" id="Page_129" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[129]</span> +insuing; and had issue by +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. West.</i></span> +him three sons, Henrie, Otho, and William, of which the middlemost came +to be emperour.</p> + +<p>The variance still depending betwixt the king and the archbishop of +<span class="rightnote">Debate betwixt the pope and the Emperour. K. Henrie offereth +to aid the emperour.</span> +Canturburie: there was also about the same time a great debate betwixt +the emperour Frederike the first and pope Alexander the third: whervpon +king Henrie wrote to the emperor, and signified vnto him, that he would +aid him if néed should require against the pope, who mainteined such a +runnagate traitor as the archbishop Becket was. Moreouer at the same +time the king caused all his subiects within the realme of England, from +the child of twelue yeares old vnto the aged person, to forsweare all +obedience that might be pretended as due to the same pope Alexander. The +king for the space of two yeares togither, remaining still in Normandie, +and in other places beyond the seas, subdued diuerse rebels, as the +earle of Angoulesme, Aimerike de Lucignie, and his sonnes Robert and +Hugh.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">An enterview betwixt the king of England and king of France. +The kings meet again to commen of peace.</span> +Also he came to an enterview with the king of France betwixt Pacie and +Maunt, where they communed of such iniuries as were thought to be +attempted on either part. For the Poictouins had made their resort to +the French king, and were confederate with him against their supreme +lord king Henrie, and had deliuered pledges for assurance thereof, which +pledges the French king would not restore. But yet there was a +<span class="rightnote">A truce.</span> +truce +concluded betwixt them, to endure till the feast of S. John Baptist.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Patrike earle of Salisburie slaine.</span> +About the feast of Easter Patrike the earle of Salisburie was slaine by +treason of the Poictouins, and was buried at Saint Hilaries: after whome +his sonne William succeeded in the earledome.</p> + +<p>The Britons practised rebellions dailie: but king Henrie entring their +countrie, wan diuerse strong townes and castels, and brought them at +length vnder his subiection. Moreouer in this summer season the two +kings met againe at Fert Bernard to treat of peace, but they departed +without concluding any agréement at all. For there were manie of the +Poictouins and Britons, which tooke part with the king of France, and +hauing deliuered vnto him hostages, had a promise made them, that the +French king should not conclude an agréement with the king of England +without their consent. Hervpon they made warres either vpon other, till +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 15. <br /> +1169.</span> +finallie (about the feast of the Epiphanie) a peace was accorded betwixt +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i> <i>N. Triuet.</i></span> +them: and then Henrie the king of Englands sonne made his homage vnto +the French king for the countie of Aniou: and the French king granted +him the office of the Seneschalcie of France, which ancientlie belonged +<span class="rightnote">Geffrey duke of Britaine.</span> +vnto the earles of Aniou. Also Geffrey duke of Britaine did homage to +his elder brother the aforesaid Henrie, by commandement of his father, +for the duchie of Britaine. And afterwards the same Geffrey went into +Britaine, and at Rheines receiued the homage and fealtie of the lords +and barons of that countrie.</p> + +<p>King Henrie in the meane while subdued certeine rebels in Gascoine, and +returning into Normandie, built a goodlie towne and fortresse neere to +Haie de Malafrey, ycleped Beauver.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Haruey de Yuon.</span> +About the same time one Haruey de Yuon, who had married the daughter of +one William Goieth, (that died in his iournie which he tooke into the +holie land) deliuered certeine castels into the hands of king Henrie, +bicause he was in despaire to keepe them against Theobald earle of +Chartres, who through the French kings aid, sought to dispossesse him of +the same castels: wherevpon the war was renewed betwixt the king of +England and the said earle of Chartres. Neuerthelesse king Henrie making +no great accompt of those wars, went into Britaine with his sonne +Geffrey, where going about the countrie to visit the cities and townes, +he reformed many disorders, laieng as it were a maner of a new +foundation of things there, fortifieng the castels, cities and townes, +and communing in courteous manner with the lords and péeres of the +countrie, sought to win their good wils: and so in such exercises he +spent a great part of the time.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 16. <br /> +1170.</span> +He kept his Christmasse at Nauntes, whither all the great lords and +barons of Britaine resorted to him. The solemnitie of which feast being +past, he entred into the lands of +<a name="Page_130" id="Page_130" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[130]</span> +earle Eudo, and wasted the same, till +the said earle submitted himself. At length, after the king had taken +order for the good gouernement of Normandie, and his other countries on +that side the sea, he returned into England in the first wéeke of March, +but not without great danger, by reason of a tempest that tooke him on +the seas, beginning about midnight, and not ceassing till 9. of the +clocke in the morning, about which houre he came on land at Portesmouth, +not with many of his ships, the rest being tossed and driuen to séeke +succour in sundrie créeks and hauens of the land, and one of them which +was the cheefest and newest, was lost in the middle of the flouds, +together with 400. persons, men & women: among whome was Henrie de +Aguell with two of his sons, Gilbert Sullemuy, and Rafe Beumont the +kings physician & houshold seruant.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i> Dauid was made knight by K. Henrie as <i>Houedon</i> +hath.</span> +After this the king held his Easter at Winsor, whither William the +Scotish king came with his brother Dauid, to welcome him home, and to +congratulat his happie successe in his businesse on the further side the +seas. They were honorablie enterteined, and at their departure princelie +rewarded. The king thus returned into England, punished the shiriffes of +<span class="rightnote">A prudent consideration of the king.</span> +the land very gréeuously for their extortion, briberie, and rapine. +After this, studieng how to assure the estate of the realme vnto his +sons, vpon good consideration remembring that no liuing creature was +more subiect to the vncerteintie of death than Adams heires, and that +<span class="rightnote">Mans nature ambitious.</span> +there is ingraffed such a feruent desire in the ambitious nature of man +to gouerne, that so oft as they once come in hope of a kingdome, they +haue no regard either of right or wrong, God or the diuell, till they be +in possession of their desired prey: he thought it not the worst point +of wisedome to foresee that which might happen. For if he should chance +to depart this life, and leaue his sons yoong, and not able to mainteine +wars through lacke of knowledge, it might fortune them through the +ambition of some to be defrauded and disappointed of their lawful +inheritance. Therefore to preuent the chances of fortune, he determined +whilest he was aliue to crowne his eldest sonne Henrie, being now of the +age of 17. yeares, and so to inuest him in the kingdome by his owne act +in his life time: which deed turned him to much trouble, as after shall +appeare.</p> + +<p>Being vpon this point resolued, he called togither a parlement of the +lords both spirituall and temporall at London, and there (on S. +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +Bartholomews daie) proclaimed his said sonne Henrie fellow with him in +the kingdome, whom after this on the sundaie following, being the +<span class="rightnote">Henrie the son crowned the 18. of Julie saith <i>Matth. +Paris.</i></span> +fouretéenth daie of June 1170. Roger archbishop of Yorke did crowne +according to the manner, being commanded so to doo by the king. This +office apperteined vnto the archbishop of Canturburie, but bicause he +was banished the realme, the king appointed the archbishop of Yorke to +doo it, which he ought not to haue doone without licence of the +<span class="rightnote"><i>W. Paruus.</i></span> +archbishop of Canturburie within the precinct of his prouince (as was +alledged by archbishop Becket) who complained thereof vnto pope +Alexander, and so incensed the pope, that he being highly moued by his +<span class="rightnote">The archb. of Yorke is forbidden the vse of the sacraments.</span> +letters, forbad not onelie the archbishop of Yorke, but also Gilbert +bishop of London, and Jocelin bishop of Salisburie (who were present at +the coronation) the vse of the sacraments, which made king Henrie far +more displeased with the archbishop Thomas than he was before.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matt. Paris.</i> <i>Polydor.</i> The king became seruitor to his +sonne.</span> +Upon the daie of coronation, king Henrie the father serued his sonne at +the table as sewer, bringing vp the bores head with trumpets before it, +according to the maner. Whervpon (according to the old adage,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Immutant mores homines cùm dantur honores)<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap"> +<span class="rightnote">Honours change manners.</span> +the yoong man conceiuing a pride in his heart, beheld the standers-by +with a more statly countenance than he had béen woont. The archbishop of +Yorke, who sat by him, marking his behauior, turned vnto him, & said; +<span class="rightnote">Yong men set vp in dignitie easilie forget themselues.</span> +"Be glad my good sonne, there is not an other prince in the world that +hath such a sewer at his table." To this the new king answered, as it +were disdainefullie, thus: "Why doost thou maruell at that? My father in +doing it, thinketh it not more than becommeth him, he being borne of +princelie bloud onlie on the mothers side, serueth me that am a king +borne hauing both a king to my father, and a +<a name="Page_131" id="Page_131" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[131]</span> +queene to my mother." Thus +the yoong man of an euill and peruerse nature, was puffed vp in pride by +his fathers vnseemelie dooings.</p> + +<p>But the king his father hearing his talke, was verie sorrowfull in his +mind, and said to the archbishop softlie in his eare: "It repenteth me, +it repenteth me my lord, that I haue thus aduanced the boy." For he +gessed hereby what a one he would prooue afterward, that shewed himselfe +so disobedient and froward alreadie. But although he was displeased with +himselfe in that he had doone vndiscréetlie, yet now when that which was +doone could not be vndoone, he caused all the Nobles and lords of the +realme togither with the king of Scots and his brother Dauid, to doo +homage vnto his said sonne thus made fellow with him in the kingdome: +but he would not release them of their oth of allegiance, wherein they +stood bound to obeie him the father, so long as he liued.</p> + +<p>¶ Howbeit some write that he renounced his estate, first before all the +lords of the land, and after caused his sonne to be crowned: but in such +vncerteine points set foorth by parciall writers, that is to be receiued +as a truth, which is confirmed by the order and sequele of things after +doone and put in practise. For true it is, that king Henrie the father +(so long as his sonne liued) did shew himselfe sometime as fellow with +his sonne in gouernement, and sometime as absolute king: and after his +sons decease, he continued in the entier gouernment, so long as he +liued. But to procéed.</p> + +<p>The French king hearing that his sonne in law was thus crowned, and not +his daughter the wife of Henrie the sonne, was highlie offended +<span class="rightnote">The French king offended.</span> +therewith, and threatned to make war against king Henrie the father, +except his daughter Margaret might receiue the crowne also as quéene +immediatlie.</p> + +<p>The cause why she was not crowned, was by reason of hir yoong yeares, +and for that she had not as yet accompanied with hir husband. But K. +Henrie the father vnderstanding the French kings threats, sailed ouer +into Normandie, where whilest they prepared for war on both sides, by +<span class="rightnote">An enteruiew of the kings. <i>R. Houed.</i></span> +the earnest diligence of Theobald earle of Blois, both the kings came to +an enteruiew at Uendosme, where at length they were accorded, vpon +promise made by king Henrie, that he would cause his sonne to be crowned +againe, and with him his wife the said Margaret the French kings +daughter as quéene.</p> + +<p>The French king contented therewith, departed homewards, and king Henrie +returning came to Uernon, where he fell into so great a sicknesse, that +anon it was noised ouer all the countrie. Insomuch that he was in such +<span class="rightnote">He made his testament. <i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +despaire of life, that he made his testament: wherein he assigned his +sonne Richard the dutchie of Aquitaine, and all those lands which came +by quéene Elianor the mother of the same Richard. And to his sonne +Geffrey he bequeathed Britaine (with the daughter of earle Conan) which +he had purchased to his vse of the French king. And to his sonne king +Henrie he gaue the dutchie of Normandie, and all those lands which came +by his father Geffrey earle of Aniou. And to his yoongest sonne John be +bequeathed the earledome of Mortaine. And finally appointed where he +would haue his bodie to be buried.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i> King Henrie the sonne his misorder.</span> +In the meane time Henrie the sonne remaining at home in England, fell +from all good order of measure kéeping, and gaue himselfe to all +excessiue riot, spending and wasting his reuenues inordinatelie. Of +which behauiour his father being aduertised, returned into England, +where he taried not long, but passed ouer againe into Normandie, hauing +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 16. <br /> +1170.</span> +his said sonne in his companie, meaning thereby to remoue him from the +companie of those that were verie like to corrupt this nature, and frame +the same to all lewdnesse: for he knew that</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i6">—— commercia turpia sanctos<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Corrumpunt mores: multi hoc periere veneno,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Labimur in vitium & facilè ad peiora mouemur.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>In this meane while Thomas the archbishop of Canturburie remained in +exile almost six yeares, and could not be restored, till partlie by +swelling threats of the pope, and +<a name="Page_132" id="Page_132" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[132]</span> +partlie at the earnest suit of Lewes +the French king, Theobald earle of Blois, and others king Henrie began +somewhat to shew himselfe conformable towards an agréement.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ex Quadrilagio.</i> The king and the arch. Becket met togither +in the presence of the French king.</span> +Wherevpon the two kings met diuerse times, and the archbishop Thomas +comming with the French king, at one time humbled himselfe so to the +king of England, that knéeling downe at his féet, he said: "My +souereigne liege lord, I commit the whole cause of the controuersie +betwixt your grace and me, vnto your maiesties order, Gods honour onlie +reserued."</p> + +<p>The king offended with that ambiguous exception, said to the king of +France: "Whatsoeuer displeaseth this man, is taken (as he interpreteth +it) contrarie to Gods honour, and so by that shift will he chalenge to +himselfe all that belongeth vnto me. But bicause you shall not thinke +that I go about to resist Gods honour, or him, in any reasonable order, +looke what the greatest and most holie of all his ancestors haue doone +vnto the meanest of mine ancestours, let him doo the same vnto me, and I +am contented therewith."</p> + +<p>All the companie present cried, "that the king humbled himselfe enough." +"My lord archbishop (said the French king) will you be greater than +saints, and better than saint Peter? Wherof stand you in doubt? Behold, +your peace is at hand." The archbishop made answer in commendation of +<span class="rightnote">The present state of the church in Becket daies.</span> +the present state of holie church, as thus: "My holie predecessours in +their time, although they cut not all things away that extolled it selfe +against God, yet did they cut off diuers: but if they had plucked vp all +by the hard roots, which might offend, who should now haue raised the +fire of temptation against vs? We are in much better case (thanks be to +God) and as we haue laboured in their lot and number, so are we +partakers of their labour and reward. What if any of them had béene +defectiue or excessiue in any point, are we bound to follow the example +of their defection or excesse? We blame Peter for his denieng of Christ, +but we praise him in reproouing of Neros violence with danger of his +life. The church hath risen and increased out of manie dangerous +oppressions, our fathers haue suffered manie things, bicause they would +not forsake the name of Christ; and ought I to suppresse his honour, to +be reconciled vnto any mans fauour? God forbid, God forbid."</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The archb. Becket blamed of arrogancie.</span> +When the Noble men present heard this answer of a subiect against his +souereigne, they all held against him, imputing the fault to the +archbishops arrogancie, that the peace was not made betweene the king +and him, insomuch that there was an erle which openlie said; "Sith he +resisteth the will of both the realmes, he is not worthie to be +succoured by either of them from henceforth: and therefore being cast +out of England, let not France receiue him."</p> + +<p>The councell then being broken vp, the kings departed without bidding +the archbishop farewell, and such as were mediatours for peace, in +departing from this meeting, spake manie reprochfull words to him, +<span class="rightnote">Archb. Becket wilfull in his owne opinion.</span> +alledging that he had béene euer stout and wise in his owne conceit, and +a folower of his owne will and opinion: adding that it was a great +hinderance to the church, that he was ordeined archbishop, and that by +him the church was alreadie in part destroied, and would shortlie be +altogither brought to vtter ruine.</p> + +<p>But the archbishop setting a watch before his mouth, kept silence (as +though he had not heard) and folowed the French king with his people. +Manie said by the waie as they iournied, "Behold the archbishop yonder, +which in talke the last night would not for the pleasure of the king +denie God, nor kéepe his honor in silence."</p> + +<p>After this, when the archbishop was come to Sens, and aduised with +himselfe whether it should be best for him to go, at length he said, +"God is able in the last point of miserie and distresse, to helpe those +that be his." Herewith came a messenger from the French king to bring +him to the court, for the French king (as one that had béene better +instructed in the matter) repented himselfe that he had iudged euill of +his answers at the last meeting, and herevpon receiued him againe into +his fauour, and rested not to trauell +<a name="Page_133" id="Page_133" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[133]</span> +so much in his cause, that at +<span class="rightnote">The French K. receiueth the archbishop Becket againe into +fauour.</span> +length another méeting was assigned at a certeine place neere the +confines of Normandie, whither king Henrie came, and there found Lewes, +the archbishop of Rouen, and diuerse other bishops together, with the +foresaid archbishop, who after they had reasoned of the matter +throughlie as they saw cause, king Henrie receiued the archbishop into +<span class="rightnote">The archb. is reconciled to the king.</span> +his fauour againe, and promised to redresse all that had béene doone +amisse, and pardon all those that had followed him out of the realme. +Wherevpon the king and the archbishop being reconciled, the archbishop +the same day came before the king, and talked with him.</p> + +<p>Now among other things he required of the K. that it might be lawfull +for him (without offending of his maiestie) to punish (according to the +censures of the church) the iniurie doone vnto him by the archbishop of +Yorke, and other bishops in the coronation of his sonne. The king +granted this, and shewed himselfe so courteous at that time, that (as it +is said) he held his stirrup whiles he mounted on horssebacke.</p> + +<p>¶ Notwithstanding which obsequiousnes of the king, it is to be presumed +that all inward repining could not be so abolished, as that no fragments +remained: but that the archbishop for his part, for the maintenance of +his great title, & the K. for the supportation of his souereigntie, when +opportunitie serued, sought to get aduantage one of another, & acquit +their harts with a new reuenge of an old grudge: for</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Iuuen. sat.</i> 15.</span> +<span class="i0">Immortale odium & nunquam sanabile vulnus.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The king would not kisse the pax with the archbishop.</span> +But whereas twise within a few daies after, the king and the said +archbishop met at masse, the king refused to kisse the pax with him. +This was marked as a signe of a fained reconciliation, though in déed he +afterwards interteined him verie courteouslie, and at his departure ouer +into England, tooke leaue of him in fréendlie manner, and directed +letters vnder his sele to his sonne the new king in forme as followeth. +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matt. Paris.</i></span></p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<h3>A letter of the king touching the pacification betweene him and Thomas +Becket.</h3> + +<p>Know ye that Thomas the archbishop of Canturburie hath made his peace +with me at my will and pleasure; and therefore I command you, that both +he and his may remaine in peace; and that he and al those which for his +cause departed out of the realme, may haue all their goods restored, and +in such quiet estate be now possessed of them as at any time within +three moneths before their departure from thence. And further, cause to +come before vs of the best and most ancient knights of the honor of +<span class="rightnote">The honor of Saltwood.</span> +Saltwood, that vpon their oths they may find what fee the archbishop +ought to haue within that honor, and that which shall appeare to +apperteine vnto him, as in fee, let him inioy the same. And thus +farewell.</p> + +</div> + +<p>The archbishop (before he tooke his iournie into England) went to visit +the French king, and to giue him thanks for his great paines and trauell +<span class="rightnote">The French kings aduise to the archbish. Becket.</span> +susteined in his cause, who aduised him in no wise as yet to commit +himselfe to present danger amongst his new reconciled enimies, but +rather to staie till their malice were somewhat assuaged. For he +perceiued by king Henries words & countenance such a deepe rooted +displeasure in his hart, that he agréed to receiue him into fauour +rather by compulsion and against his will than otherwise.</p> + +<p>But when the archbishop would needs depart & go ouer into England, the +French K. suffered him so to doo, dooing him all the honor he could at +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> The archbishop Becket returneth into +England.</span> +his leaue taking. Then the archbishop departing out of France, came into +England, and landed at Sandwich about the first of December, in the +seuenth yeare after his first departure out of the realme. +<a name="Page_134" id="Page_134" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[134]</span> +Shortlie +after his arriuall, Roger the archbishop of Yorke, Gilbert bishop of +London, and Jocelin bishop of Salisburie, with diuerse other, came vnto +him as to the popes legat, and required that it might please him to +restore them to the ministration of their offices againe; whose request +be granted, but yet vpon condition, that they should vndertake to stand +to his iudgement and order in all things, which (by the counsell of the +archbishop of Yorke) they vtterlie refused.</p> + +<p>¶ Here authors agrée not (as Polydor trulie saith) for some write that +archbishop Thomas (immediatlie vpon his returne into England) denounced +the archbishop of Yorke with the bishops of Salisburie and London +accurssed, whereas before they were depriued of the vse and +administration of the sacraments. Some others write, that now at his +comming ouer into England from his exile, he depriued them onlie of the +ministration of the sacraments, togither with the bishops of Excester, +Chester, Rochester, S. Asaph, & Landaff, which had personallie béene +present at the coronation of king Henrie the sonne, to the derogation of +the dignitie of their primat the archbishop of Canturburie (as before +you haue heard.) It shuld seeme yet by Ger. Dorober. that the archbishop +of Yorke, and the bishop of Durham were suspended, and the bishops of +London, Salisburie, and diuerse other excommunicated.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The archbish. of Yorke and other go ouer to the king to +complaine of the archbishop Becket. <i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +But how soeuer he vsed them, the archbishop of Yorke, the two bishops +London and Salisburie, being offended with his dooings, sailed ouer into +Normandie, and there complained to king Henrie of iniuries doone to them +by archbishop Thomas, gréeuouslie accusing him that he went about to +take awaie their libertie of priesthood, to destroie, corrupt, and +finallie to abolish both the lawes of God and man, togither with the +ancient decrées and statutes of their elders; in somuch that he tooke +vpon him to exclude bishops at his pleasure from the companie of +christian men, and so being excluded, to banish them for euer: to +derogat things meerelie preiudiciall to the kings roiall prerogatiue; +and finallie to take awaie from all men the equitie of laws and ciuill +orders.</p> + +<p>The king giuing eare to their complaint, was so displeased in his mind +against archbishop Thomas, that in open audience of his lords, knights, +<span class="rightnote">The occasion of the kings words that cost bish. Becket his +life.</span> +and gentlemen, he said these or the like words: "In what miserable state +am I, that can not be in rest within mine owne realme, by reason of one +onelie préest? Neither is there any of my folkes that will helpe to +deliuer me out of such troubles."</p> + +<p>There were some that stood about the king, which gessed by these words, +that his mind was to signifie how he would haue some man to dispatch the +archbishop out of the waie. The kings displeasure against the archbishop +was knowne well inough, which caused men to haue him in no reuerence at +all, so that (as it was said) it chanced on a time, that he came to +Strowd in Kent, where the inhabitants meaning to doo somewhat to his +infamie, being thus out of the kings fauour, and despised of the world, +cut off his horsses taile.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The knights that slue the archbishop Becket.</span> +There were some also of the kings seruants, that thought after an other +maner of sort to reuenge the displeasure doone to the kings maiestie, as +sir Hugh Moreuille, sir William Tracie, sir Richard Britaine, and sir +Reignold Fitz Urse, knights, who taking aduice togither, and agréeing in +one mind and will, tooke shipping, & sailed ouer into England, landing +at a place called Dogs hauen, néere Douer.</p> + +<p>Now the first night they lodged in the castell of Saltwood, which +Randulfe de Broc had in keeping. The next morning (being the 29. of +December, and fift daie of Christmasse, which as that yeare came about +fell vpon a tuesdaie) hauing gotten togither certeine souldiers in the +countrie thereabouts, came to Canturburie, and first entring into the +court of the abbeie of S. Augustine, they talked with Clarenbald the +elect abbat of that place: and after conference had with him, they +proceeded in their businesse as followeth.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Reignold Fitz Urse. That is betwéene 4. and 5. in the +euening.</span> +The first knight sir Reignold Fitz Urse came to him about the eleuenth +houre of the daie, as the archbishop sat in his chamber, and sitting +downe at his feet vpon the ground without any manner of greeting or +salutation, at length began with him thus: "Being sent of our souereigne +lord the king from beyond the seas, we doo here present vnto you +<a name="Page_135" id="Page_135" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[135]</span> +his +Graces commandements, to wit, that you should go to his sonne the king, +to doo vnto him that which apperteineth vnto you to doo vnto your +souereigne lord, and to do your fealtie vnto him in taking an oth, and +further to amend that wherein you haue offended his maiestie." Wherevnto +the archbishop answered: "For what cause ought I to confirme my fealtie +vnto him by oth? or wherein am I giltie in offending the kings +<span class="rightnote">An oth required of him for his baronie.</span> +Maiestie?" Sir Reignold said: "For your baronie, fealtie is demanded of +you with an oth, and an other oth is required of those clerkes, which +you haue brought with you, if they meane to continue within the land." +The archbishop answered: "For my baronie I am readie to do to the king +whatsoeuer law or reason shall allow: but let him for certeine hold, +that he shall not get any oth either of me or of my clerks." "We knew +that (said the knight) that you would not doo any of these things which +we proponed vnto you. Moreouer the king commandeth you to absolue those +bishops that are excommunicated by you without his licence." Wherevnto +he said: "The bishops are excommunicated not by me, but by the pope, who +hath therto authoritie from the Lord. If in déed he hath reuenged the +inurie doone to my church, I confesse that I am not displeased +therwith." Then said the knight: "Sith that such things in despite of +the king doo please you, it is to be thought that you would take from +him his crowne, and be called and taken for king your selfe, but you +shall misse of your purpose surelie therein." The archbishop answered: +"I do not aspire to the name of a king, rather would I knit three +crownes vnto his crowne if it lay in my power."</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The knights command the moonks to sée the archbishop kept +safe.</span> +At length after these and such words, the knights turning them to the +moonks, said: "In the behalfe of our souereigne lord the king, we +command you, that in any wise ye keepe this man safe, and present him to +the king when it shall please his grace to send for him." The archbishop +said: "Doo ye thinke that I will run away? I came not to run away, but +looke for the outrage and malice of wicked men." "Truelie (said they) +you shall not runne away," and herewith went out with noise and +<span class="rightnote">John de Salisburie the archb. Beckets chancellor.</span> +threatnings. Then maister John of Salisburie his chancellor said vnto +him: "My lord, this is a woonderfull matter that you will take no mans +counsell: had it not beene méet to haue giuen them a more méeke and +<span class="rightnote">The archbishops resolution.</span> +gentle answer?" But the archbishop said: "Surelie I haue alreadie taken +all the counsell that I will take, I know what I ought to doo." Then +said Salisburie, "I pray God it may be good." Now the knights departing +out of the place, and going about to put on their armour, certeine came +<span class="rightnote">The knights put on their armor.</span> +to the archbishop, & said; "My lord, they arme themselues." "What +forceth it? said he, let them arme themselues."</p> + +<p>Now when they were armed, and manie other about them, they entred into +the archbishops palace. Those that were about the archbishop cried vpon +him to flée; but he sat still and would not once remoue, till the moonks +brought him euen by force & against his will into the church. The +comming of the armed men being knowne; some of the moonks continued +<span class="rightnote">The moonks with force bring the archbishop into the church.</span> +singing of euensong, and some sought places where to hide themselues, +other came to the archbishop, who was loth to haue entred into the +church, and when he was within, he would not yet suffer them to make +fast the doores, so that there was a great stur among them, but cheeflie +when they perceiued that the armed men went about to séeke for the +archbishop, by meane whereof their euensong was left vnfinished.</p> + +<p>At length the knights with their seruants hauing sought the palace, came +rushing into the church by the cloister doore with their swords drawne, +<span class="rightnote">The knights enter the church.</span> +some of them asking for the traitor, and some of them for the +archbishop, who came and met them, saieng; "Here am I, no traitor, but +<span class="rightnote">As though archbishops can be no traitors.</span> +the archbishop." The formost of the knights said vnto him: "Flee; thou +art but dead," To whome the archbishop said, "I will not flée." The +knight stept to him taking him by the sléeue, and with his sword cast +his cap besides his head, and said, "Come hither, for thou art a +prisoner." "I will not (said the archbishop) doo with me here what thou +wilt:" and plucked his sleeue with a mightie strength out of the knights +hand. Wherewith the knight stepped backe two or thrée paces. Then the +<span class="rightnote">The courage of the archb.</span> +archbishop turning to one of the knights, said to him, "What meaneth +this, Reignold? I +<a name="Page_136" id="Page_136" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[136]</span> +haue doone vnto thée manie great pleasures, and +commest thou now vnto me into the church armed?" Unto whome the knight +presentlie answered and said; "Thou shalt know anon what is ment, thou +art but dead: it is not possible for thee any longer to liue." Unto whom +the archbishop answered: "I am readie to die for my God, and for the +defense of his iustice and the libertie of the church; gladlie doo I +imbrace death, so that the church may purchase peace and libertie by the +shedding of my blood." And herewith taking on other of the knights by +the habergeon, he floong him from him with such violence, that he had +almost throwne him downe to the ground. This was sir Will. Tracie, as he +after confessed.</p> + +<p>Then the archbishop inclined his head after the maner of one that would +praie, pronouncing these his last words: "To God, to saint Marie, and to +the saints that are patrones of this church, and to saint Denise, I +commend my selfe and the churches cause." Therewith sir Reignold +FitzUrse striking a full blow at his head, chanced to light vpon the +<span class="rightnote">Edward of Cambridge.</span> +arme of a clerke named Edward of Cambridge, who cast vp his arme to saue +the archbishop: but when he was not able to beare the weight of the +blow, he plucked his arme backe, and so the stroke staied vpon the +archbishops head, in such wise that the bloud ran downe by his face. +<span class="rightnote">The archbish. is slaine.</span> +Then they stroke at him one after an other, and though he fell to the +ground at the second blow, yet they left him not till they had cut and +pashed out his braines, and dashed them about vpon the church pauement. +All this being doone, they rifled his house, spoiled his goods, and +tooke them to their owne vses, supposing it lawfull for them being the +kings seruants so to doo.</p> + +<p>But doubting how the matter would be taken, after they had wrought their +feat, they got them into the bishoprike of Duresme, there to remaine +till they might heare how the king would take this their vnlawfull +enterprise: though (as they alledged) they had lustilie defended his +cause, and reuenged his quarell as faithfull seruants ought to doo. +Howbeit, it chanced otherwise than they looked it should haue doone: for +king Henrie gaue them so litle thankes for their presumptuous act, +<span class="rightnote">The murtherers come to an euill end. <i>Matth. Paris.</i> +<i>W. Paruus.</i></span> +sounding to the euill example of other in breach of his lawes, that they +despairing vtterlie of pardon, fled one into one place, and another into +another, so that within foure yeares they all died an euill death (as it +hath béene reported.) Some write, that they went to Rome by the kings +commandement, and there presented themselues before the pope, to receiue +such penance for their wicked act as he should enioine them. Herevpon +the pope appointed them to go vnto Jerusalem, their to do their penance, +where they remained certeine yeares, applieng themselues verie +diligentlie to performe the satisfaction of their offense, according to +the maner prescribed to them by the pope, and so at length died.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 17. <br /> +1171.</span> +This was the end of Thomas Becket archbishop of Canturburie, which was +after he had entred into that see eight yeares and six moneths, in the +<span class="rightnote">After their account that begin the yere on Christmas day.</span> +yeare after the birth of our Lord 1171. On Christmas day before his +death, which fell that yeare on the fridaie, he preached a sermon to the +people, and when he had made an end thereof, he accurssed Nigell de +Sackeuille, the violent incumbent of the church of Berges, and +<span class="rightnote">Robert de Broc.</span> + Robert de +Broc, both which had (vpon spite) curtailed the horsse of the said +archbishop: and as the same day whilest he was at the altar, according +to his custome, altogither in teares and lamentation; so at dinner he +shewed himselfe verie pleasant & merrie, insomuch that when those that +were at the table séemed somewhat doubtfull to eat of the flesh that was +set before them, bicause it was friday; "Why do ye abhorre (saith he) to +eat flesh? This day flesh hath a great priuilege, for this same day the +word was made flesh, and came into light, and appeared vnto vs." These +his words greatlie contented all the companie.</p> + +<p>¶ Thus you haue heard the tragicall discourse of ambitious Becket, a man +of meane parentage, and yet through the princes fauour verie fortunate, +if he had not abused the beneuolence of so gratious a souereigne by his +insolencie and presumption. Wherein we haue to note, how vnseemelie a +thing it was for him, being called to so sacred a function, to lead so +secular and prophane a life, as if he had professed open hostilitie to +the vocation <a name="Page_137" id="Page_137" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[137]</span> +which he pretended to honour and reuerence. We are also +taught, that promotions atchiued by ambition are not permanent, and are +so farre from procuring fame and renowne to the obteiners, that they +turne them in the end to shame, infamie and reproch, after losse of life +and effusion of bloud. The issue of all which tragedie is to be imputed +to the prouidence and counsell of almightie God, as one writeth verie +agréablie to this purpose, saieng,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Hesi. in lib. cui tit. op. & dies.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Nam facilè extollit facilè elatúmq; refrænat,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Et clarum obscurans, obscuri nomen adauget.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Erigit & miserum facilè extinguítque superbum<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Iuppiter altifremus, cui celsum regia cœlum.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie sorie for the archb. Beckets death. <i>Polydor.</i></span> +But to let this matter passe. King Henrie doubtlesse was right pensiue +for his death, bicause he wist well inough that it would be iudged, that +he himselfe was priuie to the thing: and euen so it came to passe, for +immediatlie vpon notice giuen into France of the archbishops death, king +Lewes, and Theobald the earle of Blois, as they that loued him most +deerelie were most sorowfull for it, and iudging straightwaie that king +Henrie was the procurer, they wrote their letters vnto pope Alexander, +giuing him to vnderstand both of the slaughter, and how king Henrie had +caused it to be put in execution, requiring most instantlie, that such +an iniurie doone to the Christian religion, might spéedilie be punished. +The pope was much offended, and determined to haue the matter throughlie +considered and ordered, so as might stand with his dignitie, and +accordinglie as the hainous state of the case required. King Henrie +whilest these things were a dooing, lay certein daies at Argenton, so +much displeased in his mind, that he would suffer no man once to speake +to him about any maner of businesse.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie sendeth ambassadours to the pope.</span> +At length, he sent his ambassadors to Rome, partlie to purge himselfe of +the archbishops death, partlie to excuse his fault, for that in his +furie he had vttered words against the archbishop, which had giuen +occasion to naughtie men to contriue his death, & partlie to require the +pope to send his legats into England, to make inquirie both for the +death of the archbishop, and also of the state of the clergie. The kings +ambassadors found the pope at Tiuoli, and there were heard to declare +their message: but little credit was giuen to their words, in so much +that the pope plainelie told them, that he vnderstood the matter to be +much otherwise than they had declared. Yet according to the kings +request, he sent two of his cardinals into England, which vpon due +examination, might vnderstand the truth of the matter thoroughlie as +apperteined.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +There be that write, that the king sent ambassadours twice vnto the +pope, for the first that went, could not come to his presence, nor be +suffered to declare their message: those that were sent the second time, +were receiued of some of the cardinals, but yet onelie with words +without anie other way of freendlie interteinement. At length, when the +feast of Easter drew néere, on the which either absolution or +excommunication was to be denounced against euerie man, there were +certeine of the cardinals which gaue intelligence to the English +ambassadours, that the pope by aduice of the colledge, meant on the +thursdaie before Easter daie to declare the sentence of interdiction +against the king of England, and against all his dominions, and to +confirme that which had beene alreadie pronounced against Richard the +archbishop of Yorke, and the other bishops his complices.</p> + +<p>The ambassadours being brought to a streict issue herewith, by helpe of +some of the cardinals found meanes to haue it put into the popes head, +how the English ambassadours had commission to vndertake, that the king +of England should obeie in all things what order soeuer it pleased the +pope and his court to award him. Herevpon they tooke their oth, that it +should so be, and by that meanes they auoided the interdiction. The +messengers of the archbishop of Yorke & the other bishops vsed the like +shift, but yet the same daie the pope did excommunicate the knights that +had murthered the archbishop Thomas, and all those that had procured, +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i> The ambassadours were glad to vse a shift by +briberie.</span> +aided, succoured, or abetted them +<a name="Page_138" id="Page_138" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[138]</span> +therein. Some write, that those +ambassadours which the king sent to the court of Rome, could not be +suffered to come to the popes presence, till according to the fashion, +they had giuen 500. marks in reward, and so at length were admitted to +his presence.</p> + +<p>Howsoeuer that matter passed, the king stood in great feare least his +land should be interdicted, in so much that he commanded the wardens of +the ports both on this side the sea and beyond, to take good héed, least +any cōming with letters of interdiction should passe into England; +but if any such came, that the bringer should be arrested and committed +to prison. Also he commanded, that no clearke were suffered to come ouer +into England, except he first tooke an oth that he came about no +businesse that might turne to the preiudice of the king or his realme. +This commandement he set forth, at what time he transported ouer into +England himselfe, where he landed this yeare at Portesmouth the third +daie of August. About which time it came into the kings mind, to make a +conquest of Ireland vpon this occasion.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Sundrie rulers in Ireland.</span> +It chanced, whereas diuerse rulers or (as we may call them) petie kings +reigned the same seson in that Iland (which was diuided into seuerall +estates or kingdomes) that continuall strife and dissention remained +amongst them, so that oftentimes they made sore war after the manner of +their countrie one against an other, (for</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Luc. lib. 1.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Nulla fides regni socijs, omnisque potestas<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Impatiens consortis erit.)<br /></span> +</div></div> + + +<p>Herevpon it fortuned, that one of those kings or rulers, about the 14. +yeare of this kings reigne, was sore afflicted and oppressed by his +neighbours, wherevpon taking aduice what he might best doo for remedie +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>W. Paruus.</i> Sée more hereof in Ireland.</span> +in that case, at length he sent his son into England to reteine +souldiours and men of warre, and to bring them ouer vnto his aid in hope +of gaine, & such commodities as he assured them of.</p> + +<p>Now it came to passe, that by the assistance of such Englishmen as then +came ouer, the foresaid Irish king began to recouer his losses, and in +the end waxed so strong, that he subdued all his enimies. When he had +thus obteined the victorie, he did not onelie not send backe his aiders, +but so liberallie reteined them still with him, that they had no hast to +returne home, but setled themselues in that countrie, where they liued a +pleasant and verie licentious life. For this cause also the stoutest +lords and rulers of the Irish nation began sore to stomach the matter +against him that had thus brought the English nation into their +countrie, in so much that the Englishmen perceiuing their malice, and +therewithall hauing some feare of themselues, bicause of their small +number, they sent ouer into England for such as wanted liuing, and were +willing to seeke for it in other countries, of which sort, great numbers +went ouer thither within a short space, whereby the multitude of the +English greatlie increased: but for as much as they had no ruler to +<span class="rightnote">Erle Strangbow. <i>N. Triuet.</i></span> +gouerne them, they procured Richard Strangbow earle of Struguille, aliàs +Chepstow in Wales to come ouer thither, and to receiue the souereigne +gouernement, with such honorable prouision for maintenance of his +estate, as should séeme requisit.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i> <i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +¶ Some write, that this earle Richard (being also earle Marshall of +England) for a rebellion moued against king Henrie, had before this time +forfeited all his lands; but others affirme that through riot and more +sumptuous port than his abilitie might beare, he had made awaie and +consumed the most part of his liuing, and was run so far in debt, that +he knew not how to satisfie his creditors, and therefore was he the +readier to incline to their request, which made labour vnto him to come +ouer into Ireland to haue the gouernance of such English people, as had +alreadie planted themselues there to inhabit & remaine. Herevpon he +prepared a nauie, and assembled togither a great number of such as +<span class="rightnote">Strangbow countermanded.</span> +lacked liuing, and shortlie determined to passe ouer into Ireland. But +euen as he was readie to set forward, there came vnto him messengers +from king Henrie, commanding him to staie, and not to take that iournie +in hand. Howbeit the earle hauing nothing in England whereof to make +anie great accompt, notwithstanding the kings commandement, +<a name="Page_139" id="Page_139" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[139]</span> +tooke the +sea, and passed ouer into that countrie, where he greatlie delited such +Englishmen as dailie had looked for his repaire and comming thither.</p> + +<p>Shortlie after, ioining those which he brought ouer with him, with the +other that were there before his comming, he thought to worke some feat, +whereby he might make his name famous, & cause the Irishmen to haue him +<span class="rightnote">Dublin won. Additions to <i>Iohn Pike.</i></span> +in feare. Wherevpon he first assailed the citie of Dublin, and by force +wan it. He likewise wan Waterford, & diuerse other townes neere vnto the +sea side. Also to haue some freendship amongst those barbarous people, +<span class="rightnote">Strangbow marrieth Dermutius his daughter.</span> +he married the daughter of the confederate king, and so grew into verie +great estimation in that countrie and region.</p> + +<p>Howbeit, with these and the like doings of the earle, king Henrie tooke +such displeasure (but chéeflie for disobeieng his commandement) that he +confined him the realme, seized his lands as forfeited, and by +<span class="rightnote">Strangbow confined.</span> +proclamation restreined all his subiects from passing into Ireland with +any kind of merchandize, prouision of vittels, or other commodities +whatsoeuer. By reason whereof, earle Strangbow, partlie by constreint, +<span class="rightnote">He séeketh to procure the kings fauour.</span> +and partlie in hope to returne into fauour with king Henrie, and for +other respects as may be coniectured, aduertised him of the whole state +of the countrie of Ireland, promising him, that if it would please his +grace to come ouer thither, he would so worke that he should be admitted +<span class="rightnote">The king pardoneth him. <i>N. Triuet.</i><a name="FNanchor_5_3" id="FNanchor_5_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></span> +souereigne lord of all the land. Heerevpon king Henrie pardoned him of +all former trespasses, and restored vnto him all his lands and +inheritances within England and Normandie: and further, confirmed to him +such liuings abroad in Ireland out of the walled townes, as he held +alreadie in right of his wife: and furthermore ordeined, that he should +be high steward of Ireland vnder him.</p> + +<p>King Henrie then returning out of Normandie into England about the sixt +day of August (as is aforesaid) caused a nauie of 400. ships to be made +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +readie, and to assemble at Milford hauen in Penbrokshire, with all such +prouision and furniture as was thought necessarie for such a iournie. +Herewith also he leuied a great armie both of horssemen and footmen, and +came forward with the same vnto Penbroke, and so when all his prouision +<span class="rightnote">Milford hauen.<br /> +King Henrie landeth in Ireland.<br /> +Crowch.</span> +and ships were readie, he entred the sea at Milford hauen aforesaid the +sixtéenth daie of October, and landed in Ireland, at a place called +Crowch, not past seauen miles from Waterford the day next folowing, +about nine of the clocke: and on the morrow after being S. Luke the +euangelists day, he with all his armie marched foorth to Waterford, +where he found William Fitz Aldelme his sewer, and Robert Fitz Bernard, +with other whome he had sent thither before him for such purposes as he +thought most conuenient. He remained at Waterford fiftéene daies, during +which time, there came in vnto him the king of Corke, the king of +Limerike, the king of Ossorie, the king of Méeth, Reignald de Waterford, +and diuerse other great princes of Ireland. At his first arriuall, the +<span class="rightnote">The surrender made by erle Strangbow.</span> +foresaid earle Richard surrendred into his hands all those townes and +places which he had subdued in that countrie.</p> + +<p>Herewithall the whole land began to tremble, so that the rulers of +townes and countries sent vnto him messengers; offering to become +tributaries, and to deliuer hostages: for whilest euerie of those rulers +<span class="rightnote">Sundrie rulers in a land what weakenes it causeth.</span> +which had the gouernment of Ireland in their hands, feared their owne +estate, and mistrusted their owne powers, they all in maner submitted +themselues, so that this victorie chanced to king Henrie, without the +drawing foorth of his sword, and in such wise, that he could not haue +wished for better or more speedie successe therein. For whereas the +whole Iland was diuided into sundrie dominions, and ruled by sundrie +gouernours, not drawing all one waie, but through factions and contrarie +studies one enuieng an others wealth (for</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ouid. li. 3. de art. Stat. 1. Th.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Non bene cum socijs regna venúsque manent,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">—— Socijsq; comes discordia regnis)<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">nothing more hindred the fierce and vnquiet nation from making +resistance, than that they could not agrée to take councell togither for +defending of their liberties, and entier state of the commonwelth. +Whervpon, whilest euerie of them apart by himselfe was in doubt +<a name="Page_140" id="Page_140" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[140]</span> +to +attempt the hazard of war against so mightie a king, they were all +ouercome, as were the Britons likewise in the time of Cesar and the +Saxons. King Henrie therefore gladlie receiued their humble submission, +and they doing homage vnto him, sware to be his liege and faithfull +subiects. Onelie Roderike gouernour of Connagh refused to submit +himselfe.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Roderike K. of Connagh.</span> +This Roderike pretended to be the chéefe king of Ireland, and therefore +kept continuall war with the other rulers, which was partlie the cause +wherefore they submitted themselues so soone vnto king Henrie. The said +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>Polydor.</i> The nature of the countrie of +Connagh.</span> +Roderike held that part of Ireland which lieth toward the west, being +full of great and thicke woods, and defended with verie high & great +mountaines, closed also with waters and marishes, so that it should be +verie hard, and speciallie in the winter season, to bring an armie vnto +it: which was the onelie cause whie king Henrie attempted nothing +against Roderike at that time, but tooke in hand to plant garisons of +souldiers in places conuenient to kéepe the land in quiet, which he had +woone alreadie, and to giue order for the gouernement of the whole +estate of the countrie to his behoofe and commoditie. Hervpon going to +Dublin, which is the cheefest citie of all Ireland, he assembled all the +rulers and lords as well spirituall as temporall togither in councell, +consulting with them for the assurance of the dominion of the land to +him and his heires for euermore.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The allegation of the Irishmen.</span> +The Irishmen alleged for themselues, that his deuise therin could not be +compassed, vnles the popes authoritie were therein first obteined: for +they affirmed, that immediatlie vpon receiuing the christian faith, they +did submit themselues, & all that they had, vnto the see of Rome, so +that they could not acknowledge any for their souereigne lord, but +onelie the pope. Which opinion some of them (although vainelie) haue +holden vnto these our daies. King Henrie then vnderstanding this matter, +dispatched ambassadours to Rome, requiring of pope Alexander, that he +would by his authoritie grant him licence to ioine the countrie of +Ireland vnto the realme of England, who went thither with all expedition +according to their charge.</p> + +<p>And certeinelie, these ambassadors whom the king sent now out of Ireland +to Rome in this behalfe, returned with better spéed in their message, +than did the other whom he had sent to him out of Normandie, to excuse +him of the death of the archbishop Thomas. For the pope vpon good aduice +taken in this matter (considering that he had now no profit growing to +him by that Ile, and that the Irish people being wild and rude, were far +off from all good order of christianitie in diuerse points) thought it +would be a meane to bring some gaine to his cofers, and the people more +easilie from their naughtie customes, if they were once made subiect +vnto some christian prince of puissance able to tame them, and +constreine them by force to be more meeke and tractable. In +consideration wherof, he was content to grant vnto the king all that +herein he required.</p> + +<p>Herevpon, king Henrie considering in what respect the pope was so readie +to accomplish his request, called a councell of the bishops to assemble +<span class="rightnote">A councell at Cassill.</span> +at Cassill, where manie things were decréed and ordeined for the +reforming of diuerse customes vsed before amongst the Irish men, and +méerelie repugnant to the lawes of the christian religion. There were +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +also appointed as solicitors in these matters, and to sit as assistants +with the Irish bishops, one of the kings chaplaines named Nicholas, and +<span class="rightnote">The archdeacon of Landaf.</span> +one Rafe the archdeacon of Landaf.</p> + +<p>1 Amongst other things there concluded, it was ordeined, that children +shuld be brought to the church, there to receiue baptisme in faire +water, with thrée dippings into the same, in the name of the father, the +sonne, and the Holie-ghost, and that by the préests hands, except in +case where danger of death was feared, which then might be doone by any +other person, and in any other place.</p> + +<p>2 Also it was ordeined, that tithes should be paid to churches, and that +such laie men as would kéepe wiues, should keepe them according to the +lawes of holie church, and not otherwise.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_141" id="Page_141" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[141]</span> +3 The Peter pence also that Adrian reserued in his buls, sent to the +king touching the same matter in the beginning of his reigne (with +diuerse other things) were in like maner appointed to be paid, so that +nothing was omitted that might pleasure the pope, or recouer his +gratious fauour alreadie lost in the matters of Thomas Becket, whereof +you haue alreadie heard. Thus you heare what successe our ambassadours +had in this voiage. ¶ Now will I tell you (yer I procéed any further) +what strange things did happen in England whilest the king was thus +occupied in Ireland, and within the compasse of that yeare, and first of +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 18. <br /> +1172.</span> +all, in the night before Christmas day last passed, there chanced such a +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>Matth. West.</i> A sore tempest.</span> +tempest of lightning and thunder, that the like had not bin heard of, +which tempest was not onelie generallie throughout all England, but also +in other foreine parts néere adioining, namelie in Ireland, where it +continued all that night, and Christmas daie following, to so great +terror of the people, that they looked for present death.</p> + +<p>The same night at Andeuer in Hamshire, a préest being in his praiers +before the altar, was striken with the tempest, so that he died yer it +was nine of the clocke in the morning. Also, a temporall man that was +<span class="rightnote">Lightning.</span> +there the same time, was burned with the lightning, and whereas his +brother being present, ran to him to haue succoured him, he likewise was +caught with the fire, and in like maner consumed. In Ireland also, euill +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +diet in eating of fresh flesh and drinking of water, contrarie to the +custome of the Englishmen, brought the flix and other diseases in the +kings armie, so that manie died thereof, for</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Pub. Mim.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Grauissimum est imperium consuetudinis.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +Wherfore, about the beginning of Lent, the king remoued from Dublin, & +went vnto the citie of Wexford, where he remained till toward Easter, +and then prepared to returne into England: but before he tooke the sea, +he gaue and by his charter confirmed to Hugh Lacie, all the lands of +<span class="rightnote">The kings gift vnto Hugh Lacie.</span> +Meeth, with the appurtenances, to hold of him & his heires in fee by +knights seruice, as to find him an hundred knights or men of armes (as +we may terme them) for euermore. He gaue also vnto the same Hugh, the +kéeping of the citie of Dublin, and made him chéefe iusticer of Ireland. +Unto Robert Fitz Bernard he committed the cities of Waterford and +Wesseford, that he should kéepe the same to his vse, and build in them +castels, for a more sure defense against the enimies.</p> + +<p>Thus when the king had planted garisons of souldiers in those & other +places also where was thought néedfull; and further had giuen order for +the politike gouernement of the whole countrie, so far as he had +conquered; he first sent ouer his houshold seruants, which tooke the +water on Easter daie, and landed at Milleford, but he himselfe and other +of the Nobles staid there all that daie, by reason of the high +solemnitie of that feast: howbeit the daie next after they tooke the sea +togither, and landed néere to S. Dauids in south Wales, from thence +<span class="rightnote">The king returneth into England. <i>Ger. Dor.</i> The popes +legats.</span> +(without delaie) he hasted foorth to Douer, and hauing his sonne the +yoong king with him, he sailed ouer into Normandie in the crosse weeke +to meet the popes legats, whom he vnderstood to be alreadie come +thither. At his méeting with them there, he gaue them verie good +countenance, and right honorable enterteinment, omitting nothing that +might doo them pleasure.</p> + +<p>Here when the matter came to be discussed touching the death of +archbishop Thomas, bicause it could not be certeinelie tried out in whom +the fault rested, much reasoning to and fro passed, about obiections and +excuses laid (as in doubtfull cases it often happeneth) so that welneere +the space of foure moneths was spent in debating of that matter. In +which meane time, the king to auoid all contention and strife betwixt +him and king Lewes, sent his son Henrie togither with his wife ouer into +England there eftsoones to receiue the crowne, and with them came Rotrod +the archbishop of Rouen, Giles bishop of Eureux, Roger bishop of +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i> <i>R. Houed.</i></span> +Worcester, and diuerse others.</p> + +<p>Herevpon the yoong king being arriued in England, called an assemblie of +the lords spirituall and temporall at Winchester, where both he and his +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +said wife Margaret daughter to the French king was crowned with all +solemnitie, by the hands of the said Rotrod archbishop of Rouen vpon the +twentie one of August.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_142" id="Page_142" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[142]</span> +In the meane time (saith one writer) his father +king Henrie might haue foreséene and found means to haue auoided the +discord, which euen now began to spring vp betwixt him and his children, +causing a sore and ciuill warre, if he had not beene a man that vtterlie +did detest all superstitious admonitions. For being told (I wot not by +whome) that if he did not repent, and take more regard to minister +iustice, which is a vertue that conteineth in it selfe all other +vertues; it would come to passe, that within short time he should fall +into great and manifold calamities.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">A strange apparition.</span> +"In his returne also out of Ireland (saith an other) vpon the sundaie +next after the feast of Easter, commonlie called Lowsundie, as he should +take his horsse at Cardiffe in Wales, there appeared vnto him a man of +pale and wanne colour, barefooted, and in a white kirtell, who boldlie +in the Dutch language spake vnto him, and admonished him of amendment of +life, and to haue regard that the sabboth daie (commonlie called the +sundaie) might be more duelie kept and obserued, so that no markets nor +bodilie workes be holden, vsed, or doone vpon that day within the bounds +of his dominions, except that which apperteineth to dressing of meats. +And if thou doo (saith he) after this commandement, I assure thée that +all things which thou dooest enterprise of good intent and purpose, +shall sort to good effect and verie luckie end.</p> + +<p>"But the king was not greatlie pleased with these words, and in French +said to the knight that held his bridle; 'Aske of this churle, whether +he had dreamed all this that he telleth or not.' When the knight had +expounded it in English, the man answered, Whether I haue dreamed it in +my sleepe or not, take thou héed to my words, & marke what day this is: +for if thou amend not thy life, and doo as I haue aduertised thée, +before a twelue moneth come to an end, thou shalt heare such tidings as +will make thee sorowfull all the daies of thy life after." The man +hauing thus spoken, vanished awaie suddenlie, and the king tooke his +words but in sport: howbeit he woondered that he was so suddenlie gone, +as he did likewise at his sudden appearing. Manie other warnings the +king had (saith mine author) but he set little thereby.</p> + +<p>The second warning he receiued of an Irishman, that told him of tokens +verie priuie. The third time a knight of Lindsey, called Philip de +Chesterby, passing the sea, came to the king into Normandie, and there +declared vnto him seauen articles, which he should amend, which if he +did, then he should reigne seauen yeares in great honor, and subdue Gods +enimies. If he did not amend and redresse those points, then should he +come to death with dishonour in the fourth yeare.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p>1 The first article or point was, that he should séeke to mainteine +holie church.</p> + +<p>2 The second, that he should cause rightfull lawes to be executed.</p> + +<p>3 The third, that he should condemne no man without lawfull processe.</p> + +<p>4 The fourth, that he should restore the lands, goods and heritages to +those rightfull owners from whome he had taken them by any wrong or +vnlawfull meanes.</p> + +<p>5 The fift, that he should cause euerie man to haue right, without +bribing and giuing of méed.</p> + +<p>6 The sixt, that he should paie his debts as well due to any of his +subiects, for any stuffe taken vp of them to his vse, as to his seruants +and souldiers, who bicause they could not haue their wages truelie paid +them, fell to robbing and spoiling of true labouring men.</p> + +<p>7 The seauenth and last article was, that he should cause the Jewes to +be auoided out of the land, by whom the people were sore impouerished +with such vnmercifull vsurie as they exercised.</p> +</div> + +<p>The king (notwithstanding these and other like warnings) tooke no regard +to the amendment of his sinfull life, wherevpon (as is thought) the +troubles which ensued did light vpon him by Gods iust appointment.</p> + +<p>¶ Howsoeuer this may séeme a fable, but no written veritie, & therefore +esteemed as the chaffe of summer flowers; yet as in the tales of Aesop +many good morals are +<a name="Page_143" id="Page_143" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[143]</span> +comprised, so the scope whereto this apparition +tendeth being necessarie, maketh the argument it selfe of the more +authoritie. The end therefore being (as you sée) to reuoke the king from +woorse to better, from the swines-stie of vice to the statelie throne of +vertue, from the kennell of sinne to the riuers of sanctitie, prooueth +that euen verie fictions of poets (though of light credit) haue their +drift manie times to honest purpose, and therefore bring with them a +competent weight of profit to the readers. So the scope of this tale +being the same that Dauid pointeth at in the second psalme, when he +saith,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ex G. Buch. paraph. in psal. 2.</i></span> +<span class="i0">(At vos in populos quibus est permissa potestas,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Et ius ab alta sede plebi dicitis,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Errorum tenebras depellite, discite verum, &c.)<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">maketh the narration it selfe (though otherwise séeming méere fabulous) +to be somewhat authenticall. But to returne to the course of our storie, +and now to saie somewhat of this Henrie the seconds sonne the yoong +king, by whom the troubles were moued, (note you this) that after he had +receiued the crowne togither with his said wife, they both passed the +seas incontinentlie backe againe into Normandie, where on the seauen and +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i> <i>Ger. Dor.</i> King Henrie purgeth him selfe of the +archbishop Beckets death.</span> +twentith of September, at a generall assemblie holden within the citie +of Auranches in the church of the apostle S. Andrew, king Henrie the +father, before the cardinals the the popes legats, and a great number of +bishops and other people, made his purgation, in receiuing an oth vpon +the holie relikes of the saints, and vpon the sacred euangelists, that +he neither willed, nor commanded the archbishop Thomas to be murthered, +and that when he heard of it, he was sorie for it. But bicause he could +not apprehend them that slue the archbishop, and for that he feared in +his conscience least they had executed that vnlawfull act vpon a +presumptuous boldnesse, bicause they had perceiued him to be offended +with the archbishop, he sware to make satisfaction (for giuing such +occasion) in this maner.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p> +<span class="rightnote">O vile subiection vnbeséeming a king!</span> +1 In primis, that he would not depart from pope Alexander, nor from his +catholike successours, so long as they should repute him for a catholike +king.</p> + +<p>2 Item, that he would neither impeach appeales, nor suffer them to be +impeached, but that they might freelie be made within the realme vnto +the pope, in causes ecclesiasticall; yet so, that if the king haue the +parties suspected, they shall find him suerties that they shall not +procure harme or hinderance whatsoeuer to him or to his realme.</p> + +<p>3 Item, that within thrée yeares after the natiuitie of our lord next +ensuing, he should take vpon him the crosse, and personallie passe to +the holie land, except pope Alexander or his successours tooke other +order with him.</p> + +<p>4 Prouided, that if vpon any vrgent necessitie he chanced to go into +Spaine to warre against the Saracens there, then so long space of time +as he spent in that iournie, he might deferre his going into the east +parts.</p> + +<p>5 Item, he bound himselfe in the meane time by his oth, to emploie so +much monie as the templers should thinke sufficient for the finding of +two hundred knights or men of armes, for one yeares terme in the defense +of the holie land.</p> + +<p>6 Item, he remitted his wrath conceiued against those which were in +exile for the archbishop Thomas his cause, so that they might returne +againe into the realme.</p> + +<p>7 Item, to restore all the lands and possessions which had béene taken +awaie from the sée of Canturburie, as they were belonging thereto in the +yere before the departure of the archbishop Thomas out of England.</p> + +<p>8 Item, he sware to take awaie and abolish all those customes, which in +his time had béene brought in against the church, as preiudiciall +thereto.</p> +</div> + +<p>All these articles faithfullie, and without male-ingene to performe and +fulfill in euerie degrée, he receiued a solemne oth, and caused his +sonne the yoong king being there present, to receiue the same for +performance of all those articles, such as touched his owne person +onelie excepted. And to the intent the same should remaine in the popes +<a name="Page_144" id="Page_144" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[144]</span> +consistorie as matter of record, he put his seale vnto the writing +wherein the same articles were ingrossed, togither with the seales of +the aboue mentioned cardinals.</p> + +<p>Shortlie after king Henrie the father suffered the yoong king his son to +go into France, togither with his wife, to visit his father king Lewes, +according as their deputies required, which iournie verelie bred the +cause of the dissention that followed betwixt him and his father. King +Lewes most louinglie receiued them (as reason was) and caused diuers +kinds of triumphant plaies and pastimes to be shewed for the honour and +delectation of his sonne in law and daughter.</p> + +<p>Neuerthelesse, whilest this yoong prince soiourned in France, king Lewes +not hartilie fauouring the king of England, and therewithall perceiuing +<span class="rightnote">The French king séeketh to sow sedition betwixt the father +and the sonne.</span> +the rash and headstrong disposition of the yong king did first of all +inuegle him to consider of his estate, and to remember that he was now a +king equall vnto his father, and therefore aduised him so shortlie as he +could, to get the entire gouernment out of his fathers hands: wherevnto +he furthermore promised all the aid that laie in him to performe.</p> + +<p>The yong king being readie inough not onelie to worke vnquietnesse, but +also to follow his father in lawes counsell (as he that was apt of +nature to aspire to the sole gouernement, and loth to haue any partener +in authoritie (according to that of the tragedie-writer,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Sen. in Agam.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Nec regna socium ferre nec tedæ sciunt)<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">and namelie such one as might controll him) was the more encouraged +thereto by a number of prodigall currie fauours, who by flatterie set +him aloft, declaring vnto him that he was borne to rule, and not to +obeie, and therefore it became not his highnesse to reigne by the +appointment of an other, but rather to haue the gouernement fréelie in +his owne hands, that he might not be counted prince by permission. +Herevpon the youthfull courage of the yong king being tickled, began to +wax of a contrarie mind to his father: who suspecting indéed that which +chanced; to wit (least his sonnes yoong yeares not able yet to discerne +good and wholesome counsell from euill, might easilie be infected with +some sinister practise) thought it not good to suffer him to be long +absent from him, and therefore sent for him: who taking leaue of his +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +father in law king Lewes in courteous maner, returned and came to his +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 19. <br /> +1173.</span> +father king Henrie into Normandie, who when the feast of Christmas drew +néere, repaired towards Aniou, where in the towne of Chinon, he +solemnized that feast, hauing left his sonne the yong king and his wife +all that while in Normandie: but sending for him after the feast was +<span class="rightnote">Hubert earle of Morienne.</span> +ended, they went both into Auvergne, where being at mount Ferrat, Hubert +earle of Morienne came vnto them, bringing with him his eldest daughter +Alice, whom king Henrie the father bought of him for the summe of fiue +<span class="rightnote">A marriage contracted.</span> +thousand markes, that he might bestow hir in marriage vpon his yongest +sonne John with the heritage of the countie of Morienne, if hir father +died without other issue, or at the leastwise the said Hubert chanced to +haue any sonne lawfullie begotten, that then he should leaue vnto them +<span class="rightnote"><i>Comitatus bellensis.</i></span> +and to their heires the countie of Russellon, the countie of Belle, as +he then had and held the same, Pierre castell with the appurtenances, +the vallie of Noualleise, also Chambrie with the appurtenances, Aiz, +Aspermont, Rochet, mont Magor, and Chambres, with Burg, all which lieng +on this side the mountaines with their appurtenances, the said Hubert +granted to them immediatlie for euer. And beyond the mountaines he +couenanted to giue vnto them Turine with the appurtenances, the colledge +of Gauoreth with the appurtenances, and all the fées which the earles of +Canaues held of him, togither with the fealties and seruices. And also, +the fees, fealties, and seruices which belonged to him in the countie of +Amund, and in the vallie called Vale Dosta; and in like maner, the towne +of Castellone.</p> + +<p>All the forenamed places the said earle gaue and granted to the said +John, sonne to the king of England for euermore, with his daughter, so +fréelie, wholie and quietlie (in men and cities, castels, fortresses, or +other places of defense, in medowes, leassewes, milnes, woods, plaines, +waters, vallies and mountaines, in customes and all other things) +<a name="Page_145" id="Page_145" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[145]</span> +as +euer he or his father had held or enioied the same. And furthermore, the +said earle would, that immediatlie (when it pleased the king of England) +his people should doo homage and fealtie to the king of Englands sonne, +reseruing the fealtie due to him so long as he liued. Moreouer, the said +earle Hubert granted to the said John and his wife all the right that he +<span class="rightnote">The countie of Granople.</span> +had in the countie of Granople, and whatsoeuer might be got and euicted +in the same countie. It was also couenanted, if the elder daughter died, +that then the said John should marrie the yoonger daughter, and enioy +all the like portions and parts of inheritance as he should haue enioied +with the first.</p> + +<p>Finallie, that these couenants, grants and agréements should be +performed on the part and behalfe of the said earle Hubert, both he, the +said earle, and the erle of Geneua, and in maner all the great lords and +barons of those countries receiued an oth, and vndertooke to come and +offer themselues as hostages to remaine with the king of England, in +case the said earle Hubert failed in performance of any of the aforesaid +articles, till he framed himselfe to satisfie the kings pleasure in such +behalfe.</p> + +<p>Furthermore, Peter the reuerend archbishop of Tarensasia, and Ardune the +bishop of Geneua, and also William the bishop of Morienne, with the +abbat of S. Michell promised vpon their oth to be readie at the +appointment of the king of England, to put vnder the censures of the +church the said earle and his lands, refusing to performe the foresaid +couenants, and so to kéepe him and the said lands bound, till he had +satisfied the king of England therein.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The earles of Mandeuille and Arundell.</span> +William earle of Mandeuill, and William earle of Arundell sware on the +part of king Henrie, that he should performe the articles, couenants and +agréements on his part, as first to make paiment immediatlie vnto the +said Hubert of one thousand markes, and as soone as he should receiue +his daughter, he should paie him an other thousand markes at the least, +and the residue then remaining of the said sum of fiue thousand markes, +should be paid when the mariage was consummate.</p> + +<p>It was prouided also, that the said earle Hubert might marrie his +yoonger daughter where he would, without any great diminishing of the +earledome after the first marriage consummate with the lord John, the +king of Englands sonne. And that if either the said lord John, or his +affianced wife chanced to die before the consummation of the marriage, +then should the monie which the earle had receiued, be repaid to the +king, or bestowed as the king should appoint.</p> + +<p>Shortlie after that the parties were agreed vpon the couenants afore +cited, the marques of Montferrat & one Geffrey de Plozac with his sonne +Miles and other Noble men came to the king as ambassadors from the earle +of Morienne, and receiued an oth, that they should see and procure the +said earle to performe the couenants and agreements concluded betwixt +the king and him. When these things were thus ordered, as séemed good to +both parties, for the establishment of the foresaid marriage, the king +<span class="rightnote">The earle of S. Giles.</span> +the father, and the king the sonne remoued to Limoges, whither the earle +of S. Giles came, and was there accorded with king Henrie and his sonne +Richard duke of Guien, concerning the controuersie that had béene moued +for the countie of Tholouze, dooing his homage as well vnto the father +<span class="rightnote"><i>Nic. Triuet.</i></span> +as to the sonne for the same countie, and further couenanted to serue +them with an hundred knights or men of armes (as we may call them) for +the terme of fourtie daies at all times, vpon lawfull summons. And if +the king or his sonne duke Richard would haue his seruice longer time +after the fourtie daies were expired, they should paie wages both to him +and his men in reasonable maner. Moreouer, the said earle condescended & +<span class="rightnote">Tribute for Tholouze.</span> +agreed to give yearelie for Tholouze an hundred marks, or else 10. +horsses with 10. marks a péece. Now also, whilest the king soiourned at +Limoges, the earle of Morienne came thither to him, and required to +vnderstand what parcels of land he would assigne vnto his sonne John. +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +Wherevpon the king resolued to allot vnto him the chappell of Chinon, +Lodun and Mirabell, whereby he offended his eldest sonne the +<a name="Page_146" id="Page_146" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[146]</span> +yoong king +(as after may appeare) who was glad to haue occasion (whome the poets +faine to be bald behind and hairie before, as this monastich +insinuateth,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Fronte capillata est post est occasio calua)<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">offered to broch his conceiued purpose of rebellion which of late he had +imagined, and now began to put in practise, vsing the opportunitie of +the time and the state or qualitie of the quarell then taken for his +best aduantage, and meaning to make it an ingredience or entrance to the +malicious conceit which he had kept secret in his hart.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. West.</i> <i>N. Triuet.</i></span> +This yeere the moonks of Canturburie (by the kings assent) chose for +their archbishop one Richard, who before was prior of Douer, this man +was the 39. in number that had ruled the church of Canturburie, being of +an euill life as he well shewed, in that he wasted the goods of the +church inordinatlie. Roger the abbat of Bechellouin was first chosen, +but he refused that dignitie rather for slothfulnes and idlenes (as some +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +take it) than for modestie or wisedome: so hard a thing it is to please +the people, which measure all things to be honest or dishonest, as they +eb or flow in profit and gaine.</p> + +<p>The said Richard, after that he was elected, did homage vnto king +Henrie, and sware fealtie vnto him (Saluo semper ordine suo, His order +alwaies saued) without making mention of the customes of the kingdome. +<span class="rightnote">A councell holden at Westminster.</span> +This was doone at Westminster in the chappel of S. Katharine, the kings +iusticer giuing his assent therevnto, where a councell was held the same +time, and a letter of the popes read there before the bishops and barons +of the realme, conteining amongst other things this that followeth.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<h3>A breefe extract or clause of a letter which the pope sent to the +clergie of England, &c. for the making of a new holie daie.</h3> + +<p>We admonish you all, & by the authoritie which we reteine, doo +streightlie charge you, that you celebrat the daie of the suffering of +the blessed man Thomas the glorious martyr, sometime archbishop of +Canturburie, euerie yere in most solemne sort, & that with deuout +praiers ye endeuour your selues to purchase forgiuenes of sins: that he +which for Christes sake suffered banishment in this life, and martyrdome +in death by constancie of vertue, through continuall supplication of +faithfull people, may make intercession for you vnto God.</p> +</div> + +<p>The tenor of these letters were scarslie read, but euerie man with a +lowd voice began to recite this psalme or hymne, Te Deum laudamus. +Furthermore bicause his suffragans had not exhibited due reuerence to +him their father, either in time of his banishment, or at his returne +from the same, but rather persecuted him; that they might openlie +confesse their errour and wickednesse to all men, they made this +<span class="rightnote">A collect deuised in honor of the archbishop Becket.</span> +collect: "Be fauourable good Lord to our supplication and praier, that +we which acknowledge our selues guiltie of iniquitie, may be deliuered +by the intercession of Thomas thy blessed martyr and bishop, Amen."</p> + +<p>This praier was vsed by the couent of S. Albons on the daie of his +martyrdome. Thus</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i6">—— cæca superstitionis<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Est facilísque via & cunctis iam cognita sæclis.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>¶ Notwithstanding all which honor of the pope then exhibited to his +saint, as his canonization, with other solemnities procured for the +maintenance of his memoriall in all ages, +<a name="Page_147" id="Page_147" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[147]</span> +succeeding; what remembrance +is there now of Thomas Becket? Where be the shrines that were erected in +this church and that chappell for perpetuities of his name and fame? Are +they not all defaced? are they not all ruinated? are they not all +conuerted to powder and dust? And although the pope ment by causing such +ikons to be erected, to prefer Thomas as a perpetuall saint to all +posterities, and thought as he that said of his poems,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Exegi monumentum ære perennius,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Regalíque situ pyramidum altius,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Quod non imber edax non aquilo impotens<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Possit diruere aut innumerabilis<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Annorum series & fuga temporum,<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>Yet is he growne not into renowne, but infamie and shame in England, as +our chronicles declare, which haue published that Romish rakehels +ambitious and traitorous heart to all successions. Naie, whereas in +times past he was reckoned in the popes rubricke for a saint and a +martyr, now it is come to passe (by the meanes belike of other saints +whose merits haue surpassed Beckets) that he is growne in obliuion euen +<span class="rightnote">M. Vaghan at Spitle the tuesdaie in Easter wéeke 1565.</span> +at Rome, and his name raced out of the pope's calendar (as a learned man +preached in a solemne audience at a high festiuall time) by whome he was +so magnified. In which kind of discontinuing his fauour to his sworne +children, he sheweth himselfe verie ingratefull, and not worthie of the +dutifulnesse wherewith (like buzzards as they be) they ouercharge their +hellish (holie I would saie) father.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i> The archbishops consecratiō disturbed by the +yoong king.</span> +This yeare the sister of the said archbishop Richard was made abbesse of +Berking. But now touching the new elected archbishop Richard, we find +that comming to Canturburie on the saturdaie after his election, in hope +to be there consecrated, he was disappointed by letters that came from +king Henrie the sonne, in forme as followeth.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<h3><a name="Letter1" id="Letter1"></a>A letter of yoong king Henrie touching the disappointment of archbishop +Richards consecration.</h3> + +<p>Henrie by the grace of God king of England, duke of Normandie, and earle +of Aniou, sonne of king Henrie; to our deere and faithfull freend Odo, +prior of the Church of Canturburie, and to all the conuent there, +sendeth greeting. By the assured report of some we vnderstand, that in +your church and in other churches also, my father goeth about to +institute certein persons not verie meet for such calling: and bicause +(without our consent) it ought not so to be doone, who by reason of our +kinglie annointing haue taken vpon vs the kingdome and charge of the +whole realme: hervpon we haue in the presence of many persons appealed +to the see of Rome, and haue signified our appeale in that behalfe, made +vnto our reuerend fathers and freends Albert and Theodorike, cardinals +and legats of the apostolike see, by our writing and messenger, who like +wise and discreet personages haue assented therevnto. We haue likewise +signified the same our appeale to our faithfull freends the bishops of +London, Excester, and Worcester, and as we haue appealed, so likewise we +do appeale vnder your testimonie.</p> +</div> + +<p>After the perusall of this letter, and the due consideration of the +substance and summe of the same, (albeit no such afterclaps were +suspected before) the bishops were altogither driuen to their shifts, +some of them desiring to go forward with the consecration, and +<a name="Page_148" id="Page_148" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[148]</span> +some +supposing it better to yéeld vnto the appeale. The elect archbishop +therefore first sent messengers to Rome with letters, not written onelie +by himselfe, but also by all the bishops and conuent of Canturburie. +After this he followed himselfe in person, and comming to the popes +court, found there diuers aduersaries to his cause. For some were there +that tooke part with the king the father, and some with the king the +sonne, and so his businesse could haue no spéedie dispatch. In the meane +time the rancor which king Henrie the sonne had concerned against his +father was so ripened, that it could not but burst out, and shew itselfe +to the breach of all dutifull obedience which nature requireth of a +sonne towards his father.</p> + +<p>You haue heard how king Henrie promised the earledome of Morienne, when +the marriage was concluded betwixt his son John and the said earles +daughter, to giue vnto the said John certeine townes in Normandie, for +the better mainteining of his estate and his wiues. This gift of the +fathers caused his eldest sonne the yong king Henrie, the sooner to +powre out his poison which he had sucked before at his being with his +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +father in law king Lewes. For conceiuing an offense, that his father +should giue away any portion of his inheritance, he would not condescend +to any such gifts, but alledged that sithens he was king of England, and +that all belonged to him, his father could not now haue any title to +giue awaie that which did in no wise apperteine vnto him.</p> + +<p>There was another cause that troubled his mind also, and mooued him to +grudge at his father, which was; for that the proportion of his +allowance for maintenance of his houshold and port was verie slender, +and yet more slenderlie paied. Also his father remooued from him +<span class="rightnote">Astulfe de S. Hilarie a counsellor, or rather corrupter of +king Henrie the sonne. <i>Polydor.</i></span> +certeine of his seruants, as Astulfe de S. Hilarie, and other whome he +suspected to giue him euill counsell. Wherefore those that were +procurers of him to attempt the seizing of the gouernement into his +hands, vpon this occasion slept not, but put into his head such matter, +that at length he openlie demanded to haue the whole rule committed to +him: which when he saw would not be obteined of his father by quiet +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie the sonne fled to the French king.</span> +meanes, he fled secretlie awaie vnto his father in law king Lewes, +requiring aid of him to recouer his right, which king Henrie the elder +vniustlie deteined from him.</p> + +<p>The French king comforted him, and bad him be of good cheare, for he +ment to doo for him all that in him laie. Herewith he proclaimed him +duke of Normandie, and receiued homage of him for the same. King Henrie +the father vnderstanding that his sonne was thus tied to the French +king, sent ambassadours foorthwith to the same king, requiring him to +giue his son some good & wholesome counsell, that he might repent, and +not follow such wilfulnesse of mind in swaruing from his fathers +freendship, but rather with spéed to returne home againe; & to promise +in his name, that if any thing were otherwise than well, he would be +contented the same should be reformed by his order and correction. But +so farre was king Lewes from meaning to set a quietnesse betwixt the +father and the sonne, that he would not heare the ambassadors declare +<span class="rightnote"><i>W. Paruus.</i></span> +their message, bicause they named the father, king, to the derogation of +the sonnes right, to whome he said he offered manifest wrong in vsurping +the gouernement, which he had alreadie giuen ouer and resigned. Insomuch +that when the ambassadours had declared some part of their message, he +asked them what he was that willed such things of him: and when they +answered that the king of England had sent them with that message, "That +is a false lie (saith he) for behold here is the king of England, who +hath giuen you no commission to declare any message from him vnto me at +all."</p> + +<p>¶ Here we sée philautie or selfe-loue, which rageth in men so +preposterouslie, that euen naturall dutie and affection quite forgotten, +they vndertake what mischéefe soeuer commeth next to hand; without +exception of place or person; and all for the maintenance of statelie +titles, of loftie stiles, of honorable names, and such like vanities +more light than thistle downe that flieth in the aire. A vice that hath +beene noted to reigne in all ages, among all péeres and people of all +nations, both at home and abroad, as one +<a name="Page_149" id="Page_149" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[149]</span> +verie well noteth and giueth +his verdict therevpon, saieng,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>M. Pal. in virg. & sag.</i></span> +<span class="i6">—— proh dij, mine nomina tantùm<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Magnifica, & claros titulos sibi quilibet optat,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Arrogat, affectat, sequitur, rapit; vt meritò iam<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Et se asinus pardum vocet & formica leonem.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Quid tituli illustres præclaráq; nomina prosunt?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Quæ citò mors rapit, & lethæas mergit in vndas.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie the father knoweth not whome he may trust. +<i>Polydor.</i></span> +King Henrie the father perceiuing hereby that warres would follow, +prepared the best he could for his owne defense: but he was in great +doubt on euerie side, not knowing whome he might trust. And to increase +this mischéefe, his wife quéene Elianor studied to mainteine the strife +betwixt hir sonnes. The yoong king then getting an armie togither entred +into Guian.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Richard Bart chancellor to the young king, also his +chaplaine, Sir Walter Ailward with others. <i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +King Henrie was not hastie to go against him, but sought rather with +gentlenesse and all courteous meanes to reconcile him: insomuch that +whereas diuerse graue personages being of the yoong kings counsell, and +doubting to runne into the displeasure of his father, reuolted from the +sonne to the father, and brought with them the sonnes seale, which he +vsed in sealing of letters. Howbeit, the father receiued them not, but +sent them backe againe to his sonne, commanding them to continue +faithfull in seruing him as he should appoint them, and herewith he sent +ambassadours vnto his sonne to entreate with him of peace and concord.</p> + +<p>Now whilest the father went about to asswage the sonnes displeasure, the +mother quéene Elianor did what she could to pricke him forward in his +disobedient attempts. For she being enraged against hir husband bicause +he kept sundrie concubines, and therefore delited the lesse in hir +companie, cared not what mischéefe she procured against him. Herevpon +she made hir complaint so greeuouslie vnto hir sons Richard and Geffrey, +that they ioined with their brother against their father, & came to him +into Guien, to aid him to the vttermost of their powers.</p> + +<p>¶ This may well séeme to be brought vpon the king as a plague of his +incontinent, vnchast and libidinous life; who hauing Chara coniugij +pignora, a notable motiue to kindle and to continue honest loue in +wedlocke, did not notwithstanding most inordinatelie abandon his bodie +to beastlie and vnlawfull companie kéeping with strange flesh. Note +heere how God stirreth vp the wife of his owne bosome, & the sonnes +descending of his owne loines to be thornes in his eies and godes in his +sides for profaning so diuine and holie an ordinance; which the verie +pagans did so honour and reuerence, that they did not onlie giue +precepts touching the due obseruation thereof, but denounced vndoubted +vengeance for the violation of the same, as appeareth in this old +testimonie,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Hesiod. in lib. cui tit. op. & di.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Patrat & ingraditur quicunq; cubilia fratris<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Vxorem maculans, & sancta cubilia stupro<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Hunc pater ipse deûm Saturnius odit, & ipsi<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Hunc malè dij vexant, &c.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>But we will remit this to the readers consideration, and note the issue +of this mischéefe now broched. The yoong king reioicing that he had his +brethren thus on his side, readie to take his part, became more stout +than before, and for answere vnto the messengers that came to him from +his father, he declared that if his father would deliuer vp the whole +gouernment into his hands, he would be content to breake vp his armie. +As for such souldiers as would willinglie take his part in this quarell, +he caused them to sweare that they should faithfullie serue him against +his aduersaries: and those that had rather serue on the other side, he +licensed them fréelie to depart and go to his father.</p> + +<p>King Henrie the father receiuing such a rebellious answer from his +sonne, much lamented the matter, and so much the more, for that he saw +there was no remedie, but +<a name="Page_150" id="Page_150" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[150]</span> +to haue the controuersie decided by the +sword. Therefore least he should be taken vnprouided, he kept his armie +<span class="rightnote">Twētie thousand Brabanders were reteined by king Henrie +the father as saith <i>R. Houed.</i> <i>Wil. Paruus.</i> <i>N. Triuet.</i> <i>Polydor.</i></span> +in a readinesse about him, hauing reteined certeine bands of Brabanders +called the Rowts.</p> + +<p>The lords that tooke part with his sonne, being aduertised by espials of +the dooings of the father, and hearing that he was readie (if he were +constreined) to defend himselfe by battell, and yet willing to receiue +his sons into his fauour againe, if they would be reformed, they tooke +great care how to cause his sons to persist in their enterprise, till +the father were compelled by force to resigne the gouernment vnto them. +But none more than the French king coueted to mainteine the discord, +till it might be ended by force of armes: and therefore sent vnto king +Henrie the sonne, willing him to come to Paris, where he caused a +councell to be called, & there made a league betwixt the said Henrie and +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i> <i>Polydor.</i></span> +himselfe, with William king of Scotland, Hugh earle of Chester, William +Patrike the elder, the thrée sons of Robert earle of Mellent, whose +castels king Henrie the elder had in possession, Roger Moumbray, Hugh +Bigot, and diuerse other complices of the conspiracie, Flabella +seditionum, that tooke part with Heurie the sonne.</p> + +<p>Here after they had consulted of the maner how to mainteine warre, +<span class="rightnote">The French king taketh an oth to aid Henrie the sonne. <i>Rog. +Houed.</i> <i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +bicause they would assure the yoong king that they ment not to forsake +him, first king Lewes, and after that all the residue tooke an oth to +aid him with men and monie, till his father should either be driuen out +of his kingdome, or brought to agrée with him at his will and pleasure. +On the other part, he sware neuer to conclude any peace with his father +without their consent and good will. He also promised vpon his oth to +<span class="rightnote">Philip earle of Flanders.</span> +giue, & by his charter vnder his scale he confirmed vnto Philip earle of +Flanders (for his homage) a thousand pounds of yearlie reuenues in +England, and the countie of Kent, with the castles of Douer and +<span class="rightnote">Matthew earle of Bullongne.</span> +Rochester. And to Matthew earle of Bullongne (for his homage) he +likewise promised and confirmed the Soke of Kirketon in Lindsey, and the +earledome of Morton, with the honour of Hey. Also to Theobald earle of +Blois (for his homage) he gaue and granted fiue hundred marks of yearlie +reuenue in Aniou with the castell of Ambois, and all that which he +claimed as his right within the countrie of Touraine, and surrendred to +him all the right which he and his father claimed and demanded to haue +<span class="rightnote">Chateau Reignold.</span> +in Chateau Reignold. To the K. of Scots (for his assistance) he gaue and +granted all Northumberland as far as the riuer of Tine. And to his +<span class="rightnote">Earle Dauid.<br /> +Hugh Bigot.</span> +brother Dauid (to haue his seruice) he granted the counties of +Huntingdon and Cambridge. To Hugh Bigot (for his seruice) he gaue the +castell of Norwhich. All these gifts and grants (with diuerse other to +other persons) promised & granted, he confirmed with his new seale, +which the king of France had caused him to make. These things being thus +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i><a name="FNanchor_5_4" id="FNanchor_5_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></span> +ordered at Paris, euerie man resorted to his charge, that he might +prouide for the warre with all spéed conuenient.</p> + +<p>King Henrie the father aduertised of this new league of the conspirators +against him, was in great perplexitie of mind, for that he saw himselfe +in danger, not onelie of outward enimies, but also of his owne subiects +at home. Yet bicause the winter season was alreadie at hand, taking +awaie all conuenient occasions of attempting any great exploit by war +for that time, he was in hope to compasse some agréement with his sons +yer the spring of the yeare should returne, and therefore he made not so +great prouision for his defense, as had béene necessarie in so dangerous +a case. But the Frenchmen who were bent to set forward this war with all +diligence, were readie in the field immediatlie vpon the comming of the +<span class="rightnote">The confederats inuade the dominions of king Henrie the +father.</span> +spring with king Henrie the sonne, and euen at one instant made their +inuasions vpon the lands of king Henrie the father in three seuerall +parties; namelie, in Normandie, Guien, and Britaine, which (against the +will of his sonne Geffrey duke thereof) king Henrie the father did hold +and reteine in his owne hands. The Frenchmen thus inuading the foresaid +countries, did much hurt with robbing and spoiling, and also tooke +diuerse castels and townes.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The king of Scots inuadeth Cumberland.</span> +Moreouer about the same time, William king of Scotland entred with a +great power, first into Cumberland, and besieged Carleil: but hearing +that an armie was prepared +<a name="Page_151" id="Page_151" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[151]</span> +against him in the south parties of the +realme, and readie to set forward, he raised his siege, and entred into +Northumberland (which prouince king Henrie the sonne had giuen him in +the last assemblie holden at Paris) endeuouring to bring it into his +possession. But the more earnestlie he went about to inforce the people +to his will, the more stiflie did they withstand his purpose, hating him +so much, that in no condition they were willing to come vnder his rule, +whereby the Scots were put backe and repelled, and that to their great +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +losse. The kings power also comming into the countrie followed them, and +passing ouer the water of Tweed, which diuided then (as it dooth at this +daie) the two realmes, made the like spoile in the land of the enimies, +as they had made in the countries of Northumberland and Cumberland.</p> + +<p>But in Normandie, whilest others in other places, made their hand in +fetching preies and booties out of the enimies countrie, king Lewes +<span class="rightnote">Vernueil besieged. <i>R. Houed.</i> Hugh Beauchampe.</span> +besieged Vernueil, which towne being strong of it selfe, Hugh Beauchampe +and others that had charge thereof valientlie defended, so that the +French<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> king was a moneth before it, yer he could win anie part thereof. +This towne of Vernueil was in those daies diuided into three portions, +beside the castell, euerie of them apart from other with mightie wals +and déepe ditches full of water. One of these parts was called the great +Burrow without the wals, where the French king had pitcht his field & +planted his engins. About a moneth after whose coming thither, vittels +began to faile them within, so that at length they required a truce +onelie for thrée daies, & if no succour came within those thrée daies, +they promised to yeeld that part of the towne called the great Burrow, & +the peremptorie daie was the vigill or eeue of S. Laurence. Herevpon +were hostages deliuered by the burgesses vnto the French king. Now it +was agréed that if they yéelded the towne at the daie appointed for want +of succor, king Henrie the son, and Robert the French kings brother, +with the earles of Trois & Blois, Henrie and Theobald, and William +archbish. of Sens, vndertooke vpon their othes that the hostages should +then be restored free & without any hurt or damage.</p> + +<p>King Henrie being certified from them within of the composition thus +made, was driuen to a verie hard shift: for he doubted nothing lesse +than that any such thing should haue chanced. Yet considering with +himselfe, that the sauing of the towne stood in his speedie comming to +the rescue, he hasted thither without any staie, and came to the place +the daie before the third and last daie of the truce. King Lewes +<span class="rightnote">The French king requireth to talke.</span> +perceiuing him to be come, doubting least he should loose the preie +which he looked for, sent vnto the king, and required that he might +common with him on the next daie, touching some means of agréement to be +had betwixt him and his sons. This did he of policie, to féed him with +hope of some end to be made in the troubles betwixt him and his sons, +till he had gotten possession of the towne.</p> + +<p>Now as he forecast that matter, euen so it came to passe, for whilest a +great péece of the next daie was spent in feined talke about an +agréement; K. Lewes appointed a great part of his host to close the +towne about, and to declare vnto them within, that king Henrie was put +to flight; which talke they within Vernueil beléeuing, yéelded the towne +& themselues to the Frenchmen. Soone after, king Lewes mistrusting least +he should not be able to kéepe it, set it on fire, and so burnt it, +contrarie to the composition betwixt him and them agréed and concluded +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> The ninth of August being thursdaie saieth +<i>R. Houed.</i> king Lewes fléeth awaie in the night.</span> +vpon. He kept also the souldiers that had yeelded it into his hands, +togither with the hostages as prisoners, and doubting to cope with his +enimie, went awaie in the night with as still noise as was possible. +Which euill dealing had not inuaded his hart, but that euill meaning had +possessed it before, euen at the composition making: but he neuer +learned that,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Pub. Mim.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Fidem qui perdit nihil potest vltra perdere.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>King Henrie at length perceiuing the fraud, sent certeine bands of his +horssemen after to persue the enimie: but for that king Lewes was +alreadie gotten into the inner parts of his owne countrie, those which +were sent, turned vpon those that were left in the hindermost ward, of +whome they slue a great number both horssemen and footmen.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_152" id="Page_152" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[152]</span> +K. Henrie following his men, came to Vernueil, and staieng there that +night, tooke order for the repairing and new fortifieng of the towne. On +the morrow after he went to the castell of Danuille, and wan it, taking +diuerse knights and yeomen within it: this castell belonged to one +<span class="rightnote">Danuille. Gilbert de Tileres.</span> +Gilbert de Tileres. And thus it came to passe touching the attempt of +the French king for the winning of Vernueil, as in some authors we find +reported. ¶ Other write otherwise of the mater, as thus, the French K. +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +being summoned by K. Henrie the father, either to depart from the seige +of Vernueil or to looke for battell; & hearing also that in performance +of the message K. Hearie approched with his power, he sent a bishop & an +abbat vnto him to vnderstand if he meant to giue battell in deed. The +messengers met king Henrie as he was aduanced before his host vpon some +<span class="rightnote">K. Henrie his short answere to the French kings messengers.</span> +occasion with a small companie about him, vnto whome they declared that +their maister the French king, required to be assured whether he should +haue battell or no. King Henrie armed as he was, with fierce countenance +and dreadfull voice made this short answere; "Get you hence, and tell +your king that I am here at hand." The messengers returning to their +maister, declared what they had séene and heard. Wherevpon (without +longer staie) he raised his field, and with a gallant and mightie armie +departed home to his great dishonour, not winning the towne at all, as +by the same author it should appeere.</p> + +<p>About the same time the earle of Flanders, one of the confederats +besieged the towne of Albemarle, and the earle therof within it, which +<span class="rightnote">Albemarle woon by the earle of Flanders.</span> +earle was thought to betraie the towne, bicause it was so easilie woone, +and both he himselfe, and those which king Henrie the father had sent +thither to defend the towne were taken prisoners. Diuerse other places +which belonged to the same earle were also immediatlie deliuered into +the enimies hands, which increased the suspicion.</p> + +<p>After this towne of Newcastell (otherwise called Drincourt) in those +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i> <i>Ia. Meir.</i> <i>Ger. Dor.</i> +The earle of Bullongne wounded, and dieth.</span> +frontiers was besieged, and finallie woone by surrender, by the said +earle of Flanders, who reioised nothing at the gaine of that towne: for +his brother Matthew; the earle of Bullongne who should haue béene his +heire, was shot into the knée with an arrow, as he approched to the +wals, and died of the hurt within a few daies after. The earle of +Flanders was so pensife for his brothers death, that he brake vp his +iournie and returned, blaming his euill hap and follie in that he had +attempted war against his coosen germane king Henrie, who neuer had +harmed him, but rather had doone him manie great and singular pleasures +from time to time.</p> + +<p>¶ Good cause had the earle to giue ouer the prosequuting of violence +against<a name="FNanchor_5_6" id="FNanchor_5_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> his souereigne, being dawnted with so heauie a chance, & griped +also with the grudge of conscience, in so vnkindlie rewarding his +welwiller, at whose hands he confessed himselfe to haue receiued manie a +benefit. Wherein we are to note, that ingratitude neuer hurteth anie so +much as him or them in whom it is nestled. And hereto alludeth the +comedie-writer, when he saith verie neatlie,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Plaut. in Ca.</i></span> +<span class="i0">—— morem hunc homines habent, quod sibi volunt<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Dum id impetrāt, boni sunt: sed id vbi iam pene se habet,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Ex bonis pessimi & fraudulentissimi sunt.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>Moreouer Henrie the elder (after the iournie of Vernueil ended) came +backe to Rouen, and there vnderstanding that Hugh earle of Chester, and +Rafe de Foulgiers, men of singular prowesse (who long before were +reuolted to his sonne Henrie) had taken the castell of Dole in Britaine, +and there making warre, brought all the countrie into trouble, he sent +foorth streightwaies certeine of his capteines with the Brabanders to +aid his people in those parts who on the twentieth day of August (being +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +monday) encountring with the enimies, discomfited them in battell, tooke +seauenteene knights, beside diuerse others both horssemen and footmen, +slue aboue fifteene hundred of the enimies being Britaines, and pursuing +the residue, entred the towne which they wan, and droue their +<a name="Page_153" id="Page_153" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[153]</span> +aduersaries into the castell, where they besieged them, and with all +spéed aduertised the king of that enterprise, who immediatlie with all +possible hast came thither, applieng his whole diligence to win the +place, that he might haue them which were within the same at his +commandement.</p> + +<p>To be short, it was not long yer he had his desire, for being such a +multitude, that they were not able long to continue within so streict a +roome, for want of vittell they fell to a composition, yeelding the +castell vnto the king, their bodies, liues, and lims saued, on the 25. +day of August. There were within this castell 80. knights, besides +yeomen and other common souldiers. In like maner, and with the semblable +good fortune, about the same time, his capteins in England ouercame his +enimies: for whereas Robert earle of Leicester that tooke part with king +Henrie the sonne, had assembled at the towne of Leicester a great host +of men, in purpose to set vpon Reignold earle of Cornewall and Richard +Lucie capteines on the side of king Henrie the father: they +vnderstanding his meaning, marched streight towards Leicester, and by +the waie met with their enimie earle Robert, whome they so fiercelie +<span class="rightnote">The earle of Leicester put to flight.</span> +assailed, that they put him to flight, and after approching the towne, +had it surrendered vnto them, permitting the inhabitants to depart with +bag and baggage, and then burned the towne: but the castell (which in +those daies was of great strength by reason of the situation) they could +not win.</p> + +<p>Howbeit some write, that by vndermining, the walles of the towne were +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> Leicester won by force.</span> +subuerted and throwne downe, so that the towne was entred by force, +although they within withdrew themselues into the castell and other +strong houses, which they defended for a time, till at length they +surrendered all, one parcell of the castell excepted, for the which by +composition they paied by way of a fine the sum of thrée hundred pounds +to the vse of K. Henrie the father. The siege began the seauenth day of +Julie, and on the 28. day of the same moneth the armie departed from +thence, a truce being granted to those that still defended a certeine +tower of the castell into the which they were withdrawne.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The king of Scots inuadeth Northumberland.</span> +William also the Scotish king, with an armie of Scots and Gallowaimen +inuaded Northumberland, and passing by the confines of the bishoprike of +Durham, did much hurt by slaughter, burning and spoiling the countrie. +Neuerthelesse, hearing of a power raised by the English lords in those +<span class="rightnote">He retireth.</span> +parts to resist him, he withdrew into his countrie. The English armie +folowing him, wasted the countrie of Louthian, +<span class="rightnote">The English spoile Louthian. A truce.</span> +till at length by +mediation of certeine religious men, a truce was granted to the Scots to +indure till the feast of S. Hilarie. For the which truce happilie some +rewards went betwixt, and so the English lords with spoiles and gaines +returned homewards.</p> + +<p>A few daies after these luckie chances thus happening to king Henrie, +king Lewes perceiuing fortune to be on that side, determined to assaie +whether he could obteine his purpose by some means of treatie, or at the +least put king Henrie in hope of a peace for a time, knowing that he +would rather suffer all discommodities whatsoeuer, than once to trie the +matter by battell with his sonnes: wherefore he offered to come to a +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> A treatie of peace.</span> +communication with him betwixt Gisors and Trie, shewing bread in the one +hand (as they say) and hiding a stone in the other.</p> + +<p>King Henrie was easilie intreated to heare of anie talke for peace, and +therefore comming to the place on tuesdaie the fiftéenth daie of +September, made so large offers, that he had almost conuerted the yoong +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> The offer of K. Henrie the father to his +sonnes.</span> +mens minds vnto concord. First he offered to his sonne Henrie the yoong +king, the moitie or one halfe of all the reuenues belonging to the +demaines of the crowne within England, and four conuenient castels +within the same. Or if his sonne had rather remaine in Normandie, he +offered the halfe of all the reuenues of that dutchie, with all the +rents and profits that were his fathers perteining to the earledome of +Aniou, with certeine castels in Normandie, one castell in Aniou, one in +Maine, and one in Towraine. To his sonne Richard, he offered halfe the +reuenues +<a name="Page_154" id="Page_154" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[154]</span> +of Guien, and foure conuenient castels in the same. And to his +sonne Geffrey he offered all those lands that belonged by right of +inheritance vnto the daughter of Conan earle of Britaine, if he might by +the popes good licence marrie hir. And further king Henrie the father +yéelded himselfe to stand to the order of the archbishop of Tharent and +other the popes legats, not refusing to giue his sonnes what rents and +reuenues soeuer they should say were reasonable, reseruing onelie to +himselfe the administration of iustice, and the power roiall.</p> + +<p>These séemed to be large offers, but yet they could not be accepted. For +certeine sonnes of Beliall, set vpon nothing but mischéefe, troublers of +common peace and quietnesse, wrought so with them, that no conditions of +peace (were the same neuer so reasonable) could content them, so that +without effect this communication brake vp, but not without contumelious +words passed betwixt the parties, insomuch that the earle of Leicester +(who being put from all his aid in England, was come ouer to the French +king to purchase aid at his hands) could not refraine but giuing credit +to the old adage,</p> + + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Pub. Mim.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Homo extra corpus suum est cùm irascitur,<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap"> +<span class="rightnote">The earle of Leicester offred to strike the king.</span> +after many opprobrious words vttered against king Henrie the father, +laid hand on his sword to haue striken him but the standers by would not +suffer him and so they, departed; which rash attempt or rather disloiall +enterprise,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Non sani esse hominis non sanus iuret Orestes.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>On the morrow after, the French and English skirmished togither betwixt +Curseils and Gisors, in which conflict Enguerane Chastillone de Trie was +taken prisoner by earle William de Mandeuille, who presented him to the +king of England. King Lewes though he iudged it his part to preserue his +sonne in law from danger, yet he ment nothing lesse than to ioin battell +with the English at that present. But within a few daies after, he sent +Robert earle of Leicester into England with an armie of Flemings and +others, there to ioine with Hugh Bigot, that both of them might as well +by force as faire promises and gentle persuasions bring the whole realme +vnto the obedience of king Henrie the sonne.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Additions to <i>Iohn Pike.</i></span> +The earle of Leicester therefore landing at Walton the 21. of September, +passed through the countrie vnto Fremingham, where he was receiued of +Hugh Bigot earle of Northfolke; and after that an other fléet of +Flemings were arriued for their aid, they went vnto Gipswich, where when +they had remained a few daies, and augmented their forces by certeine +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +bands of men of warre that belonged vnto earle Bigot, they went to the +castell of Haghenet (that belonged vnto Ranulph Broc) which they tooke, +spoiled & burned, & then returned to Fremingham.</p> + +<p>After this, hearing that the countesse of Leicester was arriued at +Orreford with an other power of Flemings, they went to méet hir: and so +the earle of Leicester, hauing now a strong armie about him, tooke leaue +of earle Bigot, and ment to passe through the countrie into +Leicestershire, there to succour his freends, and to worke some feat for +the behoofe and furtherance of their quarell.</p> + +<p>In the meane time the arriuall of the earle of Leicester being knowne, +the people of the countrie were assembled togither. Also Richard Lucie +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +lord cheefe iustice, and Humfrey de Boun high conestable of England, +with the kings power of horssemen which latelie before had béene in +Scotland, and made inrodes there (as before is mentioned) came with all +spéed to saue the countrie from spoile, hauing first taken a truce (as +before is said) with the king of Scots, till the feast of Saint Hilarie +next ensuing (or rather Ester) hostages being deliuered on both sides. +Vpon knowledge then had where the enimies were lodged, and what they +intended to doo, the said Richard Lucie & Humfrey de Boun came to Saint +Edmundsburie, whither Reignold earle of Cornewall the kings vncle, +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +Robert earle of Glocester, and William erle of Arundell resorted.</p> + +<p>In the meane while, the earle of Leicester passed forward on his waie so +farre as Fornham +<a name="Page_155" id="Page_155" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[155]</span> +a little village beside S. Edmundsburie. The lord +chéefe iustice & the earls before mentioned with a great armie, and +amongst others the said Humfrey de Boun, who had the leading of 300. +knights, or men of armes at the kings wages, came out of S. +Edmundsburie, hauing the baner of S. Edmund borne before them, & in a +marish ground betwixt Fornham & Edmunsburie, they encountred with the +said earle of Leicester, and after long and cruell fight discomfited his +<span class="rightnote">The earle of Leicester taken prisoner.</span> +people, and tooke him prisoner, togither with his wife the countesse +Petronill, after he had doone all that belonged to a valiant capteine.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> <i>Polydor.</i></span> +Some write that there were killed on that day of his people to the +number of ten thousand [and almost as manie taken] verelie [all the +footmen of the Flemings being in number foure or fiue thousand were +either taken or slaine:] the residue that escaped fled towards +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +Leicester, that they might both defend the towne & themselues from the +danger of their foes.</p> + +<p>¶ But here is to be noted, that it séemeth by the report of some +writers, how the earle of Leicester had not so great an armie there at +that battell, as by others account of the number slaine and taken it +should appeare he had. For at his departure from his companion in armes +Hugh Bigot, he tooke vpon him to passe through the countrie (as some +write) partlie vpon trust that he had of the force and number of his +souldiers, being about foure or fiue thousand stout and valiant footmen, +besides 80 chosen and well appointed horssemen; and partlie in hope that +manie of those which were in his aduersaries campe, would rather turne +to him than fight against him.</p> + +<p>He had a great confidence in the Flemings, who indéed presumed much vpon +their owne strength, so that they made account of some great conquest, +in such wise, that when they came into any large plaine where they might +rest, they would take ech others by the hand, and leading a danse, sing +in their countrie language,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Hop hop Wilkine, hop Wilkine,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">England is mine and thine.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>King Henrie receiuing aduertisement of the victorie which his capteines +had thus gotten in England, was maruellous ioifull, and commanded that +the prisoners should be brought ouer vnto him into Normandie: which +being doone, he went into Aniou, and there fortified the towns and +castels of the countrie with sure garrisons of men, to resist all sudden +inuasion, secret practises, and other attempts of the enimies. On the +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i> The towne of Vandosme woone.</span> +feast of S. Andrew the apostle, he tooke the towne of Vandosme by force, +which Buchard de Lauerdin held against him, hauing first expelled his +father the earle of Vandosme.</p> + +<p>About this season, or rather somewhat before, king Henrie the father, +(contrarie to the prohibition of the king his sonne and after the +<span class="rightnote">Sée <a href="#Letter1">his letter</a> before in page <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.<a name="FNanchor_5_7" id="FNanchor_5_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></span> +appeale made vnto the pope) gaue not onelie vnto Richard prior of Douer, +the archbishoprike of Canturburie; but also to Reignold Fitz-Joceline +the bishoprike of Bath; to Richard de Worcester archdeacon of Poictiers +the bishoprike of Winchester; to Robert Foliot the bishoprike of +Hereford; to Geffrey Ridell archdeacon of Canturburie he gaue the +bishoprike of Elie, and to John de Oxenford the bishoprike of +Chichister.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> * Which was fought on the 17. of October</span> +But now to our purpose. The nobles of the realme of England (after the * +battell of of S. Edmundsburie) with an infinit number of men went +against Hugh Bigot in purpose to abate his pride. But whereas they might +easilie haue had him at their pleasure, by meanes of such summes of +monie as he gaue in bribes, a peace was granted to him till Whitsuntide, +within which time hauing gotten togither fourteene thousand Flemings, he +passed through Essex, and so getting ouer into Kent, came to Douer, +where he tooke ship and transported ouer into France.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 20. <br /> +1174.</span> +King Henrie the father held his Christmasse this yeare at Caen in +Normandie, about which time a truce was made betwixt him and king Lewes +to endure till Easter, or (as others write) for the terme of six +moneths. For ye haue to vnderstand, that the fame of the victorie gotten +by the capteines of king Henrie the father against the earle of +Leicester +<a name="Page_156" id="Page_156" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[156]</span> +(being not onlie spred through England, but also blown ouer +into France) put those that tooke part with him in great feare; but +speciallie king Lewes mistrusting the matter began to wax wearie that he +had attempted so far, and susteined so great trauell and expenses in +another mans cause.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +Whilest this truce indured, the archbishop of Canturburie being readie +to returne home in dispaire of his businesse, vpon a feigned rumor spred +that there was a peace concluded betwixt the two kings, the father and +sonne, he was called backe and consecrated by the pope the sundaie after +Easter: and then furnished with the dignities of primat and legat of +England, and other priuileges according, he tooke his waie homewards +towards England, after he had laid foorth great summes of monie to +disappoint the purposes of his aduersaries.</p> + +<p>This yeare in June, the lord Geffrey the elect of Lincolne the kings +sonne besieged the castell which Roger de Mowbry had repaired at Kinard +Ferie, within the Isle of Oxholme, and compelling the souldiers within +to yéeld, he beat downe and raced the same castell vnto the verie +ground. Robert Mowbray conestable of that castell, as he passed thorough<a name="FNanchor_5_8" id="FNanchor_5_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> +the countrie towards Leicester, there to procure some aid, was taken by +the men of Claie, and kept as prisoner. Moreouer, the said elect of +Lincolne tooke the castell of Malesert that belonged to the said Roger +Mowbray, which being now taken, was deliuered vnto the keeping of the +archbishop of Yorke. The said elect also fortified a castell at +Topclife, and tooke it to the kéeping of William Stuteuille. In this +meane while the king tooke the strengths, and fortresses which his sonne +Richard had fortified at Xanctes, and in the same forts and church +(which was also fortified against him) 60. knights or men of armes, and +400. archbalisters, that is, the best of them that bare crossebowes.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The oth of the earle of Flanders.</span> +Philip earle of Flanders in the presence of the French king and other +the peeres of France, laieng his hand vpon the holie relikes, sware that +within 15. daies next insuing the feast of S. John then instant to enter +England with an armie, and to doo his best to subdue the same to king +Henrie the son. Vpon trust whereof the yoong king the more presuming +<span class="rightnote">Additions to <i>Iohn Pike.</i></span> +came downe to Whitsand, the 14. daie of Julie, that he might from thence +send ouer into England Rafe de la Haie with certeine bands of souldiers. +Before this the earle of Flanders had sent ouer 318. knights or men of +armes, as we may call them. But after their arriuall at Orwell, which +chanced the 14. of June, by reason that there associats were dispersed, +and for the more part subdued, they tooke with them earle Hugh Bigot, +and marching to Norwich, assaulted the citie and wan it, gaining there +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +great riches, and speciallie in readie monie, and led awaie a great sort +of prisoners whome they ransomed at their pleasure. This chanced the 18. +of June.</p> + +<p>¶ I remember that William Paruus writeth, that the citie of Norwich was +taken by the Flemings that came ouer with the earle of Leicester in the +yeare last past, by the conduct of the said earle before he was taken, +and that after he had taken that citie, being accompanied with earle +Bigot, he led those Flemings also vnto Dunwich, purposing to win and +sacke that towne also: but the inhabitants being better prouided against +the comming of their enimies than they of Norwich were, shewed such +countenance of defense, that they preserued their towne from that +danger, so that the two earles with Flemings were constreined to depart +without atchiuing their purpose. But whether that this attempt against +Dunwich was made by the earle of Leicester (before his taking) in +companie of earle Bigot, I haue not to auouch. But verilie for the +winning of Norwich, I suppose that William Paruus mistaketh the time, +except we shall saie that it was twise taken, as first by the earle of +Leicester in the yeare 1173. For it is certeine by consent of most +writers, and especiallie those that haue recorded particularlie the +incidents that chanced here in this land during these troubles betwixt +the king and his sons that it was taken now this yeare, 1174 by earle +Bigot (as before we haue shewed.)</p> + +<p>But now to procéed. The lords that had the rule of the land for king +Henrie the +<a name="Page_157" id="Page_157" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[157]</span> +father, perceiuing earle Bigots procéedings, sent knowledge +thereof with all expedition to the king, as yet remaining in the parties +beyond the seas. Whilest these things were a dooing, although the minds +of manie of the conspirators against king Henrie the father were +inclined to peace, yet Roger Mowbray, and Hugh Bigot (by reason of his +<span class="rightnote">Additions to <i>Iohn Pike.</i></span> +new supplie of men got out of Flanders) ceased not to attempt fresh +exploits: and chéeflie they solicited the matter in such wise with +William king of Scotland, that whilest they in other quarters of the +realme plaied their parts, he entred into the confines of Cumberland, +<span class="rightnote">The king of Scots inuadeth England.</span> +and first besieged the citie of Carleil, but perceiuing he could not win +it in any short time, he left one part of his armie to keepe siege +before it, and with the residue marched into the countrie alongst by the +<span class="rightnote">Castels woon by the Scots.</span> +riuer of Eden, taking by force the castels of Bourgh and Applebie, with +diuerse other. This doone, he passed ouer the riuer, and came through +Northumberland (wasting the countrie as he went) vnto Alnewike, which +place he attempted to win, though his labour therein proued but in +vaine.</p> + +<p>This enterprise which he made into Northumberland, he tooke in hand +chéeflie at the suit and request of Roger Mowbray, from whome Geffrey +(who after was bishop of Lincolne) K. Henries eldest base son had taken +two of his castels, so that he kept the third with much adoo. He had +giuen his eldest sonne in hostage vnto the said king of Scots for +assurance of such couenants to be kept on his behalfe as were passed +betwixt them. In the meane time one Duncane or Rothland, with an other +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i> Duncane a Scotish capteine wasteth Kendall.</span> +part of the Scotish armie entred into Kendall, and wasted that countrie +in most cruell wise, neither sparing age nor sex, insomuch that he brake +into the churches, slue those that were fled into the same for safegard +of their liues as well preests as other. The English power of horssemen +which passed not the number of 400. was assembled at Newcastell, vnder +<span class="rightnote"><i>Will. Paruus.</i> <i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +the leading of Robert de Stouteuille, Rafe Glanuille, William Ursie, +Bernard Balliolle [and Odonet de Umfreiuille.]</p> + +<p>These capteines hauing knowledge that Duncane was in one side of the +countrie, and king William in another, determinned to issue foorth and +trie the chance of warre, (which is doubtfull and vncerteine, according +to the old saieng,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Sen. in The.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Fortuna belli semper ancipiti in loco est)<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">against the enimies, sith it should be a great rebuke to them to suffer +the countrie to be wasted after that sort without reuengement. Herevpon +riding foorth one morning, there arose such a thicke fog and mist that +they could not discerne any waie about them, so that doubting to fall +within the laps of their enimies at vnwares, they staied a while to take +aduise what should be best for them to doo. Now when they were almost +fullie resolued to haue turned backe againe, by the comfortable words +<span class="rightnote">Bernard de Balliolle.</span> +and bold exhortation of Bernard Balliolle, they changed their purpose, +and rode forward, till at length the northerne wind began to waken, and +droue awaie the mist, so that the countrie was discouered vnto them, and +perceiuing where Alnewike stood, not knowing as yet whether the Scots +had woone it or not, they staied their pace, and riding softlie, at +length learning by the inhabitants of the countrie, that the Scotish +king desparing to win Alnewike, had raised his siege from thence the +same day, they turned streight thither, and lodging there all night, in +the morning got to their horsses verie earelie, riding foorth towards +the enimies that were spred abroad in the countrie to forey the same. +They had anon espied where the king was, and incontinentlie compassed +him about on euerie side, who perceiuing the English horssemen readie +thus to assaile him with all diligence called backe his men from the +spoile; but the more part of them being straied far off through the +swéetnes they found in getting of preies, could not heare the sound of +the trumpets, yet notwithstanding with those his horssemen which he +could get togither, he encountred the English men which came vpon him +verie hastilie.</p> + +<p>The battell was begun verie fiercelie at the first, and well fought for +a time, but the Scotish horssemen being toiled before in foreieng the +countrie, could not long continue against the fierce assault of the +English, but were either beaten downe, or else constreined +<a name="Page_158" id="Page_158" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[158]</span> +to saue +<span class="rightnote">The king of Scots taken.</span> +themselues by flight. The king with a few other (who at the first had +begun the battell) was taken. Also manie of the Scots that being far +off, and yet hearing of the skirmish, came running toward the place, & +were taken yer they could vnderstand how the matter had passed. This +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +taking of the king of Scots was on a saturdaie, being the seuenth<a name="FNanchor_5_9" id="FNanchor_5_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> of +Julie.</p> + +<p>The English capteines hauing thus taken the Scotish king in the midst of +his armie, conteining the number of 80000 men, returned to Newcastell, +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +greatlie reioising of their good successe, aduertising king Henrie the +father hereof with all speed, who as then was come ouer from Normandie, +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matt. Paris.</i> <i>Matth. West.</i> <i>Wil. Paruus.</i> <i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +and was (the same day that the Scotish king was taken) at Canturburie, +making his praiers there before the sepulture of the archbishop Becket +(as after shall appéere.)</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +In the meane while and somewhat before this time, the earle of +Leicesters men, which laie at Leicester vnder the conduct of Robert +Ferreis earle of Darbie (as some write) or rather of Anketille Malorie +constable or gouernour (if we shall so call him, as Roger Houeden saith) +came to Northampton, where they fought with them of that towne, and +<span class="rightnote">This chanced a little after Whitsuntide.</span> +getting the victorie, tooke two hundred prisoners, and slue or wounded +néere hand as manie more, and so with this good successe in that +enterprise returned againe to Leicester, from whence they first set +foorth. The kings horssemen herevpon came streight waies to Northampton, +and following the enimies, could not ouertake them.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Rob. Ferreis.</span> +Robert Ferreis earle of Darbie being now come vnto Leicester in aid of +them that laie there, staied not past ten daies: but finding meanes to +increase his number of horssemen, suddenlie made to Notingham, which +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i> <i>Reg. Houed.</i> Notingham taken.</span> +Reignold de Lucie had in kéeping, and comming thither earelie in the +morning tooke it, droue out the kings souldiers that laie there in +garison, burned the towne, slue the inhabitants, and diuided their goods +amongst his souldiers: which thing put the countrie about in such feare, +that manie of the inhabitants submitted themselues vnto him.</p> + +<p>King Henrie the sonne being hereof aduertised by letters oftentimes sent +vnto him by this Robert Ferreis, and other his fréends here in England, +eftsoones conceiued some good hope to obteine his purpose: and therefore +determined to prepare for the warre. Herevpon he purchased aid of king +Lewes, who (bicause the truce which he had taken with king Henrie the +father was now expired) thought it was reason to further his sonne in +<span class="rightnote"><i>W. Paruus.</i></span> +lawes enterprise so farre as in him laie. Wherfore he made his prouision +at Graueling, and there incamping with his people, staied till his ships +were readie to transport him and his armie, which consisted of certeine +horssemen, and of a number of Brabanders.</p> + +<p>King Henrie the father being informed both of his sonnes purpose, and of +the dooings in England, with all possible spéed determined to passe ouer +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +into England, and therefore got his souldiers a shipboord, among whome +were certeine bands of Brabanders: and so soone as the wind blew to his +mind, he caused the sailes to be hoised vp, and the nauie to set +forward. Being landed, he repaired first vnto Canturburie, there to make +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +his praiers, doubting least the bloud of the archbishop Thomas Becket +being shed through his occasion, did yet require vengeance against him +for that fact. From Canturburie he came to London, and tooke order for +the placing of capteines with their bands in certeine townes about the +coast, to defend the landing places, where he thought his sonne was like +<span class="rightnote">Huntington castell woone.</span> +to arriue. Then went he to Huntington, and subdued the castell there the +19. of Julie: for the knights and other souldiers that were within it +yéelded themselues to the kings mercie, their liues and lims saued.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +After this, assembling his people on all sides, he made his generall +musters at S. Edmundsburie, and determined to besiege the castels of +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> Earle Bigot is accorded with the K.</span> +Bunghey and Fremingham, which the earle Hugh Bigot held against him, who +mistrusting that he was not able to defend himselfe and those places +against the king, agréed with the king to haue peace, paieng him the +summe of a thousand markes by composition. This agréement was +concluded +<a name="Page_159" id="Page_159" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[159]</span> +the 25. of Julie. Herevpon a multitude of the Flemings which Philip +<span class="rightnote">The Flemings sent home.</span> +earle of Flanders had sent into England (as before is mentioned) vpon +their oth receiued, not afterwards to come as enimies into England, had +licence to returne into their countrie. Also the bands of souldiers that +came into the realme with Rafe de la Haie departed without impediment by +the kings sufferance.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +The king hauing thus accomplished that which stood with his pleasure in +those parties, remoued from thence and drew towards Northampton. To +<span class="rightnote">The king of Scots presented to the King of England.</span> +which towne after his comming thither, the king of Scots was brought +with his féet bound vnder the horsses bellie. Thither also came the +bishop of Durham, and deliuered to the king the castels of Durham, +Norham, and Allerton. Thither also came to the king Roger Mowbraie, and +surrendred to him the castell of Treske, and Robert earle Ferreis +deliuered vp into his hands the castels of Tutburie, and Duffield, and +Anketill Mallorie, and William de Diue constables to the earle of +Leicester yeelded to the king the castels of Cicester, Grobie, and +Mountsorell, to the intent that he should deale more courteouslie with +<span class="rightnote">The earle of Glocester. The earle Richard of Clare.</span> +the earle their maister. Also William earle of Glocester, and earle +Richard of Clare submitted themselues to the king, and so he brought all +his aduersaries within the realme of England vnto such subiection as he +himselfe wished; so that the king hauing atchiued the vpper hand of his +enimies returned to London.</p> + +<p>¶ All this hurlie burlie and bloudie tumult, was partlie to be ascribed +to the king himselfe, who ouer tenderlie fauouring his sonne, did deiect +and abase himselfe to aduance the other; partlie to the ambitious +disposition of the youth, who was charged with roialtie, before he had +learned sufficient loialtie, else would he not haue made insurrections +against his father, that himself might obteine the monarchie, and the +old king doo him homage: and partlie to the quéenes discontented or +rather malicious mind, whose dutie it had béene (notwithstanding such +dishonour doone hir by the king in abusing his bodie vnlawfullie) so +little to haue thought of stirring commotions betwixt the father and the +sonnes that she should rather haue lulled the contention asléepe, and +doone what she possiblie could to quench the feruent fier of strife with +the water of pacification. But true it is that hath béene said long ago,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Pub. Mim.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Mulier nihil nouit nisi quod vult,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Et plenum malorum est onus.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>But what insued herevpon euen by waie of chastisement, but that which +commonlie lighteth vpon tumult-raisers; namelie, either losse of life, +or at least restraint of libertie? For the king after this happie +atchiuement of his warlike affaires, being ruled by reason and aduise +(as it is likelie) would not that so smoking a fierbrand (as quéene +<span class="rightnote">Quéene Elinor is committed to close prison.</span> +Elianor had prooued hirselfe to be) should still annoie his eies, and +therefore (whether in angrie or quiet mood, that is doubtfull) he +committed hir to close prison, bicause she had procured his sons Richard +and Geffrey to ioine with their elder brother against him their father +(as before ye haue partlie heard.)</p> + +<p>But to procéed, king Lewes being aduertised that there was no great +number of men of war left in Normandie to defend the countrie, raised a +power, and comming to Rouen, besieged it verie streitlie. Shortlie after +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +also king Henrie the sonne and Philip earle of Flanders came thither, +meaning to obteine the possession of Normandie first, and after to go +<span class="rightnote">Rouen besieged by the Frēch king. <i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +into England. The citizens of Rouen perceiuing in what danger they +stood, without out faint harts prepared all things necessarie for +defense, and did euerie thing in order, purposing not to giue ouer their +citie for any threats or menaces of their enimies. Now whilest they +within were busie in deuising how to repell the assault, and to defend +themselues, the aduersaries about midnight came forth of their campe, +and approching the walles with their ladders, raised them vp, and began +to scale the citie. But the citizens being aduised thereof, boldlie got +them to the loops and towers, ouerthrew the ladders of the enimies that +were comming vp, and with arrowes, stones and darts beat them backe, to +their great losse and ouerthrow. Howbeit though the enimies could not +preuaile thus +<a name="Page_160" id="Page_160" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[160]</span> +to get the citie by this assault, yet they continued the +siege, and suffered not them with it to be in quiet, but daie and night +assailed them by one meanes or other.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> King Henrie returneth into Normandie.</span> +King Henrie the father being aduertised héereof, after he had set his +businesse in order, touching the suertie and safe defense of the English +estate, he returned into Normandie and landed at Harfleet on a thursdaie +being the eight daie of August, bringing backe againe with him his +Brabanders, and a thousand Welshmen. In this meane while, king Lewes +continued still his siege before Rouen, constreining them within by all +meanes he could deuise to yeeld vp their citie. At length came the feast +of Saint Laurence, on which daie the French king commanded that no man +should attempt any enterprise against the citizens, granting them truce +for that day, in worship of that saint. This truce was so acceptable a +thing to them within, that they forgetting themselues, without all +respect to the danger wherein the citie stood, threw off their armour, +and gaue themselues to sléepe and rest. Some also fell to banketting and +other pastimes in verie dissolute maner.</p> + +<p>¶ But through this their remisse vsage and loose behauiour, and +forgetting that a temporarie truce is no safe warrant of securitie and +peace, they deriued danger and destruction to themselues; which it had +beene their parts prouidentlie to haue preuented, and not through their +carelesnesse to set open a gap of aduantage to their enimies, who +pursued them with professed hostilitie, notwithstanding they reposed +confidence in the truce that was granted. Héerein they are to be +resembled to the cooks of whome Plautus speaketh verie neatlie, saieng,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i6">—— coquos equidem nimis<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Demiror, qui tot vtuntur condimentis, eos eo<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Condimento non vtier quod præstat omnibus,<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">Meaning sobrietie: so these delighting more in their dishes, than +mistrusting their enimies, remembred to take the vse of any pleasure +that the conuenientnesse of this present time might proffer; onelie as +cookes among all their sawces doo mind nothing lesse than sobernesse: so +these in the abundance of their ioies, thought nothing of after claps, +which afterwards made them (like fooles) to sing an vnhappie had I wist. +For the Frenchmen, perceiuing this their negligence, required licence of +the French king to giue assault to the citie, declaring in what state +the matter presentlie stood; who not meaning to violate the reuerence of +that day, and his promised faith, with any such vnlawfull attempt, +commanded his men of warre that made the request in no wise to stirre. +<span class="rightnote">The Frenchmen assault the citie, without commandement of +their king.</span> +Howbeit the souldiers vpon couetousnesse of the spoile, raised the +ladders to that part of the wall which they iudged to be most without +warders, so that some of them mounting aloft, got vp, and were about to +help vp their fellowes.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Two préests.</span> +Now it happened (as God would haue it) that two préests being gone vp +into the steeple of the cheefe church, to looke about them for their +pleasures, fortuned to sée where the French men were about to enter the +citie, and streightwaies gaue knowledge to the citizens beneath. +Wherevpon the alarum rose, insomuch that with all spéed the people ran +<span class="rightnote">The Frenchmen are repelled.</span> +to the place, and with such violence came vpon their enimies which were +entred vpon the walles, that streightwaies they slue manie of them, and +chased the residue out of the ditches, so that they returned with +bleeding wounds to their campe, repenting them of their vnhappie +enterprise, that turned them to such wo and greeuance.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +The same day a little before night, king Henrie the father came vnto +Rouen, and was receiued into the citie with great ioy and gladnesse: for +he came thither by chance, euen about the time that the citie had thus +like to haue bin surprised & taken at vnwares.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matt. Paris.</i></span> +¶ There be that write, how the French king (immediatlie vpon the +arriuall of king Henrie) left his field and departed, greatlie to his +dishonor, burning vp his engines of warre, and not staieng till his men +might haue leisure to charge their wagons with their armor and other +stuffe, which they were glad to leaue behind for a prey to the English +men +<a name="Page_161" id="Page_161" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[161]</span> +issuing foorth vpon them. But other declare, that the French king +being nothing abashed of king Henries comming, continued the siege, in +hope to win the citie.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i> The Welshmens good seruice.</span> +The next day earlie in the morning (or as other say in the night season) +the king did send foorth a certeine number of Welshmen to passe ouer the +riuer of Saine, which they did, and by force made themselues waie +through the French campe, getting without losse or danger vnto a great +wood, and slue that day of their aduersaries aboue an hundred men. After +<span class="rightnote"><i>Nic. Triuet.</i></span> +this, lieng abroad in the countrie, they skirmished dailie with the +French horssemen, and oft times cut of such prouision of vittels as came +to nourish the campe. The king himselfe on the other side remaining +within the citie, caused his people to issue out at the gates, and to +kéepe the enimies occupied with skirmishes afore the citie. And +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +moreouer, where there was a great trench cast betwixt the French campe +and the walles of the citie, he caused the same to be filled vp with +fagots, stores, and earth. But although the French men sawe this the +kings deed well enough, yet none of them issued foorth of their tents to +hinder the English of their purpose.</p> + +<p>Now king Lewes being sore vexed with his enimies on ech side, and +perceiuing the citie would not be woone within any short time, began to +wax wearie, and to repent himselfe (as afore) for taking in hand so +chargeable and great a warre for another mans quarell. Wherevpon he +<span class="rightnote">The French king maketh an ouerture for peace.</span> +caused William bishop of Sens, and Theobald earle of Blois to go to king +Henrie, and to promise vpon forbearance from warre for a time, to find +means to reconcile him and his sonnes, betweene whom vnnaturall variance +rested. Whereof K. Henrie being most desirous, and taking a truce, +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i> A truce.</span> +appointed to come to Gisors [in the feast of the natiuitie of our ladie] +there to meet king Lewes, that they might talke of the matter and bring +it to some good end.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The French king leaueth his siege.</span> +The French king, so soone as he knew that truce was taken, raised his +siege, and returning home, within a few daies after (according to the +appointment) came to Gisors, and there communed with king Henrie: but +bicause he could not make any agréement betwixt him and his sonnes at +that time, he appointed another time to meet about it. King Henrie the +father (whilest the truce continued with the French king) and his sonne +Henrie went to Poictou, where his sonne Richard (whilest his father had +beene occupied in other places) had gotten the most part of the countrie +into his possession. But now hearing of his comming, and that a truce +was taken with the French king and with his brother, he considered with +himselfe, that without their assistance he was not able to withstand his +<span class="rightnote">Richard the kings sonne prepareth to resist his father.</span> +fathers power. Howbeit at length choosing rather to trie the matter with +force of armes, than cowardlie to yéeld, he prepared for defense, +furnishing diuerse townes and castels with garisons of men: and +assembling togither all the other power that he was able to make, came +into the field, & pitched his tents not far off from his father. In the +meane while, which way soeuer his father passed, the townes and castels +<span class="rightnote">He beginneth to dispaire of good successe.</span> +submitted themselues vnto him, so that Richard began to despaire of the +matter, insomuch that he durst not approch néere his father, but kept +aloofe, doubting to be entrapped.</p> + +<p>At length when he had considered his owne state, and weied how +vnthankefullie the French king and his brother had dealt with him, in +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +hauing no consideration of him at such time as they tooke truce, he +determined to alter his purpose, and hauing some good hope in his +fathers clemencie, thought best to trie it, which he found to be the +best waie that he could haue taken. For oftentimes it chanceth, that +latter thoughts are better aduised than the first, as the old saieng is,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0"> +Δευτεραι +φροντδες +σοφοτεραι.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>Herevpon Richard laieng armour aside, came of his owne accord vnto his +<span class="rightnote">The son submitteth himselfe to the father.</span> +father on the 21. of September, and asked pardon. His father most +courteously receiuing him, made so much of him as though he had not +offended at all. Which example of courtesie preuailed much to the +alluring of his other sons to come to a reconciliation. For the bringing +whereof to speedie effect, he sent this Richard vnto king Lewes, and to +his other sonne Henrie, to commen with them of peace, at which time +earle Richard did so +<a name="Page_162" id="Page_162" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[162]</span> +effectuallie his message, that he brought them +both in good forwardnesse to agree to his fathers purpose, so that there +was a daie appointed for them to meet with their father, betwixt Towres +in Touraine and Ambois.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i> The father & sonnes are accorded.</span> +King Henrie reioising hereat, kept his daie (being the morrow after the +feast of S. Michaell) and there met him both king Lewes, and his two +sonnes Henrie and Geffrey, where finallie the father and the sonnes were +accorded; he promising to receiue them into fauour vpon these +conditions.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The conditions of the agréement.</span> +1 First the prisoners to be released fréelie without ransome on both +sides, and their offenses, which had taken either the one part or the +other, to be likewise pardoned.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +2 Out of this article were excepted all those which before the +concluding of this peace had alreadie compounded for their raunsomes, as +the king of Scots, the earles of Leicester and Chester, and Rafe +Fulgiers, with their pledges.</p> + +<p>3 It was also agréed that all those castels which had beene builded in +time of this warre, should be raced and throwne downe, and all such +cities, townes, castels, countries and places, as had beene woone by +either part during these wars, should be restored vnto those persons +that held the same, and were in possession of them 15. daies before the +departure of the sonnes from king Henrie the father.</p> + +<p>4 That king Henrie the father should assigne to his sons more large +reuenues for maintenance of their estates, with a caution included, that +they should not spend the same riotouslie in any prodigall sort or +maner.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +5 To the king his sonne, he gaue two castels in Normandie, with an +increase of yearelie reuenues, to the summe of 15. thousand pounds +Aniouin.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Richard.</span> +6 To his sonne Richard he gaue two houses in Poictou, with the one halfe +of all the reuenues of the countie of Poictou to be receiued and taken +in readie monie.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Geffrey.</span> +7 And to his sonne Geffrey he granted in monie, the moietie of that +which he should haue by the mariage of earle Conans daughter, and after +he had maried hir by licence purchased of the pope, he should enioy all +the whole liuings and reuenues that descended to hir, as in hir fathers +writing thereof more at large was conteined.</p> + +<p>8 On the other part, king Henrie the son couenanted to & with the king +his father, that he would performe and confirme all those gifts, which +his father should grant out of his lands, & also all those gifts of +lands which he either had made and assured, or hereafter should make and +assure vnto any of his men for any of their seruices: & likewise those +<span class="rightnote">John.</span> +gifts which he had made vnto his sonne John the brother of king Henrie +the sonne; namelie, a thousand pounds in lands by yeare in England of +his demaine and excheats with the appurtenances, and the castell and +countie of Notingham, with the castell of Marlebrough, and the +appurtenances. Also a thousand pounds Aniouin of yearelie reuenues in +Normandie, and two castells there. And in Aniou a thousand pounds +Aniouin, of such lands as belonged to the earle of Aniou, with one +castell in Aniou, and one in Touraine, and another in Maine.</p> +</div> + +<p>Thus were the father and sons agréed and made freends, the sonnes +couenanting neuer to withdraw their seruices and bounden dueties from +their father, but to obeie him in all things from that day forward. +Herewith also the peace was renewed betwixt king Henrie and king Lewes, +<span class="rightnote">A marriage concluded.</span> +and for the further confirmation, a new aliance was accorded betwixt +them, which was, that the ladie Adela the daughter of king Lewes should +be giuen in mariage vnto earle Richard the sonne of king Henrie, who +bicause she was not yet of age able to marie, she was conueied into +England to be vnder the guiding of king Henrie, till she came to lawfull +yeares.</p> + +<p>Thus the peace being concluded, king Henrie forgetting all iniuries +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +passed, brought home his sons in maner aforesaid, who being well pleased +with the agreement, attended their father into Normandie, where Richard +and Geffrey did homage to him, receiuing their othes of allegiance +according to the maner in that case required. But king Henrie +<a name="Page_163" id="Page_163" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[163]</span> +the sonne +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i> <i>Wil. Paruus.</i> saieth that he did homage also.</span> +did no homage, for his father (in respect that he was a king) would not +suffer him, and therefore tooke onelie sureties of him for performance +of the couenants on his part, as was thought expedient.</p> + +<p>¶ All this dissention and strife was kindled (no doubt) by the meanes of +certeine sowers of discord, sycophants, parasits, flatterers, clawbacks, +& pickethanks, who had learned their lesson, that</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Principibus placuisse viris non vltima laus est,<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">and thinking by their embossed spéech to tickle the eares and harts of +the yoong princes, who by reason of their yoong yeares and nakednesse of +experience in the course of worldlie maters, sought their owne +aduancement, euen by flinging firie faggots of dissention betweene them, +whose harts naturall affection had vnited. For by the tenor of the +storie (marke it who will) we shall sée that no attempt of the sons +against the father but had originall from the suggestions of euill +disposed persons, who (like eeles that fatten not in faire running +water, but in muddie motes and ponds) sought honour in hurlie burlies, & +reached out long armes to riches by manie a ones impouerishment. This to +be true, the finall euent and issue prooueth; namelie, the mutuall +attonement and reconciliation wouen betweene the father and the sonnes; +their remorse for their vndutifulnes, his louing fauour and +gratiousnesse; their promptnesse to yéeld to conditions of agreement, +his forwardnes to giue consent to couenants required; their readinesse +to do the old king homage, his acceptable admission of their preferred +seruice; with other circumstances to be collected out of the storie, all +which doo prooue that this their disloiall resistance sprang rather by +others incitement, than of their owne seeking. Thus we sée what +alterations happen in the actions of men, and that euill things manie +times (though naturallie bad) doo inferre their contraries, as one +aptlie saith,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Discordia fit charior concordia.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Willi. king of Scots deliuered out of prison with other.</span> +At length king Henrie went to Faleise, and there deliuered out of +captiuitie William king of Scotland, Robert earle of Leicester, Hugh +earle of Chester, with diuerse other Noble men which were kept there as +prisoners, putting them to their ransomes, and receiuing of them pledges +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> Prisoners released.</span> +with an oth of allegiance. This king Henrie the father released for his +part the number of nine hundred 69. knights or men of armes (if yée list +so to terme them) which had beene taken since the beginning of these +passed warres.</p> + +<p>As for king Henrie the sonne he also set at libertie aboue an hundred, +and that without ransome paieng, according to the articles of the peace +(as before you haue heard.) But yet some (as is alreadie specified) were +excepted out of the benefit of that article, as William king of +Scotland, who being not able to paie his ransome in present monie, +deliuered vp in gage foure of the strongest castels within his realme +<span class="rightnote">Castels deliuered by the K. of Scots.</span> +into king Henries hands; namelie, Barwike, Edenbourgh, Roxbourgh, and +Sterling, with condition, that if he brake the peace, and paied not the +monie behind due for his raunsome, king Henrie and his successours +should enioy for euer the same castels. He also couenanted, not to +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i> <i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +receiue any English rebels into his realme. Other write that the king of +Scots did not onelie become the king of Englands liegeman at this time, +and couenanted to doo homage vnto him for the realme of Scotland, and +all other his lands, but also deliuered the castels of Barwike, and +Roxbourgh to be possessed of the same king of England and his heires for +euer, without any couenant mentioned of morgage.</p> + +<p>Things being setled thus in good order, king Henrie leauing his sonne +Henrie at Rouen, went to Argenton, and there held his Christmasse, and +afterwards, namelie in the feast of the purification of our ladie, both +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +the kings (as well the father as the sonne) were at Mauns, and vpon +<span class="yearnote">1175.</span> +their returne from thence into Normandie, came to a communication with +<span class="rightnote">The kings of England and France méet at Gisors.</span> +the French king at Gisors, and then being come backe into Normandie at +Bure, the sonne (to put the father out of all doubt and mistrust of any +euill meaning in him) sware fealtie to him against all persons, and so +became his liegeman in the presence +<a name="Page_164" id="Page_164" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[164]</span> +of Rothrod archbishop of Rouen, +Henrie bishop of Baieux, William earle of Mandeuille Richard de Humez +his conestable, and manie other.</p> + +<p>After this they kept their easter at Chirebourgh, from whence they came +<span class="rightnote">Philip earle of Flanders.</span> +to Caen, where they met with Philip earle of Flanders, who had latelie +before taken on him the crosse, to go to the holie land: where king +Henrie the father required him to release all such couenants as king +Henrie the sonne had made vnto him in time of his last warres, which he +fréelie did, and deliuered vp the writing that he had of the same king +concerning those couenants, and so they confirmed vnto him the yearelie +rent which he was woont to receiue out of England, before the said +warres.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +Finallie, when king Henrie had visited the most part of the countrie, he +came to Harflew, and caused his nauie to be decked and rigged, that he +might saile ouer into England. Whilest he tarried heere till his ships +were readie, he sent letters to his sonne king Henrie, willing him to +repaire vnto him, and meaning that he should accompanie him into +<span class="rightnote">Enuious persons readie to forge matters of suspicion.</span> +England. Who at the first was loth to obeie his fathers will and +pleasure herein, bicause some enuious persons about him had put in his +head a doubt, least his father had not altogither forgot his former +grudge, and that he ment at his comming into England to commit him to +prison. Which was a surmize altogither void of likeliehood, considering +that the father, in the whole processe of his actions betweene himselfe +and his sonnes, was so farre from the desire of inflicting any corporall +punishment, or leuieng anie fine vpon them for their misdemenour, that +he alwaies sought meanes of reconcilement and pacification. And though +this Henrie the sonne for his part deserued to be roughlie dealt +withall; yet the father handled him so gentlie with courteous letters & +messages, that shortlie after he came of his owne accord vnto Harflew, +<span class="rightnote">The two kings the father and the sonne returne into England.</span> +from whence shortlie after they sailed both togither ouer into England, +landing at Portsmouth on a fridaie being the ninth of Maie, from thence +they tooke their iournie streight to London, all the waies being full of +people that came to see them, and to shew themselues glad and ioifull of +their concord and happie arriuall. At their comming to the citie they +were receiued with great reioising of the people, beseeching God long to +preserue them both in health and honour.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">William de Breause.</span> +The same yeare William de Breause hauing got a great number of Welshmen +into the castell of Abergauennie, vnder a colourable pretext of +communication, proponed this ordinance to be receiued of them with a +corporall oth; That no traueller by the waie amongst them should beare +<span class="rightnote">The Welshmē not well dealt withall.</span> +any bow, or other vnlawfull weapon. Which oth when they refused to take, +bicause they would not stand to that ordinance he condemned them all to +death. This deceit he vsed towards them in reuenge of the death of his +vncle Henrie of Hereford, whom vpon easter euen before, they had through +treason murthered, and were now acquited with the like againe.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i> Reignold erle of Cornewall departed this life.</span> +The same yeare died Reignold earle of Cornwall, bastard sonne to king +Henrie the first without heirs male, by reason whereof the king tooke +into his hands all the inheritance of lands and liuings which he held +within England, Normandie and Wales, except certeine portions which the +daughters of the same earle had by assignement allotted to them. Also +Richard erle of Glocester deceassed this yeare, and his sonne Philip +succeeded him.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. West.</i> A synod held at London.</span> +The same yeare was a synod of the cleargie kept at Westminster, wherein +many things were decréed for the conseruation of religion. Amongst other +things it was prouided, that those abbeies and churches which were void +of gouernours, and could haue none placed in them by the time of the +late ciuill warres, should now be committed vnto men worthie to enioy +the same, for the reformation of disorders growne and plentifullie +sproong vp in time of the vacations.</p> + +<p>The realme now brought into good order and deliuered from the troubles +of warre, as well at home as abroad, the king being at good leisure +<span class="rightnote"><i>W. Paruus.</i> The king of Scots dooth homage to the king of +England.</span> +determined to ride about a great part of the realme, and comming to +Yorke, sent for the king of Scots to come and doo his homage. Now the +king of Scots (according to couenants before concluded) came vnto Yorke +in the moneth of August, where dooing his homage about the twentith +<a name="Page_165" id="Page_165" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[165]</span> +day +of the same moneth in S. Peters church, the king granted further by his +letters patents, that he and his successours kings of Scotland, should +doo homage and fealtie to the kings of England, so often as they should +be necessarilie required therevnto. In signe and token of which +subiection, the king of Scots offered his hat and his saddle vpon the +altar of S. Peter in Yorke, which for a remembrance hereof was kept +there many yeares after that day.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<h3>The charter conteining the articles of the peace and agreement concluded +betwixt the two kings, which was read in S. Peters church at the same +time, exemplified as followeth.</h3> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +Wilhelmus rex Scotiæ deuenit homo ligius domini regis Angliæ contra +omnes homines, de Scotia & de alijs terris suis, et fidelitatem ei fecit +vt ligio domino suo sicut alij homines sui ipsi facere solent. Similiter +fecit homagium Henrico filio regis salua fide domini regis patris sui.</p> + +<p>2 Omnes vero episc. abbates & clerus terræ Scotiæ & successores sui +facient domino regi sicut ligio domino fidelitatem, de quibus habere +voluerit, sicut alij episcopi sui ipsi facere solent, & Henrico filio +suo & Dauid & hæredibus eorum.</p> + +<p>3 Concessit autem rex Scotiæ, & frater eius, & barones, & alij homines +sui domino regi, quòd ecclesia Scotiæ talem subiectionem amodò faciet +ecclesiæ Angliæ, qualem facere debet, & solebat tempore regum Angliæ +prædecessorum suorum.</p> + +<p>4 Similiter Richardus episcopus Sancti Andreæ, & Richardus episcopus +Dunkelden. & Gaufridus abbas de Dunfermlin. & Herbertus prior de +Coldingham concesserunt, vt ecclesia Anglicana illud habeat ius in +ecclesia Scotiæ, quod de iure debet habere: & quod ipsi non erunt contra +ius Anglicanæ ecclesiæ. Et de hac concessione sicut quando ligiam +fidelitatem domino regi & domino Henrico filio suo fecerint, ita eos +inde assecurauerint.</p> + +<p>5 Hoc idem facient alij episcopi & clerus Scotiæ, per conuentionem inter +dominum regem Scotiæ & Dauid fratrem suum & barones suos factam, comites +& barones & alij homines de terra regis Scotiæ (de quibus dominus rex +habere voluerit) facient ei homagium contra omnem hominem, & fidelitatem +vt ligio domino suo sicut alij homines sui facere ei solent, & Henrico +filio suo & hæredibus suis salua fide domini regis patris sui. Similiter +hæredes regis Scotiæ & baronum & hominum suorum homagium & ligiantiam +facient hæredibus domini regis contra omnem hominem.</p> + +<p>6 Præterea rex Scotiæ et homines sui nullū amodò fugitiuum de terra +domini regis pro felonia receptabunt, vel in alia terra sua nisi +voluerit venire ad rectum in curia domini regis & stare iudicio curiæ. +Sed rex Scotiæ & homines sui quàm citius poterunt eum capient, & domino +regi reddent, vel iusticiarijs suis aut balliuis suis in Anglia.</p> + +<p>7 Si autem de terra regis Scotiæ aliquis fugitiuus fuerit pro felonia in +Anglia, nisi voluerit venire ad rectu in curia domini regis Scotiæ & +stare iudicio curiæ, non receptabitur in terra regis, sed liberabitur +hominibus regis Scotiæ, per balliuos domini regis vbi inuentus fuerit.</p> + +<p>8 Præterea homines domini regis habebunt terras suas quas habebant, & +habere debent de domino rege, & hominibus suis, & de rege Scotiæ & de +hominibus suis. Et homines regis Scotiæ habebunt terras suas, quas +habebant, & habere debent de domino rege & hominibus suis. Pro ista vero +conuentione & fine firmiter obseruando domino regi & Henrico filio suo & +hæredibus suis à rege Scotiæ & hæredibus +suis, liberauit rex Scotiæ +<a name="Page_166" id="Page_166" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[166]</span> +domino regi castellum de Roxburgh, & castellum Puellarum, & castellum +de Striueling, in manu domini regis, & ad custodienda castella +assignabit rex Scotiæ de redditu suo mesurabiliter ad voluntatem domini +regis.</p> + +<p>9 Præterea pro prædicta conuentione & fine exequendo, liberauit rex +Scotiæ domino regi Dauid fratrem suum in obsidem & comitem Duncanum, & +comitem Waldenum, similiter alios comites et barones cum alijs viris +potentibus quorum numerus 18. Et quando castella reddita fuerint illis, +rex Scotiæ & Dauid frater suus liberabuntor. Comites quidem & barones +prænominati vnusquisq; postquam liberauerit obsidem suum, scilicet +filium legitimum, qui habuerit, & alij nepotes suos vel propinquiores +sibi hæredes, & castellis vt dictum est redditis liberabuntur.</p> + +<p>10 Præterea rex Scotiæ & barones sui prænominati assecurauerunt, quod +ipsa bona fide, & sine malo ingenio, & sine occasione facient vt +episcopi & barones & cæteri homines terræ suæ, qui non affuerunt quando +rex Scotiæ cum domino rege finiuit: eandem ligiantiam & fidelitatem +domino regi & Henrico filio suo quam ipsi fecerunt, & vt barones, & +homines qui affuerunt obsides, Liberabunt domino regi de quibus habere +voluerit.</p> + +<p>11 Præterea episc. comites & barones conuentionauerunt domino regi & +Henrico filio suo, quòd si rex Scotiæ aliquo casu à fidelitate domini +regis & filij, & à conuentione prædicta recederet, ipsi cum domino rege +tenebunt sicut cum ligio domino suo contra regem Scotiæ, & contra omnes +homines ei inimicantes. Et episcopi sub interdicto ponent terram regis +Scotiæ donec ipse ad fidelitatem domini regis redeat.</p> + +<p>12 Prædictam itaq; conuentionem firmiter obseruandam bona fide, & sine +malo ingenio domino regi & Henrico filio suo & hæredibus suos à Wilhelmo +rege Scotiæ & Dauid fratre suo & baronibus suis prædictis, & hæredibus +eorum assecurauit ipse rex Scotiæ, & Dauid frater eius, & omnes barones +sui prænominati sicut ligij homines domino regis contra omnem hominem, & +Henrici filij sui (salua fidelitate patris sui) hijs testibus, Richardo +episcopo Abrincensi, et Iohanne Salisburiæ decano, & Roberto abbate +Malmesburiæ, & Radulpho abbate Mundesburg, hec non alijs abbatibus, +comitibus & baronibus, & duobus filijs suis scilicet Richardo & +Galfrido.</p> + +</div> + +<p>These things being recited in the church of S. Peters in Yorke, in the +presence of the said kings, & of Dauid the king of Scots brother, and +before an innumerable number of other people, the bishops, earles, +barons and knights of Scotland sware fealtie to the king of England and +to Henrie his sonne, and to their heires against all men, as to their +liege and souereigne lords.</p> + +<p>King Henrie hauing ended his businesse at Yorke with the king of Scots +and others, which likewise did homage to him there, returned to London, +<span class="rightnote">A parlement at Windsor.</span> +in the octaues of S. Michaell, and he called a parlement at Windsor, +whereat were present king Henrie the sonne, Richard archbishop of +Canturburie, and other bishops of England, Laurence archbishop of Dublin +<span class="rightnote">Ambassadors from K. Connagh.</span> +with a great number of earles and barons of this realme. About the same +time the archbishop of Tuamon, and the abbat of S. Brandon, with +Laurence the chancellor of Roderike king of Connagh in Ireland were come +as ambassadours from the said Roderike, vnto king Henrie, who willinglie +heard them, as he that was more desirous to grow to some accord with +those sauage people by some freendlie order, than to war with them that +had nothing to lose: so that he might in pursuing of them seeme to fish +with an hooke of gold. Therefore in this parlement the matter was +debated, and in the end a peace concluded at the request of the said +<span class="rightnote">A tribute of ox hides</span> +ambassadours, the king appointing Roderike to paie vnto him in token of +subiection, a tribute of ox hides.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> + +<h3> +<a name="Page_167" id="Page_167" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[167]</span> +The charter of the agreement was written and subscribed in forme as +followeth.</h3> + + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The tenor of the charter of the agreement.</span> +Haec est finis & concordia quæ facta fuit apud Windshore in octauis +sancti Michaelis an. Gratiæ 1175. inter dominum regem Angliæ Henr. +secundum, & Rodericum regem Conaciæ, per catholicum Tuamensem archiep. & +abbatem C. sancti Brandani, & magistrum L. cancellarium regis Conaciæ.</p> + +<p>1 Scilicet quòd rex Angliæ concedit prædicto Roderico ligio homini suo +regnum Conaciæ, quamdiu ei fideliter seruiet, vt sit rex sub eo, paratus +ad seruicium suum sicut homo suus, & vt teneat terram suam ita bene & in +pace sicut tenuit antequam dominus rex Angliæ intraret Hiberniam, +reddendo ei tributum & totam aliam terram, & habitatores terræ habeat +sub se, & iusticiet vt tributum regi Angliæ integrè persoluant, & per +manum eius sua iura sibi conseruent. Et illi qui modò tenent, teneant in +pace quamdiu manserint in fidelitate regis Angliæ, & fideliter & integrè +persoluerint tributum & alia iura sua quæ ei debent per manum regis +Conaciæ, saluo in omnibus iure & honore domini regis Angliæ & suo.</p> + +<p>2 Et si qui ex eis regi Angliæ & ei rebelles fuerint, & tributum & alia +iura regis Angliæ per manum eius soluere noluerint, & à fidelitate regis +Angliæ recesserint, ipse eos iusticiet & amoueat. Et si eos per se +iusticiare non poterit, constabularius regis Angliæ, & familia sua de +terra ilia iuuabunt eum ad hoc faciendum, cùm ab ipso fuerint requisiti, +& ipsi viderint quòd necesse fuerit. Et propter hunc finem reddet +prædictus rex Conaciæ domino regi Angliæ tributum singulis annis, +scilicet de singulis decem animalibus vnum corium placabile +mercatoribus, tam de tota terra sua, quàm de aliena.</p> + +<p>3 Excepto quòd de terris illis quas dominus rex Angliæ retinuit in +dominio suo, & in dominio baronum suorum, nihil se intromittet, scilicet +Duuelina cum pertinentijs suis, & Midia cum omnibus pertinentijs suis +sicut vnquam Marchat Wamailethlachlin earn meliùs & pleniùs tenuit, aut +aliqui qui eam de eo tenuerint. Et excepta Wesefordia, cum omnibus +pertinentijs suis, scilicet cum tota lagenia. Et excepta Waterfordia cum +tota terra illa, quæ est à Waterford vsq; ad Duncarnam, ita vt Duncarnam +sit cum omnibus pertinentijs suis infra terram illam.</p> + +<p>4 Et si Hibernenses qui aufugerint, redire voluerint ad terram baronum +regis Angliæ, redeant in pace, reddendo tributum prædictum quod alij +reddunt, vel faciendo antiqua seruicia quæ facere solebant pro terris +suis. Et hoc sit in arbitrio dominorum suorum. Et si aliqui eorum redire +noluerint, domini eorum & rex Conaciæ accipiat obsides ab omnibus quos +ei commisit dominus rex Angliæ ad voluntatem domini regis & suam. Et +ipse dabit obsides ad voluntatem domini regis Angliæ illos vel alios, & +ipsi seruient domino de canibus & auibus suis singulis annis de +præsentis suis. Et nullum omninò de quacunque terra regis sit, +retinebunt contra voluntatem domini regis & mandatum. Hijs testibus, +Richardo episcopo Wintoniæ, Gaufrido episcopo Eliensi, Laurentio +Duuelinensi archiepiscopo, Gaufrido, Nicholao & Rogero capellanis regis, +Guilhelmo comite de Essex, alijs multis.</p> + +</div> + +<p>Moreouer, at this parlement the king gaue an Irishman named Augustine, +the bishoprike of Waterford, which see was then void, and sent him into +Ireland with Laurence the archbishop of Dubline to be consecrated of +Donat the archbishop of Cassels. The same yeare, both England and the +countries adioining were sore vexed with a great mortalitie of people, +<span class="rightnote">A great derth.</span> +and immediatlie after followed a sore dearth and famine.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_168" id="Page_168" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[168]</span> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 22. <br /> +1176.</span> +King Henrie held his Christmas at Windsor, and about the feast of the +conuersion of saint Paule he came to Northampton, & after the mortalitie +<span class="rightnote">A parlement at Northampton. <i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +was well ceassed, he called a Parlement, whereat was present a deacon +cardinall intituled of S. Angelo, being sent into England as a legat +from the pope, to take order in the controuersies betwixt the two +archbishops of Canturburie<a name="FNanchor_5_10" id="FNanchor_5_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> and Yorke. This cardinall whose name was Hugh +Petro Lion, assembled in the same place a conuocation or synod of the +bishops and cleargie, as well of England as Scotland: in which +conuocation, after the ceassing of certeine strifes and decrées made as +well concerning the state of common-wealth, as for the honest behauiour +of mans life, the cardinall consented that (according as by the kings +lawes it was alreadie ordeined) all maner of persons within the sacred +<span class="rightnote">An act against préests that were hunters.</span> +orders of the cleargie, which should hunt within the kings grounds and +kill any of his deare, should be conuented and punished before a +temporall iudge. Which libertie granted to the king, did so infringe the +immunitie which the cleargie pretended to haue within this realme, that +afterwards in manie points, préests were called before temporall iudges, +and punished for their offenses as well as the laitie, though they haue +grudged indéed and mainteined that they had wrong therein, as they that +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +would be exempted and iudged by none, except by those of their owne +order.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Obedience of the Church of Scotland to the Church of +England.</span> +Moreouer, in this councell the matter came in question touching the +obedience which the church of the bishops of Scotland did owe by right +vnto the archbishop of Yorke, whom from the beginning the popes of Rome +had constituted and ordeined to be primat of all Scotland, and of the +Iles belonging to that realme, as well of the Orkeneis as all the other. +Which constitution was obserued by the bishops of those parts manie +yeares togither, though after they renounced their obedience. Whervpon +the archbishops of Yorke (for the time being) continuallie complained, +so that these popes, Paschall the second, Calyxt the second, Honorius, +Innocentius, Eugenius the third, and Adrian the fourth, had the hearing +of the matter, and with often sending their letters, went about to +reduce them to the prouince of Yorke. But the Scots still withstanding +this ordinance, at length the matter thus in controuersie was referred +to pope Alexander, who sent the foresaid cardinall Hugh as well to make +an end of that contention, as of diuerse other: but yet he left it +vndecided.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> The king of the Scots commeth to the +parlement.</span> +William king of Scotland came personallie vnto this parlement at +Northampton, by commandement of king Henrie, and brought with him +Richard bishop of S. Andrew, and Josseline bishop of Glascow, with other +bishops and abbats of Scotland, the which being commanded by king Henrie +to shew such subiection to the church of England as they were bound to +doo by the faith which they owght to him, and by the oth of fealtie +which they had made to him, they made this answer, that they had neuer +shewed any subiection to the church of England, nor ought. Against which +deniall, the archbishop of Yorke replied, and brought foorth sufficient +priuileges granted by the forenamed popes, to prooue the subiection of +the Scotish bishops, and naimelie Glascow and Whiterne vnto the see of +Yorke. But bicause the archbishop of Canturburie meant to bring the +Scotish bishops vnder subiection to his see, he wrought so for that time +with the king, that he suffered them to depart home, without yéelding +any subiection to the church of England. The letters which the foresaid +popes did send touching this matter, were remaining safe and sound +amongst other writings in the colledge at Yorke, when Polydor Virgil +wrote the histories of England, the copies whereof in an old ancient +booke he confesseth to haue séene and read.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> Diuision of the circuits for iustices +itinerants.</span> +But to speake further of things ordered and doone at this parlement +holden at Northampton, the king by common consent of his Nobles and +other states, diuided his realme into six parts, appointing thrée +iustices itinerants in euerie of them, as here followeth, Hugh de +Cressie, Walter Fitz Robert, and Robert Mantell, were deputed vnto +Northfolke, Suffolke, Cambridgeshire, Huntingtonshire, Bedfordshire, +Buckinghamshire, Essex and Hertfordshire: Hugh de Gundeuille, William +Fitz Rafe, and William Basset +<a name="Page_169" id="Page_169" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[169]</span> +were appointed to Lincolnshire, +Notinghamshire, Derbishire, Staffordshire, Warwikeshire, +Northamptonshire, and Leicestershire: Robert Fitz Bernard, Richard +Gifford, Roger Fitz Remfrey, were assigned to Kent, Surrey, Hampshire, +Sussex, Berkshire and Oxfordshire: William Fitz Stephan, Berthram de +Verdon, Thurstan Fitz Simon were ordeined to Herefordshire, +Glocestershire, Worcestershire, and Salopshire: Rafe Fitz Stephan, +William Ruffe, and Gilbert Pipard were put in charge with Wilshire, +Dorsetshire, Summersetshire, Deuonshire & Cornwall: Robert de Wals, +Ranulf de Glanuile, and Robert Pikenet were appointed to Yorkeshire, +Richmondshire, Lancashire, Copeland, Westmerland, Northumberland, and +Cumberland.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The oth of the iustices.</span> +The king caused these iustices to sweare vpon the holie euangelists, +that they should kéepe his assises which he first had ordeined at +Clarendon, and after had renewed here at Northampton, & also caused all +his subiects within the relme of England to kéepe and obserue the same.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +Moreouer at this councell, king Henrie restored vnto Robert earle of +Leicester all his lands, both on this side the sea, and beyond, in maner +as he held the same fiftéene daies before the warre. To William de +Albenie earle of Arundell, he gaue the earledome of Sussex. About +midlent, the king with his sonne and the legat came to London, where at +Westminster a conuocation of the cleargie was called, but when the legat +was set, and the archbishop of Canturburie on his right hand as primat +<span class="rightnote">The presumptuous demeanor of y<sup>e</sup> archbishop of Yorke.</span> +of the realme, the archbishop of Yorke comming in, and disdaining to sit +on the left, where he might séeme to giue preheminence vnto the +archbishop of Canturburie (vnmanerlie inough indeed) swasht him downe, +meaning to thrust himselfe in betwixt the legat, and the archbishop of +Canturburie. And where belike the said archbishop of Canturburie was +loth to remooue, he set his buttocks iust in his lap, but he scarslie +touched the archbishops skirt with his bum, when the bishops and other +chapleins with their seruants stept to him, pulled him away, and threw +him to the ground, and beginning to lay on him with bats and fists, the +archbishop of Canturburie yeelding good for euill, sought to saue him +from their hands. Thus was verified in him that sage sentence,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Pub. Mim.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Nunquam periculum sine periculo vincitur.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">The archbishop of Yorke with his rent rochet got vp, and awaie he went +to the king with a great complaint against the archbishop of +Canturburie: but when vpon examination of the matter the truth was +knowne, he was well laught at for his labour, and "that was all the +remedie he got. As he departed so bebuffeted foorth of the conuocation +house towards the king, they cried out vpon him; Go traitor that diddest +betray that holy man Thomas, go get thee hence, thy hands yet stinke of +bloud." The assemblie was by this meanes dispersed, and the legat fled +and got him out of the waie, as he might with shame enough, which is the +common panion and waiting-woman of pride, as one verie well said,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Pub. Mim.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Citò ignominia fit superbi gloria.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Appeales made.</span> +After this, followed appealings, the archbishop of Yorke appealed to +Rome, and the legat also for his owne safegard appealed the archbishop +of Canturburie vnto Rome, which archbishop submitting himselfe and his +cause vnder the popes protection, made a like solemne appeale from the +legat to the pope. The legat perceiuing that the matter went otherwise +than he wished, and séeing little remedie to be had at that present, +gaue ouer his legatship as it had béene of his owne accord, though +greatlie against his will, and prepared himselfe to depart. +Neuerthelesse, through mediation of fréends that tooke paines betwixt +them, they gaue ouer their appeales on either side, and dissembled the +<span class="rightnote">The conuocation dissolued.</span> +displeasures which they had conceiued either against other, but yet the +conuocation was dissolued for that time, and the two archbishops +presented their complaints to the king, who kept his Easter this yeare +at Winchester, and about the same time or shortlie after, licenced his +sonne Henrie to saile ouer into Normandie, meaning shortlie after to go +<a name="Page_170" id="Page_170" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[170]</span> +vnto Compostella in Spaine, to visit the bodie of saint James the +apostle, but beeing otherwise aduised by his fathers letters, he +discontinued his purpose and staied at home.</p> + +<p>The same yeare, the ladie Johan the kings daughter was giuen in marriage +vnto William king of Sicill. Also the same yeare died the lord cheefe +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i></span> +iustice of Ireland, Robert earle of Striguill otherwise Chepstow, then +was William Fitzaldelme ordeined lord cheefe iustice in his place, who +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i> <i>N. Triuet.</i></span> +seized into the kings hands all those fortresses which the said earle of +Striguill held within the realme of Ireland. The Irishmen also paied to +<span class="rightnote">A tribut grāted by the Irish.</span> +the king a tribute of twelue pence yearelie for euerie house, or else +for euery yoke of oxen which they had of their owne. William earle of +Arundell died also this yeare at Wauerley, and was buried at Wimondham.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +This yeare, when it might haue beene thought that all things were +forgotten touching the rebellious attempts made against king Henrie the +father by his sons, and other (as before ye haue heard) he caused the +<span class="rightnote">The wals of the towne and castell of Leicester raced.</span> +wals both of the towne and castell of Leicester to be raced and all such +castels and places of strength as had béene kept against him during the +time of that rebellion, to be likewise ouerthrowne and made plaine with +the ground, as the castels of Huntington, Waleton, Growby, Hey, +Stutesbirrie or Sterdesbirrie, Malasert, the new castell of Allerton, +the castels of Fremingham and Bungey, with diuers other both in England +and Normandie. But the castels of Pascie, and Mountsorell he reteined in +his owne hands as his of right, being so found by a iurie of fréeholders +impanelled there in the countrie; further he seized into his hands all +the other castels of bishops, earles and barons, both in England and +Normandie, appointing keepers in them at his pleasure. This yeare also +<span class="rightnote">Elinor the kings daughter married to the king of Castile.</span> +he married his daughter Elianor vnto Alfonse king of Castile.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Gilbert Fitz Fergus.</span> +Moreouer, Gilbert the sonne of Fergus lord of Galloway, who had slaine +his brother Uthred coosen to king Henrie, came this yeare into England, +vnder conduct of William king of Scotland, and became king Henrie the +fathers man, swearing fealtie to him against all men: and to haue his +loue and fauour gaue him a thousand marks of siluer, and deliuered into +his hands his son Duncane as a pledge. It is to be remembred also, that +<span class="rightnote">Richard earle of Poictow.</span> +in this yeare Richard earle of Poictow sonne to king Henrie, fought with +certeine Brabanders his enimies betwixt S. Megrine and Buteuille, where +he ouercame them.</p> + +<p>¶ Here I haue thought good to aduertise the reader, that these men of +war, whom we haue generallie in this part of our booke named Brabanders, +we find them written in old copies diuerslie, as Brebazones, Brebanceni, +and Brebationes, the which for so much as I haue found them by the +learned translated Brabanders, and that the French word somewhat +yeeldeth thereto, I haue likewise so named them: wherein whether I haue +erred or not, I must submit mine opinion to the learned & skilfull +searchers of such points of antiquities. For to confesse in plaine truth +mine ignorance, or rather vnresolued doubt herein, I can not satisfie my +selfe with any thing that I haue read, whereby to assure my coniecture +what to make of them, although verelie it may be, and the likelihood is +great, that the Brabanders in those daies for their trained skill and +vsuall practise in warlike feats, wan themselues a name, whereby not +onelie those that were naturallie borne in Brabant, but such also as +serued amongst them, or else vsed the same warlike furniture, order, +trade and discipline, which was in vse among them, passed in that age +vnder the name of Brabanders. Or else I must thinke, that by reason of +some od kind of habit or other speciall cause, a certeine sort of +souldiers purchased to themselues the priuilege of that name, so to be +called Brabanceni or Brebationes (whether ye will) as hath chanced to +the Lansquenetz and Reisters in our time, and likewise to the companions +Arminaes and Escorchers in the daies of our forefathers, and as in all +ages likewise it hath fortuned amongst men of warre. Which if it so +chanced to these Brabanceni, I know not then what countriemen to make +them: for as I remember, Marchades that was a chiefe leader of such +souldiers as were knowne by that name (as after ye shall heare) is +reported by some authors to be a Prouancois.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_171" id="Page_171" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[171]</span> +It should séeme also that they were called by other names, as the Routs +(in Latine Ruptarij) which name whether it came of a French word, as ye +would say some vnrulie and headstrong companie, or of the Dutch word +Rutters, that signifieth a rider, I cannot say. But it may suffice for +the course of the historie to vnderstand that they were a kind of hired +souldiers, in those daies highlie estéemed, and no lesse feared, in so +much that against them and others there was an article conteined among +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus. lib. 3. cap. 3.</i></span> +the decrées of the Laterane councell holden at Rome, in the yeare 1179, +whereby all those were to be denounced accursed, which did hire, +mainteine or any way nourish those Brebationes, Aragonois, Nauarrois, +Basques and Coterelles, which did so much hurt in the christian world in +those daies.</p> + +<p>But to returne where we left to earle Richard, beside the aboue +mentioned victorie against those Brabanders, if we shall so take them; +he also vanquished Hamerike vicount of Limoges, and William earle of +Angolesme, with the vicounts of Ventadore and Cambanais, who attempted +rebellion against him, whome earle Richard subdued, and tooke prisoners, +with diuerse castels and strong holds which they had fortified.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The departure of the legat foorth of the Realme.</span> +About the feast of Peter and Paule, the legat departed out of the +realme, of whom we find that as he granted to the king some liberties +against the priuileges which the cleargie pretended to haue a right +vnto: so he obteined of the king certeine grants in fauour of them and +their order, as thus.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Liberties obteined for churchmen.</span> +1 First, that for no offense, crime or transgression any spirituall +person should be brought before a temporall iudge personallie, except +for hunting, or for some laie fee, or that for which some temporall +seruice was due to be yéelded, either to the king, or some other that +was cheefe lord thereof.</p> + +<p>2 Secondlie, that no archbishops see, nor bishops sée, nor any abbaie +should be kept in the kings hands more than one yeare, except vpon some +euident cause or necessitie constreining.</p> + +<p>3 Thirdlie, that such as slue any spirituall person, and were of such +offense conuicted, either by euidence or confession before the iustice +of the realme in presence of the bishop, should be punished as the +temporall law in such cases required.</p> + +<p>4 Fourthlie, that spirituall men should not be compelled to fight in +lists for the triall of any matter or cause whatsoeuer.</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i></span> +It should appeare by Nicholas Triuet, that the archbishop of Canturburie +procured the bishops of Winchester, Elie, and Norwich, thrée prelats +highlie at that present in the kings fauour, to further these grants; +namelie, that such as slue any préest or spirituall person might haue +the law for it: where before, there was no punishment for a season vsed +against such offendors but onelie excommunication. But now to leaue +preests, we will passe to other matters.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The yoong K. beginneth new practises against his father.</span> +In this meane time, king Henrie the sonne remaining in Normandie, began +to deuise new practises how to remooue his father from the gouernment +and to take it to himselfe; but one of his seruants named Adam de +Cherehedune being of his secret counsell, aduertised king Henrie the +father thereof, for the which his maister king Henrie the sonne</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">(Cereus in vitium flecti, monitoribus asper)<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">put him to great shame and rebuke, causing him to be stripped naked, and +whipped round about the streets of the citie of Poictiers, where he then +was vpon his returne from his brother earle Richard, with whome he had +beene to aid him against his enimies. King Henrie the father perceiuing +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +the naughtie mind of his sonne, and that he ceassed not from his wilfull +maliciousnesse, thought to dissemble all things, sith he saw no hope of +amendment in him: but yet to be prouided against his wicked attempts, he +furnished all his fortresses both in England & in Normandie with strong +garisons of men, and all necessarie munition.</p> + +<p>About this time, the sea rose on such a heigth, that manie men were +drowned thereby. Also a great snow fell this yeare, which by reason of +the hard frost that chanced therewith, +<a name="Page_172" id="Page_172" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[172]</span> +continued long without wasting +away, so that fishes both in the sea and fresh water died through +sharpenesse and vehemencie of that frost, neither could husbandmen till +the ground. A sore eclipse of the sunne chanced also the sixt ides of +Januarie. The monasterie of Westwood or Lesnos was begun to be founded +by Richard de Lucie Lord chéefe iustice. The same yeare also at +Woodstocke the king made his sonne the lord Geffrey knight.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +<span class="yearnote">1177.</span> +In the yeare 1177. king Henrie held his Christmas at Northampton, with +his two sonnes Geffrey and John, his other two sonnes the yoong king +Henrie, and Richard earle of Poictou, were in the parts beyond the seas, +as the king in Normandie, and the earle in Gascoigne, where he besieged +<span class="rightnote">The citie of Aques or Aigues.</span> +the citie of Aques, which the vicount of Aques and the earle of Bigorre +had fortified against him, but he wan it within ten daies after his +comming thither. Within the like terme also he wan the citie of Baion, +which Arnold Berthram had fortified against him, and cōming to the +vttermost frontiers of that countrie adioining to Spaine, he tooke a +castell called saint Piero which he destroied, and constreined the +Basques and Nauarrois to receiue an oth, that from thencefoorth they +should suffer passengers quietlie to come and go through their countrie, +and that they should liue in quiet and keepe peace one with an other, +and so he reformed the state of that countrie, and caused them to +renounce manie euill customes which they before that time had +vnlawfullie vsed.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 23.</span> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i> Geoffrey the kings base sonne made bishop of +Lincolne.</span> +Moreouer, king Henrie, to auoid further slander, placed for bishop in +the see of Lincolne a bastard son which he had named Geffrey, after he +had kept that bishoprike in his hands so long till he had almost +cleerelie destroied it. And his sonne that was now made bishop to helpe +the matter for his part, made hauocke in wasting and spending in riotous +manner the goods of that church, and in the end forsooke his miter, and +left the sée againe in the kings hands to make his best of it.</p> + +<p>Furthermore, the king in times past made a vow to build a new monasterie +in satisfaction of his offenses committed against Thomas the archbishop +of Canturburie: wherefore he required of the bishops and other +spirituall fathers, to haue some place by them assigned, where he might +begin that foundation. But whilest they should haue taken aduise herein, +he secretlie practised with the cardinals, and with diuerse other +bishops, that he might remoue the secular canons out of the colledge at +Waltham, and place therein regular canons, so to saue monie in his +cofers, planting in another mans vineyard. Howbeit, bicause it should +not be thought he did this of such a couetous meaning, he promised to +giue great possessions to that house, which he after but slenderlie +performed, though vpon licence obteined at the bishops hands, he +<span class="rightnote">Préests displaced, & canons regular put in their roomes.</span> +displaced the preests, and brought their roomes the canons as it were by +waie of exchange.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i> Nunnes of Amesburie.</span> +The same yeare also he thrust the nunnes of Amesburie out of their +house, bicause of their incontinent liuing, in abusing their bodies +greatlie to their reproch, and bestowed them in other monasteries to be +kept in more streightlie. And their house was committed vnto the abbesse +and couent of Founteuered, who sent ouer certeine of their number to +furnish the house of Amesburie, wherein they were placed by the +archbishop of Canturburie, in the presence of the king and a great +number of others.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Philip earle of Flanders.</span> +Philip earle of Flanders by sending ouer ambassadours to king Henrie, +promised that he would not bestow his two néeces, daughters to his +brother Matthew earle of Bullongne, without consent of the same king: +but shortlie after he forgot his promise, & married the elder of them to +the duke of Zaringes, & the yoonger to Henrie duke of Louaine.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">John de Curcie.<br /> +The citie of Dun taken.<br /> +Roderike K. of Ulnestre vanquished.</span> +John de Curcie lord cheefe iustice of Ireland discomfiting a power of +Irishmen, wan the citie of Dun in Ulnestre, where the bodies of S. +Patrike and S. Colme confessors, and S. Brigit the virgin are buried, +for the taking of which citie, Roderike king of Ulnestre being sore +offended, raised a mightie host, and comming into the field, fought with +the lord cheefe iustice, and in the end receiued & tooke the ouerthrow +at his hands, although the lord cheefe iustice at that encounter lost no +small number of his men. Amongst +<a name="Page_173" id="Page_173" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[173]</span> +prisoners that were taken, the bishop +of Dun was one, whom yet the lord chéefe Justice released and set at +libertie, in respect of a request and suit made to him by a cardinall +the popes legat that was there in Ireland at that time.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Viuiano a cardinall.</span> +This cardinals name was Viuiano, intituled the cardinall of S. Stephan +in Mount Celio; he was sent from the pope the yeare before, and comming +into England, though without licence, was pardoned vpon knowledging his +fault for his entring without the kings leaue first obteined, and so +permitted to go into Scotland, whither (as also into other the northwest +regions) he was sent as legat, authorised from the pope. Now when he had +ended his businesse in Scotland, he passed ouer into Man, and there held +his Christmasse with Euthred king of Man, and after the feast of the +Epiphanie, sailed from thence into Ireland, and chanced (the same time +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +that the Englishmen inuaded that countrie) to be in the citie of Dun, +where he was receiued of the king & bishops of that land with great +reuerence.</p> + +<p>The inuasion then of the Englishmen being signified to them of the +countrie aforehand they asked counsell of the legat what he thought best +to be doone in that matter; who streightwaies told them, that they ought +to fight in defense of their countrie, and at their setting forward, he +gaue them his benediction in waie of their good speed. But they comming +(as ye haue heard) to encounter with the Englishmen, were put to flight, +and beaten backe into the citie, which was herewith also woone by the +Englishmen, so that the Romane legat was glad to get him into the church +for his more safegard, and like a wise fellow had prouided afore hand +for such haps if they chanced, hauing there with him the king of +Englands letters directed to the capteins in Ireland in the legats +fauour, so that by the assistance and authoritie of the same, he went to +<span class="rightnote">The legat holdeth a councell at Dublin.</span> +Dublin, and there (in the name of the pope and the king of England) held +a councell.</p> + +<p>But when he began to practise, after the manner of legats in those +daies, somewhat largelie for his owne aduantage, in the churches of that +simple rude countrie, the English capteins commanded him either to +depart, or else to go foorth to the wars with them: whervpon he returned +into Scotland, hauing his bags well stuffed with Irish gold, for the +which it seemed he greatlie thirsted.</p> + +<p>¶ Where we haue to note the drift of the pope and all popelings to be +far otherwise than they pretend. For who (vnlesse he will be wilfullie +ignorant) knoweth not, that he and his neuer attempt any thing, but the +same beareth the hew and colour of holinesse and honestie? Hereto tend +the sendings out of his legats and cardinals to make pacifications, to +redresse disorders, to appease tumults, & I wot not what infinit +enormities (for he must haue his ore in euerie mans bote, his spoone in +euerie mans dish, and his fingers in euerie mans pursse) but the end and +scope of all his doings consisteth in this; namelie, to set himselfe +aboue all souereigntie, to purchase and assure to himselfe an absolute +and supereminent iurisdiction, to rob Christian kingdomes, to impouerish +churches, chapels, and religious places. Our chronicles are full of +these his pranks, and here we haue one practised by a lim of his, who +(as you sée) verie impudentlie and licentiouslie preied vpon the +church-goods, and conuerted the same to his owne profit and commoditie: +which he had if not trembled, yet blushed to doo, considering that the +goods of the church are the treasurie of Christ (or at leastwise ought +to be) and that none ought to alienate or change the propertie of such +goods, as the canon law hath prouided. Besides, the wretch ought to haue +remembred that which euen the verie pagans did not forget; namelie,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Prop. lib.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Haud vllas portabis opes Acherontis ad vndas,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Nudus ad infernas stulte vehere rates.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>But now to the dooings of John de Curcie, and of those Englishmen that +were with him, who did not onelie defend such places as they had woone +out of the Irishmens hands against those kings and their powers, but +also inlarged dailie more and more their frontiers, and wan the towne of +Armach (wherein is the metropolitane see of all that land) with the +whole prouince thereto belonging.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_174" id="Page_174" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[174]</span> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> <i>Polydor.</i></span> +About the same time came ambassadours vnto king Henrie from Alfonse king +of Castile and Garsias king of Nauarre, to aduertise him, that in a +controuersie risen betwixt the said two kings touching the possession of +certeine grounds néere vnto the confines of their realms, they had +chosen him for iudge by compromise, promising vpon their oths to stand +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +vnto & abide his order and decrée therein. Therefore they required him +to end the matter, by his authoritie, sith they had wholie put it to his +iudgement. Furthermore, either king had sent a most able and valiant +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +knight furnished with horsse and armour readie in their princes cause to +fight the combat, if king Henrie should happilie commit the triall of +their quarrell vnto the iudgement of battell. King Henrie gladlie +accepted their request, so that thervpon calling his councellors +togither, he consulted with them of the thing, and hearing euerie mans +opinion, at length he gaue iudgement so with the one, that the other was +contented to be agreeable therevnto.</p> + +<p>Within a while after, Philip earle of Flanders came ouer into England to +doo his deuotions at the toome of Thomas archbishop of Canturburie, of +whome the most part of men then had conceiued an opinion of such +holinesse, that they reputed him for a saint. The king met him there, +and verie fréendlie enterteined him, and bicause he was appointed +shortlie after to go ouer into the holie land to war against Gods +enimies, the king gaue him fiue hundred marks in reward, and licenced +William Mandeuile earle of Essex to go in that iourneie with other +lords, knights and men of warre of sundrie nations that were of his +dominions.</p> + +<p>The king then returning vnto London, tooke order for the establishing of +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +things touching the suertie of the realme, and his owne estate. And +first he appointed the custodie of such castels as were of most +importance by their situation, vnto the kéeping of certeine worthie +capteins. To sir William de Stuteuille he assigned the custodie of +Rockesburgh castell, to sir Roger de Stuteuille the castell of +Edenburgh, to sir William Neuille the castell of Norham, to sir Geffrie +Neuille the castell of Berwike, and to the archbishop of Yorke he +deliuered the castell of Scarborough, and sir Roger Coniers he made +<span class="rightnote">Durham tower.</span> +capteine of the tower of Durham, which he had taken from the bishop, +bicause he had shewed himselfe an vnstedfast man in the time of the +ciuill warre, and therefore to haue the kings fauour againe, he gaue to +him two thousand marks, with condition that his castels might stand, and +<span class="rightnote">Henrie de Pudsey</span> +that his sonne Henrie de Putsey aliàs Pudsey, might enioy one of the +kings manor places called Wighton.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">A parlement at Oxford.<br /> +John the kings sonne created king of Ireland.<br /> +<i>Polydor.</i><br /> +It +rained blood.</span> +After this, the king went to Oxenford, and there held a parlement, at +the which he created his sonne John king of Ireland, hauing a grant and +confirmation thereto from pope Alexander. About the same time it rained +bloud in the Ile of Wight, by the space of two daies togither, so that +linen clothes that hoong on the hedges were coloured therewith: which +vnvsed woonder caused the people, as the manner is, to suspect some +euill of the said Johns gouernement.</p> + +<p>Moreouer, to this parlement holden at Oxenford, all the chéefe rulers +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +and gouernours of Southwales and Northwales repaired, and became the +king of Englands liege men, swearing fealtie to him against all men. +Héerevpon he gaue unto Rice ap Griffin<a name="FNanchor_5_11" id="FNanchor_5_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> prince of Southwales the land of +Merionith, and to Dauid ap Owen he gaue the lands of Ellesmare. Also at +the same time he gaue and confirmed vnto Hugh Lacie (as before is said) +the land of Meth in Ireland with the appurtenances, for the seruice of +an hundred knights or men of armes, to hold of him and of his sonne John +by a charter which he made thereof. Also he diuided there the lands and +possessions of Ireland with the seruices to his subiects, as well of +England as Ireland, appointing some to hold by seruice to find fortie +knights or men of armes, and some thirtie, and so foorth.</p> + +<p>Vnto two Irish lords he granted the kingdome of Corke for the seruice of +fortie knights, and to other three lords he gaue the kingdome of +Limerike for the seruice of the like number of knights to be held of him +& his sonne John, reseruing to himselfe & to +<a name="Page_175" id="Page_175" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[175]</span> +his heires the citie of +<span class="rightnote">William Fitz Adelme. Robert de Poer. Hugh Lacie.</span> +Limerike with one cantred. To William Fitz Adeline his sewer, he gaue +the citie of Wesseford with the appurtenances and seruices: and to +Robert de Poer his marshall, he gaue the citie of Waterford; and to Hugh +Lacie, he committed the safe keeping of the citie of Diueline. And these +persons, to whome such gifts and assignations were made, receiued othes +of fealtie to beare their allegiance vnto him and to his sonne for those +lands and possessions in Ireland, in maner and forme as was requisite.</p> + +<p>The cardinall Viuian hauing dispatched his businesse in Ireland, came +backe into England, and by the kings safe conduct returned againe into +Scotland, where in a councell holden at Edenburgh, he suspended the +bishop of Whiterne, bicause he did refuse to come to that councell: but +the bishop made no account of that suspension, hauing a defense good +inough by the bishop of Yorke, whose suffragane he was.</p> + +<p>After the king had dissolued and broken vp his parlement at Oxenford, he +<span class="rightnote">Philip de Breause.</span> +came to Marleborrough, and there granted vnto Philip de Breause all the +kingdome of Limerike for the seruice of fortie knights: for Hubert and +William the brethren of Reignold earle of Cornewall, and John de la +Pumeray their nephue, refused the gift thereof, bicause it was not as +yet conquered. For the king thereof, surnamed Monoculus, that is, with +one eie, who had held that kingdome of the king of England, being +latelie slaine, one of his kinsemen got possession of that kingdome, and +held it without acknowledging any subiection to king Henrie, nor would +obeie his officers, bicause of the losses and damages which they did +practise against the Irish people, without occasion (as they alleadged) +by reason whereof the king of Corke also rebelled against the king of +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +England and his people, and so that realme was full of trouble.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polychr.</i></span> +The same season, quéene Margaret the wife of king Henrie the sonne was +deliuered of a man child which liued not past thrée daies. In that time +there was also through all England a great multitude of Jewes, and +<span class="rightnote">Jewes in England.</span> +bicause they had no place appointed them were to burie those that died, +but onelie at London, they were constrained to bring all their dead +corpses thither from all parts of the realme. To ease them therfore of +that inconuenience, they obteined of king Henrie a grant, to haue a +place assigned them in euerie quarter where they dwelled, to burie their +dead bodies. The same yeare was the bodie of S. Amphibulus the martyr, +who was instructor to saint Albone found, not farre from the towne of S. +Albones, and there in the monasterie of that towne buried with great and +solemne ceremonies.</p> + +<p>In the meane time, king Henrie passed ouer into Normandie, hearing that +the old grudge betwixt him & king Lewes began to be renewed vpon this +occasion, that whereas king Henrie had receiued the French kings +daughter Alice, promised in mariage vnto his sonne Richard, to remaine +in England with him, till she were able to companie with hir husband, +king Henrie being of a dissolute life, and giuen much to the pleasure of +the bodie (a vice which was grafted in the bone and therefore like to +sticke fast in the flesh, for as it is said,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Quod noua testa capit inueterata sapit)<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">at least wise (as the French king suspected) began to fantasie the yoong +ladie, and by such wanton talke and companie-keeping as he vsed with +hir, he was thought to haue brought hir to consent to his fleshlie lust, +which was the cause wherefore he would not suffer his sonne to marrie +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +hir, being not of ripe yeares nor viripotent or mariable. Wherefore the +French king imagining (vpon consideration of the other kings former +loose life) what an inconuenience & infamie might redound to him and +his, bethought himselfe that</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Turpe senex miles turpe senilis amor,<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">and therefore déemed iustlie that such a vile reproch wrought against +him in his bloud, was in no wise to be suffered, but rather preuented, +resisted & withstood. Herevpon he complained to the pope, who for +redresse thereof, sent one Peter a préest, & cardinall intituled of +saint Grisogone as legat from him into France, with commission to put +Normandie +<a name="Page_176" id="Page_176" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[176]</span> +and all the lands that belonged to king Henrie vnder +inderdiction, if he would not suffer the mariage to be solemnized +without delaie betwixt his sonne Richard and Alice the French kings +daughter. The king aduertised hereof, came to a communication with the +<span class="rightnote">The kings méet at Yurie.</span> +French king at Yurie, vpon the 21. of September, and there offered to +cause the mariage to be solemnised out of hand, if the French king would +giue in marriage with his daughter the citie of Burges, with all the +appurtenances as it was accorded, and also vnto his sonne king Henrie +the countrie of Veulgesine, that is to say, all the land betwixt Gisors +and Pussie, as he had likewise couenanted.</p> + +<p>But bicause the French king refused so to doo, king Henrie would not +suffer his sonne Richard to marrie his daughter Alice: howbeit at this +entervew of the two princes, by the helpe of the cardinall, and other +Noble men on both sides, they agreed to be freends, and that if they +could not take order betwixt them, to end all matters touching the +controuersies depending betwixt them for the lands in Auuergne and +Berrie, and for the fée of Chateau Raoul; then should the matter be put +to twelue persons, six on the one side, and six on the other, +authorising them to compound and finish that controuersie and all other +which might rise betwixt them. For the French king these were named, the +bishops of Claremount, Neuers, and Trois; and three barons, erle +Theobald, Robert, and Peter de Courtneie, the kings bretheren. For the +king of England were named the bishops of Mauns, Peregort, and Naunts; +with three barons also, Maurice de Croume, William Maigot and Peter de +Mountrabell.</p> + +<p>At the same time also, both these kings promised and vndertooke to ioine +their powers togither, and to go into the holie land to aid Guido king +of Jerusalem, whome the Saracen Saladine king of Aegypt did sore +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i> A law.</span> +oppresse with continuall and most cruell war. This doone, the French +king returned home, and king Henrie came to Vernueil, where he made this +ordinance, that no man should trouble the vassall or tenant, as we may +call them, for his lords debt.</p> + +<p>After this king Henrie went into Berrie, and tooke Chateau Roux or +Raoul, and marching towards Castre, the lord of that towne came and met +him on the waie, surrendring into his hands the daughter of Rafe de +Dolis latelie before deceassed, whome the king gaue vnto Baldwine de +Riuers, with the honor of Chateau Roux or Raoul. Then went he vnto +Graundemont, where Audebert earle of March came vnto him, and sold to +<span class="rightnote">The purchase of the erldome of March.</span> +him the whole countrie of March for the summe of fifteene thousand +pounds Anioun, twentie mules, and twentie palfreis. The charters of this +grant and sale made and giuen vnder the seale of the said earle of +March, bare date in the moneth of September Anno Christi 1177. Then did +the king receiue the fealtie and homages of all the barons and knights +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 24.</span> +of the countrie of March, after he had satisfied, contented, and paid +the monie vnto the earle according to the couenants.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">1178.</span> +The king this yeare held his Christmas at Angiers, and meaning shortlie +after to returne into England, he sent to the French king for letters of +protection, which were granted, and sent to him in forme as followeth.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<h3>The tenour of the French kings letters of protection.</h3> + +<p>Lvdouicus rex Francorum, omnibus ad quos præsentes literæ peruenerint +salutem. Nouerit vniuersitas vestra quòd nos recipimus in protectione & +custodia nostra totam terram Henrici regis Angliæ charissimi fratris +nostri, in cismarinis partibus sitam, si contigerit eum in Angliam +transfretare vel peregrè proficisci. Ita planè, vt quādo balliui sui +de terra transmarina nos requisierint, bona fide & sine malo ingenio eis +consilium & auxilium præstabimus, ad eiusdem terras defensionem & +protectionem. Actum apud Nicenas. The English whereof is thus.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_177" id="Page_177" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[177]</span> +"Lewes king of France, to all those to whom these present letters shall +come greeting. Know all ye that we haue receiued into our protection & +custodie all the lands of Henrie king of England our deare brother, +lieng and being in the parts of this side the sea, if it chance him to +passe ouer into England, or to go any waie foorth from home, so that +when the bailiues of his lands on this hither side the sea shall require +vs, we shall helpe them and counsell them faithfullie and without +male-engine for defense and protection of the same lands. Giuen at +Nicens."</p> + +</div> + +<p>Shortlie after, king Henrie returned into England from Normandie, and at +Woodstocke made his sonne Geffrey knight. This yeare pope Alexander sent +into all parts legats to summon the bishops and prelates to a generall +<span class="rightnote">A generall councell summoned at Rome.</span> +councell to be holden at Rome in the beginning of the Lent in the yere +next following. Whereabout two legats came into England, the one named +Albert de Suma, who had in commission to summon them of England and +Normandie: and the other called Petro de Santa Agatha, who was appointed +to summon them of Scotland, Ireland, and the Iles about the same: +wherevpon obteining licence to passe through the king of Englands +dominions, he was constreined to sweare vpon the holie euangelists, that +he should not attempt any thing in his legatship that might be hurtfull +to the king or his realme, and that he should come and visit the king +againe as he returned homewards.</p> + +<p>This yeare on the sundaie before the natiuitie of S. John Baptist, being +the 18 of June, after the setting of the sunne, there appeared a +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +maruellous sight in the aire, vnto certeine persons that beheld the +same. For whereas the new moone shone foorth verie faire with his hornes +<span class="rightnote">A strange sight about the moone.</span> +towardes the east, streightwais the vpper horne was diuided into two, +out of the the mids of which diuision a burning brand sprang vp, casting +from it a farre off coles and sparks, as it had beene of fire. The bodie +of the moone in the meane time that was beneath, séemed to wrest and +writh in resemblance like to an adder or snake that had béene beaten, +and anon after it came to the old state againe. This chanced aboue a +dozzen times, and at length from horne to horne it became blacke.</p> + +<p>In September following, the moone being about 27. daies hold, at six of +the clocke, a partile eclipse of the sunne happened, for the bodie +thereof appeared as it were horned shooting the hornes towards the west +<span class="rightnote">A strange eclipse of the sunne.</span> +as the moone dooth: being twentie daies old. The residue of the compasse +of it was couered with a blacke roundell, which comming downe by little +and little, threw about the horned brightnesse that remained, till both +the hornes came to hang downe on either side to the earthwards; and as +the blacke roundell went by little & little forwards, the homes at +length were turned towards the west, and so the blacknesse passing +awaie, the sunne receiued his brightnesse againe. In the meane time the +aire being full of clouds of diuerse colours, as red, yellow, green, and +pale, holpe the peoples sight with more ease to discerne the maner of +it.</p> + +<p>The king this yeare held his Christmasse at Winchester, at which time +newes came abroad of a great wonder that had chanced at a place called +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 25. <br /> +1179.</span> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +Oxenhale, within the lordship of Derlington, in which place a part of +the earth lifted itselfe vp on high in appearance like to a mightie +tower, and so it remained from nine of the clocke in the morning, till +the euen tide, and then it fell downe with an horrible noise, so that as +<span class="rightnote">A strange wonder of the earth.</span> +such as were thereabout, were put in a great feare. That péece of earth +with the fall was swallowed vp, leauing a great déepe pit in the place, +as was to be seene many yeares after.</p> + +<p>¶ Touching these celestiall apparitions, the common doctrine of +philosophie is, that they be méere naturall, and therefore of no great +admiration. For of eclipses, as well such as are proper to the sunne, as +also those that are peculiar to the moone, the position is not so +generallie deliuered, as it is constantlie beléeued. For the +philosophers giue this reason of eclipses.</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<a name="Page_178" id="Page_178" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[178]</span> +<span class="rightnote"><i>M. Pal. in. Aquar.</i></span> +<span class="i2">—— radios Phœbi luna interiecta repellit,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Nec sinit in terras claram descendere lucem.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Quippe aliud non est quàm terræ atque æquoris vmbra,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Quæ si fortè ferit nocturnæ corpora lunæ,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Eclipsin facit.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>In somuch as obseruing them to be ordinarie accidents, they are +<span class="rightnote"><i>Luc. lib. 1.</i></span> +ouerpassed and nothing regarded. Howbeit Lucane maketh a great matter of +eclipses, and of other strange sights precéeding the bloudie battels +betweene Pompeie and Cesar; intimating hereby, that prodigious woonders, +and other rare and vnaccustomed accidents are significations of some +notable euent insuing, either to some great personage, to the +common-wealth, or to the state of the church. And therefore it is a +matter woorth the marking, to compare effects following with signes and +woonders before going; since they haue a doctrine in them of no small +importance. For not manie yeares after, the kings glorie was darkened on +earth, nay his pompe and roiall state tooke end; a prediction whereof +might be imported by the extraordinarie eclipse of the sunne, a +beautifull creature, and the ornament of the skie.</p> + +<p>Laurence archbishop of Dublin, and Catholicus the archbishop of Tuamon, +with fiue or six other Irish bishops, and diuerse both bishops and +abbats of Scotland, passed through England towards the generall +councell, and withall tooke their oth, that they shuld not procure any +damage to the king or realme of England. There went but onelie foure +bishops out of England, to wit, Hugh Putsey, or Pudsey bishop of Durham, +John bishop of Norwich, Reignold bishop of Bath, and Robert bishop of +Hereford, beside abbats: for the English bishops firmelie stood in it, +that there ought but foure bish. onelie to go foorth of England to any +<span class="rightnote">Richard de Lucie lord chéefe iustice of England deceasseth.</span> +generall councell called by the pope. This yeare Richard de Lucie lord +chéefe iustice of England gaue ouer his office, and became a canon in +the abbeie of Westwood or Lesnos, which he had founded, and built vpon +his owne ground, endowing it with great reuenewes, and in Julie after he +died there.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">A parlement at Windsore.</span> +King Henrie the father called a parlement at Windsore, at the which was +present king Henrie the sonne, and a great number of lords, earles and +barons. At this parlement, order was taken for partition of the realme, +so that it was diuided into foure parts, certeine sage personages being +allotted vnto euerie part to gouerne the same, but not by the name of +<span class="rightnote">Ranulfe de Glanuille.</span> +iustices, albeit that Ranulfe de Glanuille was made ruler of Yorkeshire, +& authorised iustice there, as he that best vnderstood in those daies +<span class="rightnote">Geffrey earle of Britaine son to king Henrie. Guidomer de +Leons.</span> +the ancient lawes and customes of the realme. The same yeare, Geffrey +earle of Britaine by his fathers commandement leuied an armie, and +passing ouer into Britaine, wasted the lands of Guidomer de Leons, and +constreined him to submit himselfe vnto him.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The moone eclipsed.</span> +The 18. day of August, the moone was eclipsed, which was séene of king +Henrie and his companie as he rode all that night towards Douer there to +<span class="rightnote">The French K. commeth a madding to visit the archbishop +Beckets toome.</span> +méet the French king, who was comming towards England to visit the toome +of archbishop Thomas Becket as he had before time vowed. He landed at +Douer the 22. day of August. There came ouer with him Henrie duke of +Louaine, Philip earle of Flanders, Baldwin earle of Guines, earle +William de Mandeuille, and diuerse other earles, lords, barons and +knights; whome king Henrie was readie to receiue at the water side, and +the morow after brought them with great honor to Canturburie, where they +were with due reuerence and vnspeakeable ioy receiued of archbishop +Richard, and diuerse other bishops there assembled togither with the +couent of Christes-church, and an infinit multitude of Nobles and +<span class="rightnote">The French word is Muis.</span> +gentlemen. The French king offered vpon the toome of the said archbishop +Thomas, a rich cup of gold; and gaue to the moonks there an hundred tuns +of wine to be receiued yearelie of his gift for euer at Poissie in +France. Further he granted to the same moonks, that whatsoeuer was +bought in his dominions of France to their vse, should be free from +toll, tallage, and paieng any maner of excise for the same. +<a name="Page_179" id="Page_179" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[179]</span> +These +grants he confirmed with his charter thereof, made & deliuered to them +by the hands of Hugh Putsey, son to the bishop of Duresme that was his +chancellor. King Lewes hauing performed his vow, and receiued manie rich +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +gifts of king Henrie, returned home into France, and shortlie after +causing his sonne to be crowned king, resigned the gouernment to him (as +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> Cadwallon prince of Wales.</span> +by some writers appeareth.) About the same time, Cadwallon prince of +Wales, being brought before the king to make his answer to diuerse +accusations exhibited against him, as he returned toward his countrie +vnder the kings safe conduct, was laid for by his enimies, and slaine, +to the kings great slander, though he were not giltie in the matter. +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 26. <br /> +1180.</span> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +After this, King Henrie the father held his Christmasse at Notingham, +and William king of Scotland with him.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Discord betwixt the French K. and his nobles.</span> +The same yeare fell discord betwixt the yoong king of France, and his +mother and vncles, hir brethren, earle Theobald and earle Stephan, who +thinking themselues not well vsed, procured king Henrie the sonne to +ioine with them in fréendship, and to go ouer into England to purchase +his fathers assistance in their behalfe against their nephue. Who being +come ouer to his father, informed him of the whole mater, and did so +much by his earnest suit therin, that before the feast of Easter, his +father went ouer with him into Normandie, and immediatlie vpon their +arriuall in those parts, the old French quéene, mother to the yoong king +Philip, with their brethren the said earles, and manie other Noble men +of France came vnto him, and concluding a league with him, deliuered +hostages into his hands, and re-ceiued an oth to follow his counsell and +aduice in all things.</p> + +<p>Herevpon king Henrie assembled a great armie, in purpose after Easter to +inuade the French kings dominions: but before any great exploit was +made, he came to an enteruew with the new king of France, betwixt Gisors +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +and Treodsunt, where partlie by gentle words, and partlie by threatnings +which king Henrie vsed for persuasion, the French king released all his +indignation concerned against his mother and vncles, and receiued them +againe into his fauour, couenanting to allow his mother for euerie day +towards hir expenses seuen pounds of Paris monie, during his father king +Lewes his life time; and after his death, she should enioy all hir +dower, except the castels which king Philip might reteine still in his +hands. Also at this assemblie, king Henrie the father in the presence of +<span class="rightnote">The earle of Flanders does homage to the king of England.</span> +the French king, receiued homage of Philip earle of Flanders, and +granted to him for the same a thousand markes of siluer, to be receiued +yearelie out of the checker at London, so that in consideration thereof +he should find fiue hundred knights or men of armes, to serue the king +of England for the space of 40. daies, when soeuer he should haue +warning giuen vnto him.</p> + +<p>Moreouer, the two kings at this assemblie concluded a league togither, +and whereas certeine lands were in controuersie betwixt them, as the fée +of Chateau Raoul, and other small fees, if they could not agree among +themselues concerning the same, either of them was contented to commit +the order thereof, and of all other controuersies betwixt them vnto six +bishops, to be chosen indifferentlie betwixt them, the one to choose +thrée, and the other thrée.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i> Tailbourg woone.</span> +In this yeare, or (as the annales of Aquitaine say) in the yeare last +passed, Richard earle of Poictou subdued the strong fortresse of +Tailbourg, which was iudged before that time, inexpugnable: but earle +Richard oppressed them that kept it so sore with streight siege, that +first in a desperate mood they issued foorth, and assailed his people +verie valiantlie, but yet neuerthelesse they were beaten backe, and +forced to retire into their fortresse, which finallie they surrendred +into the hands of earle Richard, who caused the wals thereof to be +raced. The like fortune chanced to diuers other castels and fortresses +that stood in rebellion against him within a moneth space.</p> + +<p>Tailbourg belonged vnto one Geffrey de Rancin, who of a proud and loftie +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +stomach practising rebellion against duke Richard, tooke this enterprise +in hand, and when he had atchiued the same to his owne contentation, he +passed ouer into England, and was receiued with great triumph, pompe & +magnificence.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_180" id="Page_180" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[180]</span> +<span class="rightnote"><i>W. Paruus.</i> The forme of the kings coine changed.</span> +About the same time, the forme of the kings coine was altered and +changed, bicause manie naughtie and wicked persons had deuised waies to +counterfeit the same, so that the alteration thereof was verie +necessarie, but yet gréeuous and chargeable to the poore inhabitants of +the realme.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 27. <br /> +1181.</span> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +King Henrie the father, whilest he was at Mauns after Christmasse made +this ordinance, that euerie man being worth in goods to the value of an +hundred pounds Aniouin, should keepe one horsse able for seruice in the +wars, and complet armour for a knight or man of armes, as we may rather +call them. Also that such as had goods woorth in value from 40. pounds +to 25. of the same monie, should at the least haue in his house for his +furniture an habergeon, a cap of stéele, a speare, and a sword, or bowe +and arrowes. Furthermore he ordeined, that no man might sell or laie to +gage his armour and weapon, but should be bound to leaue it to his next +heire. When the French king and the earle of Flanders were aduertised +that king Henrie had made this ordinance amongst his subiects, they gaue +commandement that their people should be armed after the like manner.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +This yeare after Candlemasse, Laurence archbishop of Dublin came ouer to +the king into Normandie and brought with him the son of Roderike king of +Conagh, to remaine with him as a pledge, for performance of couenants +passed betwixt them, as the paiment of tribute and such like. The said +archbishop died there in Normandie, wherevpon the king sent Geffrey de +Haie one of his chapleins, and chapleine also to Alexius the popes legat +into Ireland, to seize that archbishops sée into his hands. He also sent +John Lacie conestable of Chester, and Richard de Peake, to haue the +citie of Dublin in kéeping, which Hugh Lacie had in charge before and +now was discharged, bicause the king tooke displeasure with him, for +that without his licence he had maried a daughter of the king of Conagh, +according to the manner of that countrie.</p> + +<p>This yeare also, Geffrey the kings bastard sonne, who was the elect of +Lincolne, and had receiued the profits of that bishoprike, by the space +of seuen years, and had his election confirmed by the pope in the feast +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +of the Epiphanie at Marlebridge, in presence of the king and bishops +renounced that preferment, of his owne free will. Within a while after +the pope sent a streit commandement vnto Richard archbishop of +Canturburie, either to cause the same Geffrey by the censure of the +church to renounce his miter, or else to take vpon him the order of +préesthood. Wherefore vpon good aduice taken in the matter with his +father and other of his especiall fréends, iudging himselfe insufficient +for the one, he was contented to part with the other; and therevpon +wrote letters vnto the said archbishop of Canturburie, in forme as +followeth.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<h3>A letter of Geffrey the kings base sonne elect of Lincolne to Richard +archbishop of Canturburie,</h3> + +<p>Venerabili patri Richardo Dei gratia Cantuariensi archiepiscopo +apostolicæ sedis legato, Galfridus domini regis Angliæ filius & +cancellarius salutem & reuerentiam debitam ac deuotam. Placuit maiestati +apostolicæ vestræ iniungere sanctitati, vt me certo temore vocaretis ad +suscipendum ordinem sacerdotis, & pontificalis officij dignitatem. Ego +verò considerans quamplures episcopos maturiores ac prouectiores +prudentia & ætate vix tantæ administrationi sufficere, nec sine periculo +animarum suarum sui officium pontificatus ad perfectum explere, veritus +sum onus importabile senioribus mihi imponere iuniori: faciens hæc nō +ex leuitate animi, sed ob reuerentiam sacramenti. Habito itaque tractatu +super eo cum domino rege patre meo, dominis +<a name="Page_181" id="Page_181" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[181]</span> +fratribus meisque rege & +Pictauensi & Britannorum comitibus: episcopis etiam Henrico Baiocensi, +Frogerio Sagiensi, Reginaldo Batoniensi, Sefrido Cicestrensi, qui +præsentes aderant, aliter de vita & statu meo disposui, volens patris +mei obsequijs militare ad tempus, & ab episcopalibus abstinere: omne it +que ius electionis inde & Lincolnensem episcopatum spontaneè, liberè, +quieté, & integrè, in manu vestra pater sancte resigno, tam electionem +quàm episcopatus absolutionem postulans à vobis, tanquam à metropolitano +meo, & ad hoc ab apostolica sede specialiter delegate. Bene vale.</p> + +</div> + +<p>The king for his maintenance, now after he had resigned his bishoprike, +gaue him 500. markes of yearelie rent in England, and as much in +Normandie, and made him moreouer lord chancellor.</p> + +<p>This yeare also after Easter, the kings of England and France came to an +enteruew togither, at a place in the confines of their countries called +by some writers Vadum Sancti Remigij, on a mondaie being the 17. of +April, in which assemblie of those two princes, the knights templers and +hospitallers presented to them letters directed from pope Alexander vnto +<span class="rightnote">The danger of the holie land.</span> +all christian princes, aduertising them of the danger wherein the holie +land stood at that present, if spéedie remedie were not the sooner +prouided. Wherefore he exhorted them to addresse their helping hand +towards the releefe thereof, granting vnto all such as would enterprise +to go thither in person (to remaine there vpon defense of the countrie +against the infidels) great pardon, as to those that did continue there +the space of two yéeres, pardon of penance for all their sins, except +theft, extortion, roberie, and vsurie; in which cases restitution was to +be made, if the partie were able to doo it; if not, then he should he +absolued as well for those things as for other. And those that remained +one yeare in those parties were pardoned of halfe their whole penance +due for all their sinnes. And to those that went to visit the holie +sepulchre, he also granted great pardon, as remission of their sinnes, +whether they came thither or peraduenture died by the waie. He also +granted his frée indulgence vnto those that went to warre against the +common, the professed and open enimies of our religion in the holie +land, as his predecessors the popes Vrbanus and Eugenius had granted in +time past: and he receiued likewise their wiues, their children, their +goods and possessions vnder the protection of S. Peter and the church of +Rome.</p> + +<p>The two kings hauing heard the popes letters read, and taken good aduice +thereof, promised by Gods fauour shortlie to provide conuenient aid for +reléefe of the holie land, and of the christians as yet remaining in the +same. This was the end of their communication for that time, and so they +departed, the French king into France, and the king of England into +Normandie.</p> + +<p>In the meane time, by the king of Englands appointment, William king of +Scotland went ouer into Normandie, and by the aduice and good admonition +of king Henrie, he granted licence vnto two bishops of his realme of +Scotland, to wit, Aberdene and saint Andrewes, to returne into Scotland, +whome he had latelie before banished, and driuen out of his realme. +Moreouer, as king Henrie laie at Harfléet readie to saile ouer into +England, discord fell betwixt the king of France and the erle of +Flanders, so that the king of England at desire of the French king +returned backe, and came vnto Gisors, where the French king met him, and +so did the earle of Flanders, betwixt whome vpon talke had in the matter +depending in controuersie, he made a concord, and then comming downe, to +Chirburge he and the king of Scots in his companie passed ouer into +England, landing at Portesmouth the 26. of Julie.</p> + +<p>The king now being returned into England, ordeined a statute for armour +<span class="rightnote">An ordinance for armour.</span> +and weapon to be had amongst his subiects heere in this realme, which +was thus. Euerie man that held a knights fée should be bound to haue a +paire of curasses, an helmet, with shield and speare; and euerie knight +or man of arms should haue as manie curasses, helmets, shields and +speares as he held knights fées in demaine. Euerie man of the laitie +hauing +<a name="Page_182" id="Page_182" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[182]</span> +goods or reuenues to the value of sixteene marks, should have +one paire of curasses, an helmet, a speare, and a shield. And euerie +free man of the laitie hauing goods in value worth ten marks, should +haue an habergeon, a steele cap, & a speare; and all burgesses, and the +whole communaltie of frée men should haue a wambais, a cap of steele, +and a speare.</p> + +<p>Further it was ordeined, that euerie man thus bound to haue armour, +should be sworne to haue the same before the feast of S. Hilarie, and to +be true vnto king Henrie Fitz-empres, in defense of whome and of his +realme they should kéepe with them such armour and weapon, according to +his precept and commandement thereof had and made. And no man being +furnished with such armour, should sell, pledge, or otherwise alien the +same, neither may his lord by any means take the same from him, either +by waie of forfeiture, by destresse or pledge, nor by any other means: +and when any man died, hauing such armour, he shall leaue it to his +heire, and if his heire be not of lawfull age to weare it into the +field, then he that hath the custodie of his bodie shall haue the +armour, and find an able man to weare it for him, till he come to age.</p> + +<p>If any burgesse of any good towne haue more armour than he ought to haue +by this statute, he shall sell it or giue it to some man that may weare +<span class="rightnote">Jewes might haue no armour.</span> +it in the kings seruice. No Jew might haue armour by this statute: but +those that had anie, were appointed to sell the same to such as were +inhabitants within the realme, for no man might sell or transport anie +armour ouer the sea, without the kings licence. For the better execution +of which ordinance, it was ordeined, that inquests should be taken by +sufficient iurors, what they were that were able to haue armour by their +abilitie in lands and goods. Also the K. would, that none should be +sworne to haue armour, except he were a frée man of birth and bloud.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matt Paris.</i></span> +The same yeare, the king being at Waltham, assigned an aid to the +maintenance of the christian souldiers in the holie land, that is to +wit, 42. thousand marks of siluer, and fiue hundred marks of gold. Hugh +<span class="rightnote">The decesse of Hugh earle of Chester. <i>Ran. Higd.</i></span> +Bosun otherwise called Keuelocke the sonne of Ranulfe the second of that +name earle of Chester, died this yeare, and was buried at Léeke. He left +behind him issue by his wife, the countesse Beatrice daughter of Richard +Lacie lord iustice of England, a sonne named Ranulfe, who succéeded him, +being the first erle of Chester, & third of that name after the +conquest. Besides this Ranulfe he had foure daughters by his said wife; +to wit, Maud married to Dauid earle of Angus, Huntington and Galloway; +Mabell coupled with William Daubignie earle of Arundell, Agnes married +to William Ferrers earle of Derbie, and Hauise ioined with Robert +Quincie earle of Lincolne.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The archbish. of Yorke deceasseth.</span> +The 21. of Nouember, Roger archbishop of Yorke died, who (when he +perceiued himselfe in danger of death by force of that his last +sicknesse) deliuered great summes of monie vnto certeine bishops and +other graue personages to be distributed amongst poore people: but after +his death, the king called for the monie, and seized it to his vse, +alleadging a sentence giuen by the same archbishop in his life time, +that no ecclesiasticall person might giue any thing by will, except he +deuised the same whilest he was in perfect health: yet the bishop of +Durham would not depart with foure hundred marks which he had receiued +to destribute amongst the poore, alledging that he dealt the same awaie +before the archbishops death, and therefore he that would haue it +againe, must go gather it vp of them to whom he had distributed it, +which he himselfe would in no wise doo. But the king tooke no small +displeasure with this vndiscréet answer, insomuch that he seized the +castell of Durham into his hands, and sought means to disquiet the said +bishop by diuerse maner of waies.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">1182.</span> +The king held his Christmasse this yeare at Winchester, and afterwards +<span class="rightnote">The K. passeth ouer into Normandie.</span> +sailed ouer into Normandie, bicause he heard that the king his sonne was +gone to his brother in law king Philip, and began to practise eftsoones +new trouble, which was true indéed: but yet at length he came backe, and +<span class="rightnote">The K. & his sonne eftsoones reconciled.</span> +was reconciled to his father, and tooke an oth, that from thenceforth he +would neuer swarue from him, nor demand more for his maintenance but an +hundred pounds Aniouin by the daie, and ten pounds a day of the same +<a name="Page_183" id="Page_183" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[183]</span> +monie for his wife. His father granted this, and also couenanted, that +within the tearme of one yeare he would giue him the seruices of an +hundred knights. Neuerthelesse all this did little amend the matter, for +though he set a new copie of countenance therevpon, yet he reteined his +old peruerse purpose in his discontented mind, hauing learned that</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Qui nescit fingere nescit regere.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">After this, king Henrie the father as a mediator betwixt the king of +France, and the earle of Flanders touching controuersies betwixt them +did so much in the matter, that he set them at one for that time.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +About the same season, king Henrie the father sent William de Mandeuille +earle of Albemarle, and other ambassadors vnto the emperour Frederike, +<span class="rightnote">The duke of Saxonie.</span> +to intreat for his sonne in law the duke of Saxonie, that he might be +againe restored into his fauor, which could not be obteined: for he was +alreadie condemned to exile, but yet thus much to pleasure the king of +England the emperour granted, that so manie as went with him out of +their countrie, might returne againe at their pleasure, and that his +wife the dutches Maud the K. of Englands daughter, should inioy hir +dowrie, and be at libertie, whether she would remaine vpon it, or follow +hir husband into exile, therefore when the daie came that he must depart +out of his countrie, he set forward with his wife and children, and a +great number of the Nobles of his countrie, and finallie came into +Normandie, where he was right ioifullie receiued of his father in law +king Henrie.</p> + +<p>Shortlie after his comming thither, he gaue licence to the Noble men +that were come thither with him, to returne home, and then he himselfe +went into Spaine to visit the bodie of S. James the apostle. His wife +being great with child, remained with hir father in Normandie, and at +<span class="rightnote">The duchesse of Saxonie deliuered of a sonne. Ranulfe Poer +slaine.</span> +Argenton she was deliuered of a sonne. This yeare the Welshmen slue +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 29. <br /> +1183.</span> +Ranulfe Poer shirife of Glocestershire. King Henrie held his Christmasse +at Caen, with his thrée sons, Henrie the king, Richard earle of Poictow, +and Geffrey earle of Britaine. There was also Henrie duke of Saxonie, +with his wife and their children, besides the archbishops of Canturburie +and Dublin, with other bishops earles and barons in great number.</p> + +<p>Here would king Henrie the father, that his son the king should receiue +homage of his brethren Richard earle of Poictow, and Geffrey earle of +Britaine. The earle of Britaine did not staie at the matter, but the +earle of Poictow refused, alledging that it was not conuenient so long +as their father liued, to acknowledge any superioritie to their brother: +for as the fathers inheritance was due to the eldest sonne, so he +<span class="rightnote"><i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +claimed the lands which he held due to him in right of his mother. This +deniall so much offended his brother the king, that afterwards when +Richard would haue doone homage, he would not receiue it, whervpon +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +Richard departed from the court in great displeasure, & comming into +Poictow, began to fortifie his castels & townes, that he might be in +readinesse to stand vpon his safegard, if his father or brethren should +come to pursue him. King Henrie the sonne followed him, set on by the +earles and barons of Poictow, which for the sharpe and cruell +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +gouernement of earle Richard, hated him mortallie. Againe on the other +side, the fauourable courtesie, séemelie personage, and other noble +qualities which they saw in the yoong king, moued them to take part with +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> War betwixt the brethren.</span> +him against Richard, and shortlie after their brother Geffrey came with +a great armie in aid of his brother the king, in so much that earle +Richard not knowing how to shift off the present danger, sent to his +father for aid, who being verie sorie in his mind to sée such vnnaturall +dealing among his sonnes, gathered an armie and set forward.</p> + +<p>He had a little before trauelled to set them at one, in somuch that +where earle Richard held a castell named Clareualx, which after the +fathers deceasse ought to remaine vnto king Henrie the son, vpon his +complaint thereof made, the father did so much with the earle, that he +surrendered it into his fathers hands. Immediatlie after all the three +<span class="rightnote">The father séeketh to appease the quarell betwixt his +sonnes.</span> +sonnes came to Angers, and there sware to be obedient vnto their fathers +will, and to serue him against all men: whervpon he appointed them a +daie to meet at Mirabell, where the barons of Guien should also be, vnto +whom king Henrie the sonne had +<a name="Page_184" id="Page_184" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[184]</span> +sworne to aid them against earle +Richard. Herewith was earle Geffrey sent vnto them to persuade them to +peace and quietnesse, and to come vnto Mirabell according to king Henrie +<span class="rightnote">Earle Geffrey dealeth vnfaithfullie.</span> +the fathers appointment: but in stéed of persuading them to peace +(contrarie to his oth so oftentimes receiued) he procured them to pursue +the warre both against his father and his brother earle Richard: and no +maruell, for</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Malè sarta gratia nunquam benè coalescit.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>King Henrie the sonne remaining with his father, shewed outwardlie that +he wished for peace, but his meaning was all contrarie, and so obtained +licence of his father to go vnto Limoges, that he might labour to reduce +both his brother Geffrey, and the barons of Guien vnto quietnesse. But +such dissembling was put in practise by king Henrie, that when the +father followed with an armie, and came vnto Limoges, in stéed of +receiuing him with honor, as it had béene their duties to haue doone, +they shot at him, and pearsed through his vppermost armor, so that both +he and his sonne Richard were constreined to depart. Howbeit afterwards +he entered that citie, and comming foorth of it againe to talke with his +sonnes, those within Limoges eftsoones rebelled, so that certeine of +them within, shot the horsse whereon king Henrie the father rode into +the head. And if it had so chanced, that the horsse in casting vp his +head had not receiued the blow, the arrow had light in the kings brest, +to the great danger & perill of his person. Neither did his sonnes the +king and his brother Geffrey go about to sée such an heinous attempt +punished, but rather séemed to like well of it, and to mainteine those +most malicious enimies of their souereigne lord and father, for they +ioined with them against him, although king Henrie the sonne made +countenance to be willing to reconcile his brother and the barons of +<span class="rightnote">The disloiall dissembling of the yoong king.</span> +Guien to his father by waie of some agréement: but his double dealing +was too manifest, although indeed he abused his fathers patience for a +while, who was desirous of nothing more than to win his sonnes by some +courteous meanes, and therefore diuerse times offered to pardon all +offenses committed by his enimies, at the suit of his sonne the king, +who in déed offered himselfe now and then as an intreatour, but that was +onelie to win time that his brother with such Brabanders and other +souldiers as he had with him in aid, beside the forces of the barons of +Guien, might worke the more mischéefe against their father and their +brother earle Richard, in wasting and destroieng their countries that +stood stedfast on their side.</p> + +<p>In the meane time Richard the archbishop of Canturburie, and diuerse +other bishops and abbats both of England and Normandie assembled +togither at Caen, and in the abbeie church of S. Stephan pronounced the +sentence of excommunication against all those that did hinder and +impeach their purpose, which was to haue peace and concord concluded +betwixt the king and his sonnes, the same sonnes onlie out of the said +sentence excepted.</p> + +<p>Diuerse shiftes were made by king Henrie the sonne, and his brother +earle Geffrey also to get monie for the paiment of their souldiers, as +spoiling of shrines, and such like. But at length when things framed not +to their purpose, and that the harme which they could doo against their +father was much lesse than they wished, if power had béene answerable to +their willes, king Henrie the sonne through indignation and displeasure +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie the sonne falleth sicke.</span> +(as some write) fell into a gréeuous sicknesse in a village called +Mertell, not farre from Limoges, where his father laie at siege.</p> + +<p>At the first he was taken with an extreame feuer, and after followed a +sore flixe. Now perceiuing himselfe in danger of death, and that the +<span class="rightnote">He sendeth to his father.</span> +physicians had giuen him ouer, he sent to his father (better late than +neuer) confessing his trespasse committed against him, and required of +all fatherlie loue to come & sée him once before he died. But for that +the father thought not good to commit himselfe into the hands of such +vngratious persons as were about his sonne, he sent his ring vnto him in +token of his blessing, and as it were a pledge to signifie that he had +forgiuen him his vnnaturall doings against him. The son receiuing it +with great humilitie, kissed it, and so ended his life in the presence +of the +<a name="Page_185" id="Page_185" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[185]</span> +archbishop of Burdeaux and others, on the day of saint Barnabie +the apostle. He died (as some write) verie penitent and sorowfull.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">His repentance before his death.</span> +And whereas in his life time he had vowed to make a iourneie into the +holie land against Gods enimies, and taken vpon him the crosse for that +intent, he deliuered it vnto his familiar freend William Marshall to go +thither with it in his stead. Moreouer when he perceiued present death +at hand, he first confessed his sinnes secretlie, and after openly +before sundrie bishops and men of religion, and receiued absolution in +most humble wise. After this, he caused his fine clothes to be taken +<span class="rightnote">A strange kind of superstitious deuotion, if this report of +our author be true.</span> +from him, and therewith a heare cloth to be put vpon him, and after +tieng a cord about his necke, he said vnto the bishops and other that +stood by him; "I deliuer my selfe an vnworthie and greeuous sinner vnto +you the ministers of God by this cord, beséeching our Lord Jesus Christ, +which pardoned the théefe confessing his faults on the crosse, that +through your praiers and for his great mercies sake it may please him to +be mercifull vnto my soule;" wherevnto they all answered, "Amen." Then +<span class="rightnote">He is drawne out of his bed, a thing vnlike to be true.</span> +he said vnto them, "Draw me out of this bed with this cord, and laie me +on that bed strawed with ashes" (which he had of purpose prepared) and +as he commanded so they did: and they laid at his feet and at his head +two great square stones. Thus being prepared to die, he willed his bodie +after his deceasse to be conueied into Normandie, and buried at Rouen. +<span class="rightnote">His death.</span> +And so after he had receiued the sacrament of the bodie and bloud of our +Lord, he departed this life as afore is said, about the 28. yeare of his +age.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>N. Triuet.</i></span> +His bodie after his death was conueied towards Rouen, there to be buried +accordinglie as he had willed: but when those that had charge to conueie +it thither were come vnto the citie of Mauns, the bishop there and the +cleargie would not suffer them to go any further with it, but committed +it to buriall in honourable wise within the church of saint Julian. +Whereof when the citizens of Rouen were aduertised, they were sore +offended with that dooing, and streightwaies sent vnto them of Mauns, +requiring to haue the corps deliuered, threatening otherwise with manie +earnest oths to fetch it from them by force. Wherefore king Henrie, to +set order in this matter, commanded that the corps of his sonne the king +should be deliuered vnto them of Rouen to be buried in their citie, as +he himselfe had willed before his death. And so it was taken vp and +<span class="rightnote">The bodie of the yong king lastlie buried at Rouen.</span> +conueied to Rouen, where it was eftsoones buried in the church of our +ladie.</p> + +<p>¶ Thus ended this yoong king in his floorishing youth, to whome through +his owne iust deserts long life was iustlie denied, sith he delighted to +begin his gouernement with vnlawfull attempts, as an other Absolon +against his owne naturall father, seeking by wrongfull violence to pull +the scepter out of his hand. He is not put in the number of kings, +bicause he remained for the more part vnder the gouernance of his +father, so that he rather bare the name of king as appointed to reigne, +than that he may be said to haue reigned in déed. So that héere by the +waie a notable obseruation dooth occurre and offer it selfe to be noted +of vs; namelie, that euen princes children, though borne to great +excellencie, and in high degree of dignitie, are to consider with +themselues, that notwithstanding their statelie titles of souereigntie, +they haue a dutie to discharge vnto their parents, which if it be +neglected, and that in place thereof disobedience is substituted, God +himselfe (when politike lawes prouide not to punish such offenses) will +take the cause in hand, & will powre vengeance vpon such vngratious +children. For he will be true of his word both in blessing and curssing, +in blessing the dutifull child with long life and happie daies, and in +curssing the obstinate and froward with short life and vnfortunate +daies, according to the tenure of his law. If this man had liued in the +old Romans time, when aged persons were so reuerenced and honoured (much +more parents) he had beene cut off in the prime of his disobedience, and +present death had beene inflicted vpon him as a due and deserued reward; +which Iuuenal noteth excellentlie well in these words,</p> + + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote">Iuuen. sat 13.</span> +<span class="i0">Credebant hoc grande nefas, & morte piandum,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Si iuuenis vetulo non assurrexerat, & si<br /></span> +<a name="Page_186" id="Page_186" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[186]</span> +<span class="i0">Barbato cuicunq; puer, licèt ipse videret<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Plura domi farra, & maioris glandis aceruos,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Tam venerabile erat præcedere quattuor annis,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Primáq; par adeò sacræ lanugo senectæ.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>King Henrie (after his sonne the king was thus dead) inforced his power +<span class="rightnote">Limoges rendred to king Henrie.</span> +more earnestlie than before to winne the citie and castell of Limoges +which he had besieged, and at length had them both surrendered into his +hands, with all other castels and places of strength kept by his enimies +in those parts, of the which some he furnished with garisons, and some +he caused to be laied flat with the ground.</p> + +<p>There rose about the same time occasion of strife and variance betwixt +King Henrie and the French king, about the enioieng of the countrie +<span class="rightnote">Veulquesine.</span> +lieng vpon Gisors, called Veulquesine, on this side the riuer of Hept, +which was giuen vnto king Henrie the sonne, in consideration of the +marriage betwixt him and queene Margaret the French kings sister. For +the French king now after the death of his brother in law king Henrie +the sonne, required to haue the same restored vnto the crowne of France: +but king Henrie was not willing to part with it. At length they met +<span class="rightnote">The kings of England and France talke togither.</span> +betwixt Trie and Gisors to talke of the matter, where they agréed that +quéene Margaret the widow of the late deceased king Henrie the son, +should receiue yearelie<a name="FNanchor_5_12" id="FNanchor_5_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> during hir life 1750 pounds of Aniouin monie at +Paris, of king Henrie the father and his heires; in consideration +whereof she should release and quit claime all hir right to those lands +that were demanded, as Veulquesine and others. Shortlie after, Geffrey +erle of Britaine came to his father, and submitting himselfe, was +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 30.</span> +reconciled to him, and also to his brother Richard earle of Poictow. +Also I find that king Henrie at an enteruiew had betwixt him and the +French king at their accustomed place of meeting betwixt Trie and Gisors +on saint Nicholas day, did his homage to the same French king for the +lands which he held of him on that side the sea, which to doo till then +he had refused. The same yeare king Henrie held his Christmas at the +citie of Mauns.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">1184.</span> +When the king had set the French king and the earle of Flanders at +agréement for the controuersie that chanced betwixt them about the lands +of Vermendois, he passed through the earle of Flanders countrie, and +comming to Wisand, tooke ship and sailed ouer into England, landing at +<span class="rightnote">The duchesse of Saxonie deliuered of a sonne.</span> +Douer the tenth day of June, with his daughter the dutches of Saxonie, +who was afterwards deliuered of a sonne at Winchester, and hir husband +the duke of Saxonie came also this yeare into England, and was ioifullie +receiued and honourable interteined of the king his father in law.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The archbish. of Colen.</span> +And whereas the archbishop of Colen came ouer into England this yeare to +visit the toome of Thomas late archbishop of Canturburie, the king +trauelled to make an agréement betwixt him and the Saxonish duke +touching a certeine variance depending betwixt them, wherin the king did +so much, that the archbishop forgaue all iniuries past, and so they were +made fréends. Also by the counsell of the same archbishop the king sent +<span class="rightnote">Hugh Nouant.</span> +Hugh Nouant archdeacon of Liseux and others, ambassadours from him vnto +pope Lucius, that by his helpe there might be made some waie to obteine +a pardon for the said duke, and licence for him to returne into his +countrie. Those that were sent demeaned themselues so discréetly in +dooing their message, that the emperour comming where the pope then was, +that is to say, at Verona in Italie, at the earnest suit of the said +pope was contented to release all his euill will which he bare towards +<span class="rightnote">The duke of Saxonie pardoned and reuoked out of exile.</span> +the duke, pardoned him for all things past, and licenced him now at +length to returne home into his countrie, his condemnation of exile +being cléerlie reuoked.</p> + +<p>There died this yeare sundrie honorable personages, as Simon earle of +Huntington son to Simon earle of Northampton, after whose decease the +<span class="rightnote">Death of Noble men.</span> +king gaue his earledome vnto his brother Dauid, or (as Radulfus de +Diceto saith) bicause the said Simon died without issue, the king gaue +the earledome of Huntington vnto William king of Scots sonne to earle +Henrie that was sonne to king Dauid. Also the earle of Warwike died this +yeare, and +<a name="Page_187" id="Page_187" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[187]</span> +Thomas Fitz Bernard lord chéefe iustice of the forests, +which roome Alaine de Neuill had inioied before him. Now after the death +<span class="rightnote">The gouernement of the forests diuided.</span> +of this Thomas Fitz Bernard, the king diuided his forests into sundrie +quarters, and to euerie quarter he appointed foure iustices, two of the +spiritualtie, and two knights of the temporaltie, beside two generall +wardens that were of his owne seruants, to be as surueiers aboue all +other foresters of vert and venison, whose office was to sée that no +disorder nor spoile were committed within any grounds of warren +contrarie to the assises of forests. Diuerse prelates died this yeare +also, as foure bishops, to wit, Gerald surnamed la Pucelle bishop of +Chester, Walran bishop of Rochester, Joceline of Salisburie, and +Bartholomew of Excester.</p> + +<p>Besides these, diuerse abbats, & on the 16. of Februarie died Richard +archbishop of Canturburie in the 11. yeare after his first entring into +the gouernment of that sée. His bodie was buried at Canturburie. He was +noted to be a man of euill life, and wasted the goods of that church +inordinatlie. It was reported that before his death there appeared to +him a vision, which said; "Thou hast wasted the goods of the church, and +I shall root thée out of the earth." Wherevpon he tooke such a feare, +that he died within eight daies after. Then Baldwin who before was +bishop of Worcester succéeded him, he was the 40. archbishop that had +ruled the church of Canturburie. The king and bishops procured his +election not without much adoo: for the moonks pretending a right +thereto, were sore against it. It is reported of him, that after he was +made a white moonke, he neuer eat flesh to his liues end. On a time an +old woman met him, and asked him if it were true that he neuer eat any +maner of flesh; "It is true said he." "It is false quoth she, for I had +but one cow to find me with, and thy seruants haue taken hir from me." +Wherevnto he answered, "that if it so were, she should haue as good a +cow restored to hir by Gods grace, as hir owne was." The same time also +Margaret the wife of the late deceased king Henrie the son, returned +into France to hir brother king Philip, and was after ioined in marriage +with Bela king of Hungarie.</p> + +<p>But after long digression to returne againe to our purpose. The king +being aduertised of the destruction and spoile which the Welshmen dailie +did practise against his subiects, both in their persons and substance, +assembled a mightie armie, and came with the same vnto Worcester, +meaning to inuade the enimies countries. But Rées ap Griffin fearing his +puissance thus bent against him and other the leaders of the Welshmen, +came by safeconduct vnto Worcester, and there submitting himselfe, sware +fealtie to the king, and became his liegeman, promising to bring his +sonne and nephues vnto him as pledges. But when (according to his +promise) he would haue brought them, they refused to go with him, and so +the matter rested for a time.</p> + +<p>After this, king Henrie held his Christmasse at Windsore, and the same +yeare Heraclius the patriarch of Jerusalem, and Roger master of the +house of S. Johns of Jerusalem came into England, to make suit vnto king +<span class="rightnote">Heraclius patriarch of Jerusalem.</span> +Henrie for aid against the Saracens that dailie wan from the christians, +townes and holds in the holie land, taking and killing the people most +miserablie, as in the description of the holie land may more plainelie +appeare, where the dooings of Saladine the Saracen are touched. The +patriarch made earnest request vnto the king, proffering him the keies +of the citie of Jerusalem, and of the holie sepulchre (with the letters +of Lucius the third then pope of Rome) charging him to take vpon him the +iournie, and to haue mind of the oth which before time he had made.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">A councell at Clerkenwell.</span> +The king deferred his answer for a time, and calling a councell of his +lords togither at Clerkenwell, on the 15. of Aprill, asked their aduice +in this matter: who declared to him, that as they tooke it, he might not +well depart so far out of his realme and other dominions, leauing the +same as a prey to his enimies. And whereas it was thought by some, that +he might appoint one of his sonnes to take vpon that iournie, yet +bicause they were not as then within the realme, it was iudged that in +their absence there was no why it should be so decréed.</p> + +<p> +<a name="Page_188" id="Page_188" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[188]</span> +<span class="rightnote">Baldwin archbishop of Canturburie exhorteth men to go to +warre against the Saracens.</span> +Howbeit in the meane time vpon licence granted by the king, that so +manie might go as would, Baldwin the archbishop of Canturburie preached, +and exhorted men to take vpon him the crosse so effectuallie, that a +great number receiuing it, fullie purposed to go on in that iournie. At +length the king gaue answer to the patriarch, excusing himselfe in that +he could go, for he declared that he might not leaue his land without +keeping, being in danger to remaine as a prey to the robberie and spoile +<span class="rightnote">Fiue thousand marks saith <i>Geru. Dor.</i> <i>Ran. Higd.</i></span> +of the French men: but he offered to giue large summes of gold and +siluer to such as would take vpon them that voiage. With this answer the +cardinall was nothing pleased, and therefore said: "We séeke a man and +not monie: euerie christian region well neere sendeth vs monie, but no +countrie sendeth vs a prince; and therfore we require a prince that +néedeth monie, and not monie that needeth a prince." But the king still +alledged matter for his excuse, so that the patriarch departed from him +comfortlesse, and greatlie discontented in his mind: whereof the king +hauing knowledge, and intending somewhat to recomfort him with sweet and +pleasant words, followed him to the sea side. But the more the king +thought to satisfie the patriarch with words, the more wroth and +discontented he shewed himselfe to be; in so much that at the last he +<span class="rightnote">The words of the patriarch to the king.</span> +said vnto him, "Hitherto hast thou reigned gloriouslie, but hereafter +shall thou be forsaken of him, whom thou at this time forsakest. +Consider of him, and remember what he hath giuen thée, and what thou +hast yéelded to him againe, how first thou wast false to the king of +France, and after sluedst archbishop Becket, and now lastlie thou +forsakest the protection of Christes faith."</p> + +<p>The king was stirred with these words, and said vnto the patriarch, +"Though all the men of the land were one bodie, and spake with one +mouth, they durst not vtter such words against me." "No woonder (said +the patriarch) for they loue thine and not thée; that is to say, they +loue thy temporall goods, and stand in feare of thée for losse of +promotion, but thy soule they loue not." And when he had so said, he +offered his head to the king; saieng, "Doo by me euen as thou diddest by +archbishop Becket, for all is one to me, either to be slaine heere in +Europe of a wicked christian, or in the holie land by a Saracen, for +thou art woorse than a Saracen, and thy people follow the prey and +spoile and not a man." The king kept his patience, and said, "I may not +go out of my land, for if I should, mine owne sonnes would rise and +rebell against me." "No maruell (said the patriarch) for of the diuell +they came, and to the diuell they shall." And thus he departed from the +<span class="rightnote">Rash iudgement in an holie father.</span> +king in great displeasure. ¶ Thus haue some written: but by others it +appeareth that the patriarch remained here till the king went ouer into +Normandie himselfe, in companie of whom the patriarch went also (as +after shall appear.)</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i> John the kings sonne made king of Ireland. +<i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +This yeare the last of March, king Henrie made his sonne John knight, +and shortlie after sent him ouer into Ireland, of which countrie he had +made him king. At his comming into Ireland, he was honourablie receiued +of the archbishop of Diueline, and other noble men that had béene sent +thither before him. The king allowed him great abundance of treasure, +but he hauing learned that</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Non minor est virtus quàm quærere parta tueri,<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">keeping it in his coffers (as one now come into a strange place, and not +knowing what he shuld want) would not depart with it so fréelie amongst +his souldiers and men of warre as they looked for: by reason whereof +their seruice was such, that in diuerse conflicts he lost manie of his +men, and at length was driuen through want of conuenient aid, to returne +againe into England, hauing appointed his capteins and souldiers to +remaine in places most expedient for the defense of that countrie. ¶ But +héereof yée may read more at large in the historie of Ireland.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">An earthquake.</span> +On the mondaie in the wéeke before Easter, chanced a sore earthquake +thorough all the parts of this land, such a one as the like had not +beene heard of in England sithens the beginning of the world. For stones +that laie couched fast in the earth, were remooued +<a name="Page_189" id="Page_189" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[189]</span> +out of their places, +stone houses were ouerthrowne, and the great church of Lincolne was rent +from the top downwards.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The king and the patriarch passe ouer into France.</span> +The day next after this terrible woonder, the king and the patriarch +with the bishop of Durham and a great sort of other Noble men of this +realme, passed the seas from Douer to Wissand, and so rode foorth +towards Normandie, where immediatlie vpon his comming thither he raised +<span class="rightnote">The kings message to his sonne earle Richard.</span> +a power, and sent word to his sonne Richard earle of Poictou (which had +fortified the townes and castels of Poictou against him, and taken his +brother Geffrey prisoner) that except he deliuered vp into his mothers +hands the whole countrie of Poictou, he would surelie come to chastise +him with an iron rod, and bring him vnder obedience smallie to his ease. +<span class="rightnote">Erle Richard obeieth his father.</span> +Vpon this message earle Richard being somewhat better aduised, obeied +his fathers commandements in all points, rendring vp into his mothers +hands the earldome of Poictou, and comming to his father as an obedient +sonne, shewed himselfe readie to serue him at commandement with a glad +and willing mind. Soone after this, and about the seauenth houre of the +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> Particular and not generall, saieth +<i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +day, the sunne suffered a generall eclipse, so that no part of it +appeared, and therewith followed great thunder with lightning and sore +tempest, with the violence whereof both men and beasts were destroied, +and manie houses burned.</p> + +<p>Shortlie after this the kings of England and France met and communed +togither for the aiding of them in the holie land, and they promised +indéed to send thither both men and monie: but the patriarch made small +account thereof, for he was much deceiued of that which he hoped to haue +brought to passe, which was, either to haue got the king of England, or +one of his sonnes, or some other man of great authoritie with him into +the holie land: but bicause that would not be, he departed from the +court verie sorrowfull and sore displeased, so that it may be thought, +that then (and not before his departure out of England) he spake his +mind so plainlie vnto the king (as before yee haue heard.)</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 32.</span> +Moreouer, about this time king Henrie obteined of pope Vrbane the third, +that he might crowne which of his sonnes it should please him king of +Ireland, in token of which grant and confirmation, the said pope sent +vnto him a crowne of peacocks feathers, after a feat maner wouen in with +gold.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">1186.</span> +This yeare the king held his Christmasse at Danfrount, and shortlie +after came to a communication with the French king, at the which he +tooke a solemne oth that he would deliuer the ladie Alice the French +kings sister (whome he had as yet in his custodie) vnto his sonne +Richard erle of Poictou in mariage. For the which mariage to be had and +solemnized, the French king granted to deliuer vnto the said Richard the +towne of Gisors, with all that which his father king Lewes promised vnto +king Henrie the sonne (latelie deceassed) in marriage with quéene +Margaret the wife of the same Henrie, receiuing an oth thereto, neuer to +make anie claime or chalenge to the same towne and lands.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie returneth into England. <i>Ger. Dor.</i> +Hugh prior of Witham made bishop of Lincolne.</span> +King Henrie (after he had thus concluded and finished his affaires with +the French king) returned backe into England in Maie, and then was Hugh +prior of Witham instituted bishop of Lincolne after that the see there +had béene void and without any lawfull gouernour almost the space of +seauenteene yeares. This Hugh was reputed a verie godlie and vertuous +man. Before him Walter Constance was nominated to that sée, but bicause +he was made archbishop of Rouen before he was inuested in the church of +Lincolne, he is not accounted in number of the bishops of Lincolne.</p> + +<p>Moreouer king Henrie shortlie after his returne at this time into +England, assembled a great armie, and went with the same to Caerleill, +in purpose to haue entred Galloway, and there to haue chastised Rouland +lord of that countrie, who was sonne to Uthred the sonne of Fergus, for +the iniuries doone to his coosine germains, namelie to Duncane sonne to +Gilbert, who was sonne to the same Fergus, in spoiling him and the +residue (after the deceasse of the said Gilbert) of their parts of +inheritance, vsurping the whole to himselfe. But as the king was now +readie to inuade his countrie, Rouland came to +<a name="Page_190" id="Page_190" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[190]</span> +him, and vsed such +meanes vnder pretense of satisfaction, that he made his peace with the +king, who therevpon brought backe his armie, and did no more at that +time.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Hugh Lacie slaine.</span> +About the same time came newes to the king, that Hugh Lacie was slaine +in Ireland by an Irish gentleman that was his confederate (or rather by +a labourer, as in the Irish historie you may read) whereof the king was +nothing sorie, bicause the same Hugh was growne to so high degrée of +puissance in that countrie, that he refused to obeie the kings +commandement when he sent for him.</p> + +<p>¶ It is to be noted, that when king Henrie had conquered the most part +of Ireland, and set the countrie in some good order, and after his +comming from thence, such capteines as he left there behind him, were +not idle, but still did what they could to inlarge the confines which +were committed to their gouernance: but amongst them all this Hugh Lacie +<span class="rightnote">Hugh Lacies diligence to inlarge his possessions in Ireland.</span> +was the chéefest, in somuch that after the death of Richard earle of +Striguile, the king made him gouernour of the countrie in place of the +said earle, by reason whereof he so inlarged his possessions, that +within a while he became dreadfull, not onelie to the enimies, but also +to his associats, as to such English capteins as were abiding in Ireland +vpon gard of the English frontiers. For if any of them disobeied his +commandement, he would not sticke to chastise them at his pleasure, so +that by such meanes he seemed rather to conquer the countrie to his owne +vse, than to the kings. Wherein he dealt not so directlie or discréetlie +as he might; for,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Homines volunt allici non impelli.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>He had also ioined himselfe in mariage with a daughter of the king of +Unlester, not making king Henrie priuie to the same. Wherevpon the king +hauing sundrie informations presented to him of such his presumptuous +demeanour, commanded him by his letters to returne home, and come before +his presence, which to doo (as before I haue said) he refused, by reason +whereof he confirmed the suspicion which was conceiued of him, to rise +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie not sorie for the death of Lacie.</span> +vpon no vaine coniectures, and therefore the euill that came to him was +nothing lamented of king Henrie, who with good cause was highlie +offended towards him for the contempts and considerations aforesaid.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The death of Geffrey the kings sonne.</span> +This yeare Geffrey the kings son who was earle of Britaine died at +Paris, and was buried in the same citie, leauing behind him (besides two +daughters) one onlie sonne as then in his mothers wombe, of whom she was +deliuered in the night of the feast of Easter next insuing hir husband's +death: he was named Arthur, and succeeded his father in the earledome of +Britaine. His fathers death was occasioned (as men iudge) by a fall +which he caught at a iournie, for he was sore bruised therewith, and +neuer had his health, but finallie fell into a flix and so died.</p> + +<p>About this season pope Vrbane wrote vnto Baldwin archbishop of +Canturburie, granting him licence to build a church at Alkinton, in +honour of S. Stephan and Thomas Becket now reputed a martyr, and that +the fourth part of the offerings which came to the box of Thomas the +martyr should be assigned to the vse of the moonks, & an other fourth +part to the buildings of that church, and an other fourth part to be +giuen to the poore, and the other fourth part remaining he might reserue +to himselfe to bestow at his pleasure. But within a while after, at the +suit and supplication of the prior and couent of Canturburie (who liked +nothing of the former partition) the pope sent letters of prohibition to +the said archbishop, that he should ceasse from building of the fore +mentioned church, bicause the building thereof would be preiudiciall to +the church of Canturburie.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The ladie Ermengard the vicount Beaumonts daughter, maried to +William king of Scots.</span> +About the same time also king Henrie gaue his coosen the ladie Ermengard +(who was daughter to Richard Vicount Beaumont) in marriage vnto Willam +king of Scotland, causing the archbishop of Canturburie to ioine them +togither in the bond of matrimonie within the chappell at Woodstocke, +where he kept great cheere in honour of that marriage for the space of +foure daies togither. And further he gaue at the same time vnto the king +<span class="rightnote">Castell of Edenbourgh.</span> +of Scots the castell of Edenbourgh: and the king of Scots streitwaies +gaue it vnto his wife +<a name="Page_191" id="Page_191" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[191]</span> +the forsaid Ermingard, as a portion of hir dower, +augmented with an hundred pounds of lands by the yeare, and 40. knights +fées.</p> + +<p>The French king required to haue the custodie of the infant Arthur, +heire to Geffrey earle of Britaine: but king Henrie would in no wise +<span class="rightnote">Ambassadours sent to the French king.</span> +grant thereto. Wherefore he sent Walter archbishop of Rouen, William de +Mandeuille earle of Albemarle, and Ranulfe de Glandeuille lord cheefe +iustice of England to the French court, to talke with king Philip about +that matter, so that king Philip hauing heard them, was contented to +staie from attempting force till the feast of S. Hilarie. But in the +<span class="rightnote">Sir William de Walles.</span> +meane time it chanced, that one sir Richard de Walles a knight of the +realme of France went about to fortifie a castell in a village that +belonged to him called Walles, situated betwixt Trie & Gisors. Wherevpon +Henrie Vere (constable of Gisors vnder William earle of Albemarle) was +nothing content therwith, and therefore got a companie togither, & went +foorth to disturbe the worke. Vpon this occasion the seruants of the +said sir Richard de Walles came foorth, and encountred with him in the +field, in somuch that Rafe the sonne of sir Richard de Walles was +slaine, and the residue that were with him fled, many of them being sore +beaten and wounded.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The king of Englands subiects arested in Frāce.</span> +When the French king was informed hereof, he caused all the kings of +England his subiects, that could be found within his countries and +dominion of France to be apprehended, and their goods seized. The +stewards, bailifes, & officers then of king Henrie, did the like by the +<span class="rightnote">The French subiects arested in Normandie.</span> +French kings subiects that chanced to be at that present within the king +of Englands countries, on that further side of the sea. But within a +little while after, the French king set the English subiects at +libertie, and so likewise did the K. of Englands officers release the +French subiects.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 33. <br /> +1187.</span> +At this time king Henrie held his Christmasse at Gilford, and shortlie +<span class="rightnote">Octauianus a cardinall.</span> +after came one Octauianus a subdeacon cardinall, and Hugh de Nouant from +the court of Rome, sent as legats from pope Vrbane into Ireland, that +they might crowne earle John the kings sonne king of that land. But king +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie passeth ouer into Normandie.</span> +Henrie made a delaie therein, taking the legats with him into Normandie, +whither he sailed at the same time, and landing at Wissand, he went from +thence into Normandie, and shortlie after came to a communication with +the French king, at a place called Vadum Sancti Remigij where after much +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +talke they could not agrée, by reason the French king demanded things +vnreasonable, and so they departed without any thing concluded [sauing a +truce] till after Whitsuntide.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Jerusalem taken.</span> +About the same time, the citie of Jerusalem was taken by Saladine the +chéefe prince of the Saracens. Wherevpon much conference was had among +the christian princes for the succoring of those christians, which as +yet held and defended other péeces in the holie land, so that by +publishing of the popes buls, manie tooke on them the crosse: and +amongst other Richard the sonne of king Henrie (without anie licence +obteined of his father) receiued the same, vowing to go thither out of +hand, and to fight against Gods enimies to the vttermost of his power.</p> + +<p>In the meane time the grudge still increased betwixt king Henrie and +Philip the French king, partlie for one cause, and partlie for an other, +<span class="rightnote">Out of the annales of France written by Nicoll Gallis.</span> +but speciallie one cheefe occasion was for that earle Richard deferred +the dooings of his homage vnto king Philip for the dutchie of Poictou, +which by his fathers appointment he now inioied and held. The French +king to preuent his enimies, immediatlie vpon the expiring of the truce +raised a power, and entring into the dominions belonging to king Henrie, +wasted the countrie till he came vnto Chateu Raoul: about which castell +also he foorthwith planted his siege.</p> + +<p>When king Henrie was aduertised hereof, he raised his power also, and +togither with his sonne earle Richard came with all spéed to succour his +people, and to saue his castell from the hands of his enimies. Now when +he approched néere vnto the place, he pitcht downe his tents ouer +against the one side of the French campe, and earle Richard on the +other, so that they were readie to assaile the French king on both sides +<a name="Page_192" id="Page_192" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[192]</span> +at once, but before they came to ioine battell, by the mediation of a +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +cardinall (as some write) or (as other saie) through meanes made by the +earle of Flanders, the matter was taken vp. For earle Richard through +persuasion of the said earle of Flanders came to the French king, and +agréed with him, before that his father king Henrie was resolued of any +such matter for his part, so that he was now in a maruellous +perplexitie, & almost to séeke what was best to doo, as a man fearing +his owne suertie, by reason of mistrust which he had in his sonne +Richard; but yet at the length through humble suit made by his said +<span class="rightnote">A truce granted.</span> +sonne vnto the French king, a truce was granted by the space of two +yeares.</p> + +<p>Earle Richard, after the matter was thus taken vp, went into France with +the French king, of whom he was so honoured whilest he was there, that +they kept one table at dinner and supper in the daie time, and was (as +was said) one bed serued them both to sléepe on in the night.</p> + +<p>In the meane time king Henrie hearing of all this, fell into great +suspicion whereto this great familiaritie betwixt the French king and +his sonne would tend, and doubting the likeliest, sent for him to +<span class="rightnote">Erle Richard giueth his father faire words.</span> +returne vnto him. But earle Richard perceiuing his father to mistrust +his loialtie, gaue faire words, and promised to returne with all +conuenient spéed. Howbeit he ment an other matter, and so departing from +<span class="rightnote">He seizeth vpon his fathers treasure.</span> +the French court, came to Chinon, where he got into his hands a great +portion of his fathers treasure that was kept there, against the will of +him that had the custodie of it, and taking it thus awaie with him, he +began to fortifie his castels and townes within his countrie of Poictou, +and clearlie refused to come backe to his father for a time, although at +length forsaking the counsell of naughtie men, he turned home vnto him, +and humblie submitted himselfe, in such wise as to his dutie +apperteined. And for the more assurance therof, he renewed his fealtie, +in receiuing an oth vpon the holie euangelists. Which doone, king Henrie +went into Britaine with an armie, and woone the castell of Mountreleis +by siege, which one Henrie de Lions, and one Guinemer his brother had +gotten into their hands, after the deceasse of Geffrey earle of +Britaine.</p> + +<p>This yeare the twentie of October, the citie of Chichester was almost +wholie consumed to ashes by mischance of fire. The head church with the +bishops palace, and the houses of the canons were burnt euen downe to +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 34. <br /> +1188.</span> +the ground. After this king Henrie held his Christmasse at Caen, from +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie returneth into England.</span> +whence he went to Harfleet, and there taking the sea passed ouer into +England. The French king hearing by and by of his departure, assembled a +great armie, and threatned to destroie the countrie of Normandie, and +other lands on that side the sea, except king Henrie would deliuer into +his hands the towne of Gisors, with the appurtenances, or cause his +sonne Richard earle of Poictou to take to wife his sister Alice, +according to his promise.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie passeth againe into Normandie.<br /> +<i>Polydor.</i><br /> +Heauie newes from the east parts.</span> +When king Henrie was aduertised hereof, he turned with all speed into +Normandie, that he might prouide for timelie resistance, if the French +king came forward to inuade his dominions. About the selfe same time +came newes out of the holie land, that Saladine after the winning of +Jerusalem, pursued his victorie with such successe, that he had taken +from the christians the more part of all other towns and strengths +within the land. These newes were nothing pleasant to the christian +princes, and namelie the two kings Henrie and Philip seemed sorowfull +for the same, and therefore came to an enterview togither on the 21. day +<span class="rightnote">An enteruiew betwixt the two kings.</span> +of Januarie betwixt Trie and Gisors, where the archbishop of Tire was +present through whose earnest exhortation the two kings were made +<span class="rightnote">The two kings receiue the crosse. The French wear red +crosses, The English white, The Flemings gréene.</span> +freends, and the same day receiued the crosse at his hands in purpose to +make a iourneie togither against those Saracens that had doone such +iniuries to the christian name. And for a difference that one nation +might be knowne from an other, the French king and his people tooke vpon +them to weare read crosses, the king of England and his subiects white +crosses: but the earle of Flanders and his men ware gréene.</p> + +<p>Herewith they departed asunder, each one repairing to their countries to +prouide their armies, and make them in readinesse to set forward by a +day towards this necessarie +<a name="Page_193" id="Page_193" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[193]</span> +iournie. King Henrie comming to Chinon, by +<span class="rightnote">An aid granted to them in the Holie Land. <i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +aduise of his councell, ordeined that euerie one of his subiects should +yeeld a tenth part of his reuenues and mooueable goods for that yeare +towards the aid of them in the holie land (corne of that yeares growth +excepted, and also all armour, horsses, bookes, apparell, ornaments of +chappels, and pretious stones, which should not come in the rate of +goods now taxed, nor be charged with this paiment.) Moreouer those +knights and men of warre that were appointed to go in this iourneie +paied nothing, but had that monie also towards their furniture, which +were gathered of their tenants and farmers, howbeit burgesses and others +that tooke vpon them the crosse without license of their lords, paied +his tenth, so that none of them went free.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Good orders and discipline instituted.</span> +There were also good orders deuised, both for the aduancement of Gods +glorie, and the releefe of the common-wealth, as that no man should +sweare in any outragious maner, that no man should plaie at cards, dice +or tables, and that no maner of person after Easter should weare any +costlie furs or cloth of scarlet, nor that men should vse to haue their +tables serued with more than two dishes of meat at one meale, nor should +haue their apparell cut, iagged, or laced: and further, that none of +them should take any women foorth with them in this iourneie, except +such a landresse, of whome there might not growe anie suspicion of +wanton life. It was also ordeined, that the monie of such as died in +this iournie, should go towards the finding and maintenance of their +seruants and of poore people, and towards the aid of the christians in +the holie land. Moreouer, the pope granted that all those that went +foorth in this iournie, repenting and confessing their sinnes, should be +<span class="rightnote">The king returneth into England.</span> +absolued and pardoned of the same. The king hauing thus taken for his +businesse in the parts on the further side the sea, came now ouer into +England againe, landing at Winchelsey on a Saturday the thirtith day of +<span class="rightnote">A council holden at Gaitington. <i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +Januarie, and calling a councell togither at Gaitington, which is eight +or nine miles from Northampton, he there declared what orders he had +taken for his iournie into the holie land. Wherevpon the bishops of +Norwich and Lincolne, and a great number of other people tooke vpon them +the crosse at the preaching of the archbishop of Canturburie, and the +bishop of Rochester.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">A tenth leuied.</span> +This doone, king Henrie tooke order also for the leuieng of the tenth, +as well here in England, as he had doone in the parts subiect to him on +the further side the sea. He also sent Hugh bishop of Durham, and other +both spirituall and temporall persons, vnto William king of Scots, to +gather the tenth likewise within his countrie, but he met them betwixt +<span class="rightnote">The king of Scots.</span> +Wark and Brightham, and would not suffer them to enter into Scotland, +but he offered to giue vnto the king of England in recompense of the +tenths, and for to haue againe his castels, the summe of 5000. marks of +siluer, which could not be accepted. The French king likewise gathered +the tenths in his countrie towards this intended iournie. But by the +<span class="rightnote">The good meaning of the two kings disappointed. <i>Polydor.</i></span> +working of some wicked spirit (as we may well thinke) which enuied the +aduancement or the christian common-wealth, that good meaning of the two +kings was broken and disappointed: for the peace latelie concluded +betwixt them continued not long vnuiolated.</p> + +<p>The French writers impute the fault thereof vnto English men, and the +English writers laie it to French men. The French writers say, that +earle Richard the son of king Henrie in breach of the league, made warre +<span class="rightnote">Reimond earle of Tholouze.</span> +vpon Reimond earle of Tholouze. The English writers reproue the French +king as a wicked man, in that he should of purpose breake the peace and +moue warre against king Heurie, to withdraw him from going to make warre +against the Saracens, to the which enterprise, he was wholie bent and +inclined. Such is the maner of manie writers, who more affectionat to +the loue of their countrie than to the truth, doo not obserue the law of +histories in their writings, but rather inueie one against another in a +bralling and reprouing maner.</p> + +<p>¶ Examples hereof are more than by any possibilitie may be remembred, +and namelie for breuitie sake George Bucchanan in the 8. booke of his +Scotish historie verie reprochfullie speaketh of Richard Grafton (a +right reuerend man whiles he liued and of entier +<a name="Page_194" id="Page_194" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[194]</span> +name also being dead) +charging him with ignorance, and the report of a shamelesse lier. Whose +case, bicause it is not so conuenient to be handled in this place as els +<span class="rightnote">* Where he shall be fellie & sufficientlie answered.</span> +where, we will remit to the reigne of* Edward the third, in whose time +John Balioll was king of Scots, cleere him (as well as we can) from a +Scotish slander. Another example also we haue, and that most notorious, +of Gabriel Prateolus the Jesuit, who hauing neuer beene in England, nor +yet vnderstanding the English toong, blusheth not to say that the +translation of the English bible hath in it a thousand faults. O +singular and insufferable impudencie, when men passe not what they vomit +and cast vp out of a full gorge surfetting with malice and rancour! But +what shall we say,</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Horat. in art. poet.</i></span> +<span class="i0">Omne superuacuum pleno de pectore manat.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> The nobles of Poictou rebell against earle +Richard.</span> +In deed (as Roger Houeden and other doo witnes) the foresaid earle +Reimond, and also Aimer earle of Angolesme, Geffrey de Racon, and +Geffrey de Lusignan, with the most part of all the nobles of Poictou, +made warre against earle Richard, and he held tacke against them all, +and in the end ouercame them. Amongst other of earle Reimonds part whom +<span class="rightnote">Peter Seille</span> +he tooke, was one Peter Seille, by whose counsell earle Reimond had +taken diuerse merchants of Poictou that were subiects to earle Richard, +& doone manie other displeasures to him and to his countrie, wherefore +earle Richard kept this Peter in verie close prison, and would not put +him to his ransome: in somuch that earle Reimond tooke two of the king +of Englands knights, sir Robert Poer, and sir Richard Fraser, as they +were returning from Compostella, where they had béene to visit the bodie +of S. James, but they were quicklie set at libertie by the French kings +commandement, for the reuerence of S. James whose pilgrims they were.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Erle Richard inuadeth the earle Tholouze lands.</span> +After this, earle Richard entred with a great armie into the lands of +earle Reimond, wasted the same, and tooke by siege a castell of his +situate néere vnto Tholouze, called Moisac: whereof the French king +hearing, sent out of hand to the king of England, requiring to know if +the damages doone by his sonne earle Richard vnto him & his people in +Tholouze, were doone by his commandement, for the which he demanded +restitution. Herevnto the king of England answered, that his sonne earle +Richard did nothing in that behalfe, either by his knowledge or +commandement: but that as he had signified to him by the archbishop of +Dublin, what soeuer he did therin, was doone by the counsell of the +French king himselfe.</p> + +<p>Howsoeuer this matter went, certeine it is, that king Philip taking +<span class="rightnote">Annales de France.</span> +weapon in hand, vpon a sudden entred into Berrie, and tooke from king +Henrie Chasteau Raoull, Brezancois, Argenton, Mountrichard, Mountresor, +Vandosme, Leprose, Blanc en Berrie, Culan and Molignon. Wherfore king +Henrie (who was at this<a name="FNanchor_5_13" id="FNanchor_5_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> time in England about to prepare an armie to go +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> The archbishop of Canturburie with the bishops +of Chester, saith <i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +therewith into the holie land) when he heard thereof, with all spéed he +sent Baldwin archbishop of Canturburie, and Hugh bishop of Durham ouer +into France, to appease the French kings displeasure with courteous +words and reasonable persuasions if it might be: but when that could not +be brought to passe, he sailed ouer into Normandie himselfe, with an +armie of Englishmen and Welshmen, landing with the same at Herflue the +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +10. daie of Julie, after he had beene sore tossed by a cruell tempest +that rose as he was on the sea, to the great danger of his person, & all +that were with him.</p> + +<p>Now after his comming to land, he repaired vnto Alencon, increasing his +power by gathering vp souldiers and men of warre out of Normandie and +<span class="rightnote">Chateau Roux it is called in the French annales: but y<sup>e</sup> +chronicles of Aniou name it Chasteau Raoul, and rightlie as I thinke.</span> +other his countries on that side the sea. In the meane time his sonne +Richard earle of Poictou entred into Berrie with a mightie armie, and +the French king deliuering Chateau Raoull vnto the keeping of sir +William de Berres returned into France, so that earle Richard spoiled +and wasted the lands of those earls and barons which tooke the French +part exceedinglie. The French king kept him as yet within France, and +durst not come foorth now after the ariuall of king Henrie, but manie +enterprises were atchiued by the capteines on both sides. Philip bishop +of Beauuois inuading the frontiers of Normandie, burned Blangeuille, +<a name="Page_195" id="Page_195" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[195]</span> +belonging to the earle of Augi, and the castell Albemarle (that belonged +to William de Mandeuille, whereof he bare the title of earle) and wasted +the countrie round about. The French king also came to the towne of +Trow, and burned it, and tooke 40. men of armes there, but the castell +he could not win. On the other part, Richard earle of Poictou tooke a +<span class="rightnote">Sergeants.</span> +strong place called Les Roches, beyond Trow towards Vandosme, with 25. +men of armes, and 60. yeomen.</p> + +<p>About this time king Henrie sent ambassadours vnto the French king, as +Walter the archbishop of Rouen, John bishop of Eureux, and William +Marshall, to require restitution for the damages doone to him and his +people. And furthermore, that if the French king refused to make +restitution, then had they in commandement to declare defiance against +him. Wherevnto the French king answered, that he would not giue ouer to +make warre till he had Berrie, and the countrie of Veuxin or Veulgesine +wholie in his possession. Wherefore king Henrie with a mightie armie (on +the tuesdaie after the feast of the decollation of S. John) entred into +the realme of France, and burned manie townes and villages, approching +the same day néere to the towne of Maunt, where the French king was +thought to be. Now as it chanced, William de Berres and Drogo de Merlo +encountred with Richard earle of Poictou and William de Mandeuille earle +of Albemarle, so that William de Berres was taken by earle Richard, but +by negligence of them that should haue taken héed to him, escaped awaie +vpon his pages horsse. The morrow after also, earle Richard departed +<span class="rightnote">The Welshmen.</span> +from his father towards Berrie, and vpon the thursdaie the Welshmen +burned manie villages, with the castell of Danuille that belonged to +Simon Daneth, and tooke manie rich preies and booties. Also William +Mandeuille earle of Albemarle burned a place called saint Clare, that +was belonging vnto the demaine of the French king.</p> + +<p>But see, when the English were fullie bent to prosecute the warres (with +all extremitie) now in hand, there came messengers vnto king Henrie from +the French king, requiring him that he would grant a peace to be had +betwixt them, with promise that if he would condescend therevnto, that +he should receiue by waie of restitution all that the French king had +<span class="rightnote">The two kings come to a treatie.</span> +now taken from him in Berrie. Herevpon they came to a communication +betwixt Trie & Gisors, and when they could not agrée, the French king +caused a great elme standing betwixt those two places to be cut downe, +<span class="rightnote">An elme cut downe.</span> +at which the kings of England and France were accustomed to méet when +they treated of matters in controuersie betwixt them, swearing that from +thencefoorth there should neuer be anie more méetings holden at that +place.</p> + +<p>Afterward, when the earle of Flanders and the earle of Blois with +diuerse other earles and barons of the Realme of France, laid their +armor aside, protesting openlie that they would not put on the same +<span class="rightnote">A commendable protestation and worthie to be noted.</span> +againe to make warre against any christian, till they should returne +from their iournie which they had vowed into the holie land, the French +king destitute of men to serue him, made sute once againe to king +Henrie, that they might méet and talke of peace, which was hardlie +granted, and so they met on the morrow after saint Faithes daie, or the +<span class="rightnote">Castellium.</span> +seauenth of October, at Chattellon, where they entreated of a forme of +peace, so that the French king should haue restored all that he had +taken within the countries belonging to king Henrie, and likewise +Richard earle of Poictou should deliuer vp vnto the earle of saint Giles +(otherwise called earle of Tholouse) all that he had taken from him +since the breach of the last truce. But when king Henrie would not +deliuer the castell of Pascie in pledge to the French king, they +departed in sunder (as before) without any thing concluded. The king of +France after this tooke the castell of Paluell.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">An other treatie betwixt the two kings.</span> +Vpon the eightéenth day of August the two kings came againe togither +about a new treatie of peace betwixt Bonsemblance and Sukennie, where +the French king offered king Henrie, to restore to him all that he had +taken by his last warres if his sister Alice might be ioined in marriage +with Richard erle of Poictou, now eldest sonne aliue to king +<a name="Page_196" id="Page_196" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[196]</span> +Henrie, +and that all king Henries subiects might doo homage and sweare fealtie +to the same Richard. But king Henrie after the old prouerbe, Ictus +piscator sapit, hauing bought his experience with the féeling of smart, +& bearing in memorie the iniuries done to him by his sonne Henrie, after +such his aduancement to kinglie degrée, would not grant the French kings +request herein. Wherevpon a further mischeefe happened, for his sonne +earle Richard (taking displeasure that his father should denie him that +honour, which made altogither for his more assurance to succeed him as +<span class="rightnote">Erle Richard reuolteth from his father to serue the French +king.</span> +king) fell from his said father manifestlie, and became the French kings +man, dooing homage to him also without consent of king Henrie, for all +those lands that belonged to his said father on that further side the +sea. The French king for his homage and fealtie gaue him Chateau Raoull +and Ysoldun, with all the honour thereto belonging.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +¶ Some write, that the cheefest cause which mooued king Henrie to refuse +to ioine his sonne earle Richard and the ladie Alice, daughter vnto the +French king in marriage togither, was, for that he was linked in the +cumbersome chaine of hot burning loue with the same ladie, and therefore +he sought all the shifts of excuses & delaies that might be imagined; so +that it appeared he had no mind to part with hir. The truth was (as +writers affirme) he had alreadie persuaded hir to satisfie his lust, +insomuch that he liked hir so well, that he ment to be diuorsed from his +wife quéene Elianor, and to marrie this yoong ladie, which if he might +bring to passe, and haue children by hir, he purposed to disherit those +which he had by Elianor, and to make the other which he should haue by +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i></span> +Adela his legitimat and lawfull heires. Yet before they departed from +this communication, a truce was taken to endure till the feast of S. +Hilarie. And Henrie bishop of Alba a cardinall that was sent from the +pope to end this controuersie betwixt these two mightie princes, +accursed Richard earle of Poictou, for that by his meanes the troubles +rose and were continued betwixt them.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Beuerley burnt.<br /> +William de Sempringham decesseth.<br /> +Gilbert de Ogerstan.</span> +The towne of Beuerley, with the church of saint John the archbishop, was +in maner wholie consumed with fire, on the 20. of September. Also the +same yeare died William of Sempringham, the author and first founder of +the religious order of Sempringham. Moreouer +Gilbert de Ogerstan a +knight templer put in trust by king Henrie, with others, to gather the +tenths towards the reléefe of the holie land, was prooued to vse +falshood in the receipt, and so was deliuered vnto the maister of the +temple at London to be punished according to the statutes of his order. +Also this yere in the vigill of S. Laurence, there was séene at +Dunstable by diuerse persons a figure of the crosse verie long and large +<span class="rightnote">A strange apperance in the aire.</span> +in the aire, with the shape of a crucifix thereon, and streames of bloud +to their sight seemed to run out of the wounds of the feet, hands and +sides. This strange appearance continued in sight from noone till almost +night.</p> + +<p>¶ Some will deeme this a meere fable, and saie it sauoureth of grosse +superstition and idolatrie, wherevpon they will conclude that no such +fragments poudered with papistrie should be inserted into a chronicle. +But (to auoid all suspicion of iustifieng the fansies of men) note you +this, that in the ecclesiasticall historie, no small number of things no +lesse strange and true than this seemeth vaine and false, are recorded; +yea euen touching the verie crosse. But considering that this our age is +verie nice and deintie in making choise of matter pleasing their owne +humor we will not wade too farre in this kind of argument, which we know +may as soone offend as it is taken, as a thorne may pricke, or a netle +sting when it is touched. Neuerthelesse, we would not wish that the +forme of a thing should be quite condemned for some scandalous peoples +pleasures, whome nothing will please, vnlesse it come out of their owne +drieuat or casket of conceits.</p> + +<p> +<span class="yearnote">An. Reg. 35. <br /> +1189.</span> +King Henrie held his Christmas at Saumur in Aniou, but manie of his +earles and barons were gon from him, and tooke part with the French +king, and with his sonne Richard earle of Poictou. Now when the day was +come, in which the truce expired, the Britains (which had a charter of +couenants of the French king and earle Richard, that +<a name="Page_197" id="Page_197" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[197]</span> +if they concluded +any peace with king Henrie, the Britain should be partakers in the same) +entred into the confines of those countries which still continued their +due obedience towards king Henrie; spoiling and wasting the same on each +<span class="rightnote">A legat.</span> +side with barbarous crueltie. At which time also a legat came from the +pope named John de Anagnia, who assaied both by courteous meanes and +also by threats and menacings to reduce the parties vnto peace and +concord: insomuch that by his procurement they met this yeare after +Easter néere vnto Fiert Bernard, twise within a few daies togither, to +trie if by talke they might sort to some reasonable conditions of +agreement.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. Paris.</i></span> +The last time of those their meetings was in the Whitsunwéeke, at what +time the French king required not onelie to haue his sister Alice +deliuered vnto earle Richard for wife, according to the former +couenants, but also some assurance giuen vnto the same earle Richard, +that he should inherit his fathers lands after his deceasse. Also he +required that earle John might take vpon him the crosse to passe ouer +into the holie land also; for otherwise earle Richard would not go. +<span class="rightnote"><i>R. Houed.</i></span> +Howbeit king Henrie would in no wise consent to any of these demands: +but yet as some write, he offered thus much vnto king Philip, that if he +could be so content, his sonne John should marrie his sister Alice, and +inioy with hir all such things as he demanded in preferment of his sonne +Richard, and that in more large maner than he had requested the same; +But king Philip would none of that.</p> + +<p>Thus how soeuer it was, whilest the one demanded that which the other +thought no reason to grant, they departed without concluding any +<span class="rightnote">King Phillip entereth into the countrie of Maine.</span> +agréement, so that king Philip hauing got by this meanes a good occasion +to further his enterprises, with all his whole puissance entred into +Maine, where he destroied a great part of that countrie, and approched +to the citie of Mauns, where king Henrie as then laie, in purpose to +besiege it; But king Henrie being warned of his comming set the suburbs +on fire, bicause his enimies should haue no succour in them. Howbeit the +flame of the fire was by force of the wind driuen so directlie into the +citie, that what with heat and assault of the enimie, the king being +without any store of souldiers to defend it longer, was constreined to +forsake it. Herewith he was so mooued that in departing from the citie, +<span class="rightnote">The words of king Henrie in his displeasure towards earle +Richard.</span> +he said these words of his sonne Richard to himselfe: "Sith thou hast +taken from me this daie the thing that I most loued in this world, I +will requite thee, for after this daie, I shall depriue thée of that +thing which in me should most please thée, euen mine owne hart."</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">Mauns yéelded to the French king. <i>Wil. Paruus.</i></span> +Being thus driuen to leaue the defaced citie of Mauns, he repaired vnto +Chinon, the citizens whereof being left destitute of aid, yéelded +themselues to the French king, who taking a great pride in his dooings +for that victorie, passed ouer Loire, and wan the citie of Towrs, +wherein he placed a garison, and so hauing sped his businesse with good +<span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> +successe, brought home his armie laden with preies & booties. King +Henrie being thus put to the worsse, and not perceiuing anie readie +meane how to recouer his losses, began to despaire in himselfe, and +therefore of necessitie thought it best to séeke for peace, but his suit +<span class="rightnote">The earle of Flanders séeketh to agrée the parties. <i>Matth. +Paris.</i></span> +was in vaine: for the enimie hauing now the aduantage, would not grant +to agrée vpon any reasonable conditions.</p> + +<p>At the last Philip the earle of Flanders and William archbishop of +Reimes, with Hugh duke of Burgoine, came to king Henrie to moue waies of +agréement, and to conclude the same betwixt him on the one partie, and +the French king and earle Richard on the other partie. Earle Richard had +the Britaines and them of Poictou confederate with him vnder such +conditions, as he might not agrée with his father, vnlesse they might be +<span class="rightnote">A peace concluded.</span> +comprised in the agréement. At length they agreed vpon conditions, not +altogither aduantageable to the king of England, yet in the end, Chateau +Raoul was restored to king Henrie with all that had béene taken from him +since the time that the French king & he tooke vpon them the crosse: on +the other part king Henrie did homage to the French king, which, in the +beginning of this warre he had surrendred and renounced. He was bound +<span class="rightnote">Thirtie thousand to the K. and twentie to the barons of +France, saith <i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +also to paie to the French king 20. thousand markes for the aid which +earle Richard +<a name="Page_198" id="Page_198" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[198]</span> +had receiued of him: moreouer to resigne and acquite vnto +the French king, all that which either he or his predecessours held or +possessed within Aluergue. Other articles there were which king Henrie +agréed vnto some against his will, as the deliuerie of the ladie Alice +or Adela, and such other, which (as not much materiall) we passe ouer.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Rog. Houed.</i> At Gisors saith <i>Ger. Dor.</i></span> +This peace was concluded not farre from Towrs, in a place appointed +conuenient for both the kings to méet in, about the feast of the +apostles Peter and Paule. And (as writers record) there chanced great +thunder and lightening at the verie time when the two kings came to +enteruiew and talke togither, so that the thunderbolt did light betwixt +<span class="rightnote">Strange thunder & lightning.</span> +them two: & yet (notwithstanding such thunder & lightening) the aire was +cleare and nothing troubled. The two kings parted a sunder through feare +thereof for that day, and on the next day the like chance happened, +greatlie to the terrour of them both. Which mooued king Henrie the +sooner to condescend to the agreement.</p> + +<p>Moreouer this is not to be forgotten, that when all matters were quieted +and accorded amongst them, King Henrie required to haue all their names +deliuered vnto him in writing, which had promised to take part (and were +ioined as confederates) with the French king and earle Richard. This was +granted, and when the roll was presented vnto him, he found his sonne +John the first person that was named in that register, wherewith he was +so troubled and disquieted in his mind, that comming to Chinon he felt +such gréefe hereof, that he curssed euen the verie daie in which he was +borne, and as was said, gaue to his sonnes Gods cursse and his, the +which he would neuer release, although he was admonished to doo it both +of sundrie bishops and other religious and godlie men. Thus saith +Houeden.</p> + +<p>Howbeit, it is not like that earle Richard at this time had procured his +brother John to be confederate with him in his rebellious dealings, but +rather bicause earle Richard had some suspicion, least his father would +make John his heire and successour in the kingdome, it might be a +policie wrought by the French king and earle Richard, to alienate his +fathers mind from the said John.</p> + +<p>¶ These euils were estéemed to fall vnto king Henrie by the iust +iudgement of God, for that being admonished diuerse waies, as well by +diuine reuelation, as by the wholesome aduise of graue men, as Hugh +bishop of Lincolne and others, he would not reforme his licentious +appetite of heaping vp sinne vpon sinne, but still wallowed therein to +his owne destruction. Wherevpon being brought to such an extremitie as +ye haue heard, he was taken with a greeuous sicknesse, which bringing +him to vtter desperation of recouering of health, he finallie departed +this life, though more through verie anguish and gréefe of his late +losse and troubles susteined, than by the force of his bodilie disease +<span class="rightnote">King Henrie departeth this life.</span> +(as writers haue affirmed.) But howsoeuer it was, he ended his life the +sixt of Julie in the 61. yeare of his age, and after he had reigned 34. +yeares, nine moneths, and two daies, which was in the yeare after the +<span class="yearnote">1189.</span> +birth of our sauiour 1189. and of the creation of the world 5155. His +bodie was buried at Founteuerard, which is an abbeie situate not farre +from the towne of the eagle within the dutchie of Alanson.</p> + +<p>Immediatlie vpon his death, those that were about him, applied their +market so busilie in catching and filching awaie things that laie readie +for them, that the kings corps laie naked a longtime, till a child +<span class="rightnote">His surname whereof it came.</span> +couered the nether parts of his body with a short cloke, and then it +séemed that his surname was fulfilled that he had from his childhood, +which was Shortmantell, being so called, bicause he was the first that +brought short clokes out of Aniou into England. As his sonne Richard met +the corps going towards the buriall, suddenlie there issued bloud out of +the dead bodies nosthrilles, which was taken for a signification that it +abhorred the presence of so wicked a son, which in his life time had so +persecuted the father. His death was signified by a maruellous strange +<span class="rightnote">A strange maner of fight betwixt fishes.</span> +woonder, for a few daies before he died, all the fishes in a certeine +méere or poole in Normandie, leapt foorth on land in the night season, +and fought togither with such a noise, that a great +<a name="Page_199" id="Page_199" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[199]</span> +multitude of men +came running thither to behold the woonder, and could not find on fish +aliue in the meere.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The issue of Henrie the second. His sonnes. His daughters.</span> +He had issue by his wife quéene Elianor (as may appeare by that which +alreadie is rehearsed) foure sonnes, Henrie, Richard, Geffrey, and John, +besides two other that died yoong, as some authors haue recorded: also +three daughters, Maud, married vnto Henrie the duke of Saxonie; Elianor +the wife of Alfonse the eight of that name king of Castile, and Joane +<span class="rightnote">His base sons.</span> +giuen in marriage vnto William king of Sicill. He had also two bastard +sonnes by a concubine, the one named William, & the other Geffrey. He +<span class="rightnote">The constitution of his bodie.</span> +was of bodie fleshie and strong, and could abide verie patientlie the +displesures both of cold and heat, he had a large head, a broad breast, +a broken voice, and was furthermore verie spare of diet, cheefelie +bicause he would not be too fat; and therefore when he was at quiet +without any trouble of warres, he would exercise himselfe in hunting or +<span class="rightnote">His stature.</span> +trauelling abroad. He was of a good stature and verie well-formed, of a +comelie countenance, partlie red heared, with graie eies, of wit quicke, +and of a perfect good memorie, so that he would long remember those +<span class="rightnote">His qualities and conditions of mind.</span> +things which he had either read, heard, or seene. He was stout of +stomach, and more constant in time of aduersitie than in time of +prosperitie, except at the time of his death, when being destitute in +maner of all his fréends, he shewed himselfe almost in despaire. He was +liberall towards all men, oftentimes giuing rewards to his souldiers +ouer and besides their wages.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Radulphus de Diceto.</i></span> +Moreouer, of nature he was pitifull towards the poore, as it well +appeared by diuerse his charitable deeds; as for example. When in the +yeare 1176. there was a great dearth & scarsitie of bread in the parts +of Aniou & Maine, he fed euerie daie with sufficient sustenance ten +thousand persons, from the begining of Aprill, till the time that new +corne was inned: and what prouision soeuer was laid vp in garners, +cellers and storehouses, for the kings necessarie vses, he caused the +same to be imploied towards the reléefe of religious houses, and poore +people. He tooke of his subiects but sildome times any great tributes. +He was verie expert in feats of warre, and right fortunate therein. He +praised his capteins and men of warre when they were dead, and lamented +their losse more than he shewed to loue them when they were aliue. And +this did he of policie, that they might vnderstand that they should be +honoured after death, and therefore feare it the lesse. He was somwhat +learned, and also knowne to be wise.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Radulphus de Diceto.</i></span> +His care to haue iustice dulie ministred in his realme was exceeding +great, insomuch that finding how the shirifes were rather inclined to +seeke their owne gaine, than to deale vprightlie with his subiects, he +appointed other officers to haue a regard to their dooings, as if they +had béene controllers, that they knowing how there were such appointed +to haue a sound ouersight in their dealings, might be the more +circumspect in their duties. He ordeined also punishments for hunters in +forrests and grounds of warren, either by fining them, or by +imprisonment.</p> + +<p>Moreouer, he ordeined that murtherers should suffer death by hanging: +and so for other transgressours he appointed other kinds of punishments, +as some to be condemned to exile, and other to losse of lims, &c.: +according to the qualitie of the offense committed. And to haue the +lawes dulie executed, and iustice vprightlie ministred on all hands, he +was so carefull that he tried all orders of men, in placing them in +roomes of iustice. And lastlie, trusting to find among the cleargie such +as would not be corrupted with bribes, nor for respect of feare or +<span class="rightnote">Bishops chosen principall iustices.</span> +freendship decline from right iudgement, he chose foorth the bishops of +Winchester, Elie and Norwich to be principall iustices of the relme, so +as they might end and determine all matters, except in certeine cases +reserued to the hearing of the prince himselfe.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">The vices of K. Henrie.</span> +His vices were these, as they are remembred. In time of aduerse fortune +no man could shew himselfe more courteous, gentle, méeke, and promising +more largelie than he would. But when fortune once began to smile, no +man was more sharpe, hard to deale with, nor more redie to breake his +promise and faith. He was also partlie noted +<a name="Page_200" id="Page_200" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[200]</span> +of couetousnesse: for +although he was liberall towards souldiers and strangers, yet was he +streict inough towards his owne people, and namelie towards his sonnes, +which caused them to estrange themselues and their good wils from him. +He was not so zealous toward the execution of right and equitie as to +the furtherance of his owne priuat commoditie.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote">His incontinencie.</span> +He was out of measure giuen to fleshlie lust, and satisfieng of his +inordinate concupiscence. For not contented with the vse of his wife, he +kept manie concubines, but namelie he delited most in the companie of a +pleasant damsell, whom he called the Rose of the world (the common +people named hir Rosamund) for hir passing beautie, propernesse of +person, and pleasant wit, with other amiable qualities, being verelie a +<span class="rightnote">Rosamund his concubine.</span> +rare and péerlesse péece in those daies. He made for hir an house at +Woodstocke in Oxfordshire, like a labyrinth, with such turnings and +windings in & out as a knot in a garden called a maze, that no creature +might find hir nor come to hir, except he were instructed by the king, +or such as were secret with him in that matter. But the common report of +the people is, that the quéene in the end found hir out by a silken +thread, which the king had drawne after him out of hir chamber with his +foot, and dealt with hir in such sharpe and cruell wise, that she liued +not long after. She was buried in the nunrie of Goodstow beside Oxford, +with these verses vpon hir toome:</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Hîc iacet in tumulo, Rosa mundi non Rosa munda,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Non redolet sed olet, quæ redolere solet.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="nogap">The meaning whereof may be found in Graftons large chronicle, page 77. +in an English septenarie.</p> + +<p> +<span class="rightnote"><i>Ran. Higd.</i></span> +Long time after the death of this damsell, in the said abbeie was shewed +a cofer, that sometimes was hirs, of the length of two foot, in the +which appeared giants fighting, startling of beasts, swimming of fishes, +and flieng of foules, so liuelie, that a man might woonder at the fine +deuise thereof.</p> + +<p>Moreouer, king Henrie was noted not to be so fauourable to the liberties +& fréedoms of the church as he might haue béene. For besides the +persecuting of the foresaid Thomas archbishop of Canturburie, he would +not suffer the legats sent from the pope, to enter within the bounds of +his dominion, till they had sworne that they should doo nothing +preiudiciall to the customes of his kingdome, neither by prescribing +<span class="rightnote">His negligēce in aiding the Christians against the +Saracens.</span> +orders, nor any other maner of act or meanes. He was thought to be +negligent in aiding the christian commonwealth in the holie land. For +though he had appointed twice or thrice to go thither in person, yet +being letted by light occasions, he staied at home, and sent small +reléefe thither, though he was earnestlie called vpon for the same. His +estimation was such amongst forren princes, that Philip king of France +being newlie entred into the gouernement of that realme after his +fathers deceasse, committed<a name="FNanchor_5_14" id="FNanchor_5_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> himselfe and his kingdome to the disposition +and order of king Henrie, as if he had béene regent of his realme, and +gouernour of his person.</p> + +<p>There liued in the daies of this king Henrie the second, diuerse +honourable personages and capteins of great fame, for their approued +valiancie and experience in warlike enterprises, as Robert earle of +Leicester, Hugh bigot earle of Northfolke, Reignold earle of Cornewall, +Robert Ferreis earle of Darbie, Richard Lacie, Roger Mowbray, Rafe de +Fulgiers, Humfrey Bohun conestable of England, Ranulfe Glandeuille, +<span class="rightnote"><i>Bale.</i></span> +William Vesey, & Bernard de Ballioll. Also there flourished in his time +here in this land, men of singular learning in arts and sciences, as +Nicholas Breakespeare, Serlo surnamed Grammaticus, William Rheualensis, +Adam de Euesham, Thomas of Munmouth, Adelbertus Leuita, Geruasius +Cicestrensis, Odo Cantianus, Ealred Rhieuellensis, Johannes +Sarisburiensis, Clemens Lanthoniensis, Walter Daniell, Robert Knought +aliàs Camtus, Robert Folioth, William Ramsey, Senatus Brauonus, Robert +the Scribe, Odo Miremouth, Hugh of Reading, Richard of Douer, William of +Peterburough, Cicerciensis, Bartholomew Iscanus, and Gilbert de +Sempringham, with others.</p> + +<p>¶ And here to make an end with this high and mightie prince Henrie the +second, I +<a name="Page_201" id="Page_201" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[201]</span> +haue thought good to make you partaker of an epitaph, which +we find in Matthew Paris and others written of him as followeth.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<h3>Epitaphium in Henricum secundum regem mortuum & hîc sepultum</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Rex Henricus eram, mihi plurima regna subegi,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Multiplicíq; modo dúxq; comésq; fui,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Cui satis ad votum non essent omnia terræ<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Climata, terra modò sufficit octo pedum.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Qui legis hæc, pensa discrimina mortis, & indè<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Humanæ specula conditionis habe.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Quod potes instanter operare bonum, quia mundus<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Transit, & incautos mors inopina rapit<br /></span> +</div></div> + + +<h3>Aliud.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Tvmuli regis superscriptio breuis exornat,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Sufficit hic tumulus, cui non suffecerat orbis,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Res breuis est ampla, cui fuit ampla breuis.<br /></span> +</div></div> + + +<h3>An epitaph vpon king Henrie the second dead and heere intoomed.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Of late king Henrie was my name,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">which conquerd manie a land,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And diuerse dukedoms did possesse,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">and earledoms held in hand.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And yet while all the earth could scarse<br /></span> +<span class="i1">my greedie mind suffice,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Eight foot within the ground now serues,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">wherein my carcase lies.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Now thou that readest this, note well<br /></span> +<span class="i1">my force with force of death,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And let that serue to shew the state<br /></span> +<span class="i1">of all that yeeldeth breath.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Doo good then here, foreslowe no time,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">cast off all worldlie cares,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For brittle world full soone dooth faile,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">and death dooth strike vnwares.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202" ></a> +<span class="pagenum">[202]</span></p> +<h3>An other.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Small epitaph now serues, to decke<br /></span> +<span class="i1">this toome of statelie king:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And he who whilome thought whole earth<br /></span> +<span class="i1">could scarse his mind content,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">In little roome hath roome at large,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">that serues now life is spent.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +</div> + +<p>¶ Here may be thought that the reigne of the Normans and French men ouer +the realme of England tooke end, a hundred twentie two yeares after the +comming in of the Conquerour; for those that reigned after this Henrie +the second, we may rightlie estéeme to be Englishmen, bicause they were +borne in England, and vsed the English toonge customes, and maners, +according to the nature and qualitie of the countrie.</p> + + + +<p class="lastline">Thus farre the succession and regiment of the Frenchmen ouer this +Iland; namelie, Stephan of Bullongne and Henrie the second.</p> + +<div class="footnotes"> +<h3 >Transcriber's notes</h3> + +<p>There are no footnotes in the original. The original spelling and +punctuation have been retained, with the exception of obvious errors which +have been corrected by reference to the 1587 edition of which the +original is a transcription.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_1" id="Footnote_5_1"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_1"> + +<span class="label">[1]</span> + </a> Original reads 'withcraft'; corrected to 'witchcraft'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_2" id="Footnote_5_2"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_2"> + +<span class="label">[2]</span> + </a> Original reads 'vpon summons giuen vnto him him'; corrected to 'vpon summons giuen vnto him'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_3" id="Footnote_5_3"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_3"> + +<span class="label">[3]</span> + </a> Original reads 'M. Triuet.'; corrected to 'N. Triuet.'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_4" id="Footnote_5_4"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_4"> + +<span class="label">[4]</span> + </a> Original reads 'Poloydr'; corrected to 'Polydor'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_5"> + +<span class="label">[5]</span> + </a> Original reads 'Fench'; corrected to 'French'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_6" id="Footnote_5_6"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_6"> + +<span class="label">[6]</span> + </a> Original reads 'againt'; corrected to 'against'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_7" id="Footnote_5_7"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_7"> + +<span class="label">[7]</span> + </a> The passage referred to is in this reign, An. Reg. 19, 1173.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_8" id="Footnote_5_8"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_8"> + +<span class="label">[8]</span> + </a> Original reads 'thorugh'; corrected to 'thorough'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_9" id="Footnote_5_9"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_9"> + +<span class="label">[9]</span> + </a> Original reads 'euenth'; corrected to 'seuenth'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_10" id="Footnote_5_10"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_10"> + +<span class="label">[10]</span> + </a> Original reads 'Cauturburie'; corrected to 'Canturburie'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_11" id="Footnote_5_11"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_11"> + +<span class="label">[11]</span> + </a> Original reads 'Griffiin'; corrected to 'Griffin'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_12" id="Footnote_5_12"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_12"> + +<span class="label">[12]</span> + </a> Original reads 'yearelelie'; corrected to 'yearelie'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_13" id="Footnote_5_13"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_13"> + +<span class="label">[13]</span> + </a> Original reads 'at this this'; corrected to 'at this'.</p> + +<p class="footnote"> + <a name="Footnote_5_14" id="Footnote_5_14"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_5_14"> + +<span class="label">[14]</span> + </a> Original reads 'commmitted'; corrected to 'committed'.</p> + + +</div> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Chronicles of England, Scotland and +Ireland (2 of 6): England (5 of 12), by Raphael Holinshed + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRONICLES OF ENGLAND *** + +***** This file should be named 16761-h.htm or 16761-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/7/6/16761/ + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Louise Pryor and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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