A memorial of all the English monarchs being in number 151, from Brute to King Charles. In heroicall verse by Io. Taylor. Taylor, John, 1580-1653. 1630 Approx. 105 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 57 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2003-01 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A13472 STC 23774 ESTC S118225 99853433 99853433 18816 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A13472) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 18816) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1475-1640 ; 1611:15) A memorial of all the English monarchs being in number 151, from Brute to King Charles. In heroicall verse by Io. Taylor. Taylor, John, 1580-1653. [112] p. : ports. (woodcuts) Printed by Iohn Beale, for Iames Bowler, London : 1630. In verse. Signatures: A-G. The first leaf and the last two leaves are blank. Running title reads: A memoriall of monarchs from Brute to King Charles. Includes bibliography. Reproduction of the original in the British Library. With added frontispiece portrait of King Charles. Some print faded and show-through; some pages creased, torn, and tightly bound. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. 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Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. The texts were encoded and linked to page images in accordance with level 4 of the TEI in Libraries guidelines. Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Great Britain -- Kings and rulers -- Poetry -- Early works to 1800. 2002-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2002-08 Apex CoVantage Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2002-09 Emma (Leeson) Huber Sampled and proofread 2002-09 Emma (Leeson) Huber Text and markup reviewed and edited 2002-10 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion CAROLUS STUART . Koningk van Engelandt . Schotlandt , En Irlandt , Gebooren A o. 1600. Binnen Londen onthalst , A o. 1649. in 't 24 Iaer zyner Regeeringe . Ant●… van Dyck pinxit . Ioost Hartgers excud . S. Savery f●●tt A MEMORIAL OF ALL THE English Monarchs being in number 151 , from BRVTE to King CHARLES . In Heroicall Uerse by IO. TAYLOR . LONDON Printed by IOHN BEALE , for Iames Bowler , 1630 ❧ TO THE RIGHT Honourable , LIONEL Lord Viscount Cranefield , Earle of Middlesex , &c. MY humble Muse , in lofty manner sings a A Catalogue of Englands mighty Kings : At first I do begin with Troian BRVTE , And following Chronicles I do dispute , Proceeding briefely with their Raignes and Names , Till these blest dayes of our best Monarch IAMES , T is but an Argument that 's written here , That in such time such and such Princes were : But he that meanes their Actions more to know , May read Boetius , Hollinshed , or Stow , Or our true labouring Moderne Master How , Which Authors , Learned Iudgement do allow : Or if you le see how former times doe runne , Reade the laborious paines of Middleton . We haue had Kings since Brute , of royall Blood , One hundred forty sixe , some bad , some good , Foure Queenes in all , this time did only Raigne , Whose Memories in Histories remaine . So in two thousand and seuen hundred yeeres , We had thrice 50 Princes it appeares . This Kingdome here was fiue times won and lost , And Kings ( as God decreed ) oft chang'd and tost . Sometimes one swaid the Scepter , sometime twaine , And sometime seuen at once did rule and raigne , Till sixe ( by bloudy warres ) lost life and throne , And valiant Egbert ioyn'd them all in one . But since ( through Heauens high prouidence ) I see , T is growne more great , and greater like to be : Long may He liue , by whom in one 't is guided , And may they sinke that wish't againe diuided . Then ( Noble Lord ) with good acceptance take This Poem , for the Royall Subiects sake , And though it be not compleate as it should , Beare with it , and accept of what I could , The matter 's worthy , though the manner poore , VVhich makes me heere your Patronage implore , And may you be externall and internall , Blest and aduanc'd to happinesse eternall . Your Honours in all obseruance to be commanded , Iohn Taylor . Yeeres before Christ. Medulla Historioe Anglicanoe BRVTE , THE FIRST KING OF BRITTAINE , began his Reigne , 1. BRVTE . Anno mundi , 2858. Before Christ , 1108. AENEAS from subuerted Troy exilde , In Tuscan wedded King Lati●…s childe : By whom the Realme of Italy he gain'd , And after he had 3 yeeres fully raign'd , He died , and left Ascanius in his stead : To whom Sil●…s Post●…s did succeed . From which Posthumus Royall loynes did spring , * Great Brutus , Brittaines first commanding King : The people then were ( here ) all voyd of pride , Borne Naked , Naked liu'd , and Naked dy'd . Three Sonnes Brute left , Locrinus was his Heire To England , Cambria ( Wales ) was Cambers share , To Albanact ( the youngest ) 't was his lot , To sway the Scepter of the valiant Scot. Thus 'mongst his Sonnes this Ile he did diuide , And after twenty foure yeeres Reigne he dy'd . Locrine 20. yeeres , 1084. LOcrinus , Eldest of old Brutus Sonnes , By Valour vanquisht the inuading Hunnes : He chas'd them , & their power did quite confound , And their King Humber was in a Humber drownd : This Locrine had a Queene , faire b Guendolin , Yet folly led him to the Paphaean sinne , ●…esotted sence , and blood with lust inflam'd , He lou'd a beautie , Beautious Estrild nam'd , ●…y whom he had a Daughter , Sabrin hight , 〈◊〉 whome the King had whole and sole delight : ●…or which the Queene made war vpon her Lord : ●…nd in the Fight she put him to the Sword ; ●…nd after a reuengefull bloody slaughter , Queene Guendoline tooke Estrild and her daughter , ●…nd drownd them both ( to quēch her ielous flame ) ●…nd so from Sabrine , Seauerne got the name . Q. Guendoline , 1064. About this time Saul was King of Israel . VVHen 15. yeeres this Queen had wisely raign'd , She dy'd , & then her Son the kingdome gain'd . Queene Guendoline was allowed the gouernment in her Sonne Madans minority , whose p●…dent reigne is app●…fully recorded in histories . Madan , 1009. VVHen forty yeers this King had rul'd this Ile , ( As Stories say ) he died a death most vile : The wide-mouth'd Wolfe , and keene-tusk'd brutish Bore Did eate his Kingly flesh , & drinke his gore . Madan was a vicious and wicked Prince , the Sonn●… of Locrine and Guendoline . Hee was a great Tyrant . H●… built the To●…ne of Doncaster . Hee had two ●…nes , Mempricius and Mannus . Mempricius raigned 20. yeeres , 991. MEmpricius base , his brother 〈◊〉 slew , And got the Crowne , by murder , 〈◊〉 as d●…e : Maids , wiues and widdowes , hoby 〈◊〉 deflowr'd : He liu'd a Beast , and dy'd , by a Beast , d●…uour'd . Hee killed his elder brother tre●… sly as ●…ee was parlying with him . Hee was eaten of Wolues as hee was hunting . Hee was so beastly , that he was ta●…din histories to be a Sodomite with Beasts in his time . Ebranke , 989. King Dauid reigne ouer Israe●… AT Edinburgh the Castle he did found , Alcluid & York , he built new from the ground He builded Bambrough , and reigned sixty yeeres , Belou'd , as it in Chronicles appeares . Ebranke had 21. wiues , by whom he had 20. Sonnes and 30. Daughters ; hee inuaded Gallia , now France He was the Sonne of Mempricius . In his Reigne reigne King Salomon . Alcluid is Dumbreton in Scotland . Brute the second , 929. IF any noble act Brute Greeneshield did , Hee 's wrong'd , because from Histories th' are hid : Twelue yeeres he rul'd , that 's all I of him read , And how at Yorke , hee Iyeth buried . This Brute was the Sonne of Ebranke and some histories write doubtfully , that he conquer'd France , and that after he receiued a great foyle in field by Brinchild , or Brinchillus , Prince of Henoway , or Henault . Leil . 917. LEil Carleile b●…t , and raign●…d yeeres twenty fiue , And as Fame still keepes dead mens acts aliue : So Leil ( though dead ) 〈◊〉 euer liue by Fame , He lyes at Carleile , which himselfe did frame . Leil was the Sonne of Brute Greeneshield . It is also written that he bu●… the 〈◊〉 of Chester . Lud , or Rudhudibras was the Sonne of Leil , a religious Prince in ●…s superstitious way of Paganisme , for in these 3. Townes ●…ich he built , hee erected 3. Temples , and placed 3. 〈◊〉 or Pagan Bishops in them . Rudhudibrasse , 892. THis King built Canterbury , Winchester , And Shaftsbury , he from the ground did reare : And after twenty nine yeeres reigne was past , At Winchester sore sicke , he breath'd his last . Bladud reign'd 20. 863. BAathe was by Bladud to perfection brought , By Necromanricke Arts , to flye hee sought : As from a Towre he thought to scale the Sky , He brake his necke , because he soar'd too hig●… This Bladud had beene a st●… in Ather ●…id : whence hee brought ●…ny learned men : hee bui●… elue ford , a Colledge I thinke , the first in England : play the fowle or the foole , he brake his necke on the Temple of Apollo in Troynouant . Leire , 844. LEire ( as the Story saies ) three daughters had , The youngest good , the other two too bad : Yet the old King lou'd thē that wrong'd him most , She that lou'd him , he banisht from his Coast. False Gonorel and Ragan , he betweene Them gaue the Kingdome , making ●…ach a Queene . But young Cordeilla wedded was by chance , To Aganippus , King of fertile France : The eldest Daughters did reiect their Sire , For succour to the young'st hee did retire , By whose iust aide the Crowne againe he gain'd ; And dyed when he full forty yeeres had reign'd . Leire built Leicester and was a good Prince . At Leycester he built a Temple to Ianues Bifrons , or Ianues with two faces . Qu. Cordeilla , 805. MAd Morgan , and vnmanner'd Cunedague , Their Aūt Cordeilla with fierce war did plague : They vanquish'd her , and her in Prison threw : And hauing reign'd fiue yeeres , her selfe she slew . She reigned with her Husband Aganippus till he dyed , and then in her widowhood her cruell kinsmen opprest her . Shee stabb'd her selfe in prison , being tyrannously vsed , in despaire of her liberty . Morgan Cunedagu●… , 800. THen Morgan did 'gainst Cunedague contend , And at Glamorgan , Morgan had his end . Then Cunedagus sole King did abide , Full three and thirty yeeres , and then he dyed . Morgan was the Sonne of Gonorel , Leires eldest Daughter , and Cunedagus his kinsman , was the Sonne of Ragan . The Prophet Esay prophesied about this time . Riuallo , before Christ , 766. THree daies it rain'd blood , when Riuallo reign'd , And great mortalitie the Land sustain'd ; Hee forty six yeeres rul'd in Kingly State , And then surrendred to all humane Fate . This Land in this Kings reigne was almost vnpeopled with dearth , death and desolation . In his time Rome was builded , 356. yeeres after Brute : Innumerable multitudes of Horse-flyes or Hornets sprung out of the blood that raind , which flyes stung many people to death . Riuallo was buried at Yorke . Gurgustus , 7●… . Scicillius , 684. A Common Drunkard was this wicked King , Which vice did many other vices bring , Yeeres thirty eight , the Diadem he wore , Scicillius next raignd nine and forty more . Gurgustus and Scicillius were brethren . I finde little mention of any good they did , though they reigned long : They were both the Sonnes of Riuallo . Iago , 636. 〈◊〉 , 612. OF these two Kings , small mention I doe finde , They left bare Names ( for me hori●… ) behinde ; One twentie fiue yeeres : 〈◊〉 other fifty foure , Had in this Land Commanding Regall power . Iugo was a kinsman to Gurgustus , and by his vicious life , he got a sleepy disease called the Lethargy , whereof he dyed . These two Kings were both buried at Yorke . Gorbodug , 559. GOrbodug next did in the Throne succced , Was sixty three yeeres King , and ●…ast decreed , 'Twixt his two Sonnes this Kingdome to diuide , At Yorke hee 's buried , where in peace hee dy'd . Some write that he reigned but 42. yeeres , and that he was buried at Troynouant . Ferex , and Porex , 496. POrex , in Fight his brother Ferex kil'd , For which their mother , Porex heartblud 〈◊〉 These murthers mercilesse , did quite deface , These Princes , last of Royall Brutus Race . Ferex and Porex were the sonnes of Gorbodug . Their mother and her maides chopped Porex in pieces , in reuenge of her sonne Ferex : they reigned fiue yeeres : after whose death the Land was a long time diuided into fiue Kingdomes . Mulmutius Donwallo . 441. THe Land vnguided , Kinglesse did remaine , Till great Mulmutius did the Wreathe obtaine : He builded Temples , made Lawes , Ploughs , high-waies , And 40. yeeres he liu'd in fame and praise . Mulmutius slew Pinnar , Slater , and Rudack , three Kings of seuerall parts of this I le , and at last brought the Kingdome to his sole obedience . He was the Sonne of ●…lotten , Duke of Cornewall : He was the first of all the Kings of this Land that wore a crowne of Gold. Bellinus and Brennus reigned 26. yeeres . 401. THese brethren did diuide the Realme in twaine , But Kings can brooke no partnership in reigne ; They fell at oddes , and Brennus fled , subdude With slaughter of his warlike multitude . To France he scap'd , and was receiu'd in State , In London , Belline builded Bellins-gate Braue Brennus conquer'd Italy and Rome , Bellinus lies heere in an honour'd Tombe . Brennus slew himselfe with the sword , at the fiedge of Delphos in Greece . Bochas . They were the sonnes of Mulmutius Donwallo . Belinus brought Denmarke to be tributary to Brittaine : they were a paire of worthy brothers . Gurguintus , 373. GVrguintus , was Belinus first-borne sonne , Victorously ●…e Denmarke ouer-runne : He the vnpeopled Ireland did supply , Reign'd nineteene yeeres a King , and then did dye . This King gaue leaue to a company of stragling distressed Spaniards to possesse themselules in Ireland , hee lyeth buried at Carelion . Guinthelinus , 456. HE married Mercia a renowned Dame , From whom the iust , wise , Mercian Statutes came : He sixe and twenty yeeres the Scepter swaide , And then with honour in his Tombe was laide . He was the sonne of Arguintus , he builded Warwick and lyeth buried at London . Cecilius , 330. Kimarus , 223. Seuen yeeres Cecilius kept the Regall Chaire , Three yeeres Kimarus rul'd as his sole Heire ; The Syre with loue did well and iustly reigne , His sonne Kimarus was a hunting slaine . About this time , a sauage people called the Picts , beg'd habitation of the King of Scots , and liued in the Marshes betweene England and Scotland . Kimarus was a vicious Prince , and killed by wild Beasts as hee was hunting : he was the sonne of Cecilius . Cecilius was buried at Carelion . Elanius , 321. ELanius ( as most Histories agree ) Was King of Brittaine yeeres iust three times three : What Acts he did , or what Lawes he decreed , They are vnwrit , and therefore are vnread . Elanius was the sonne of Kimarus . Morindus reigned 8 yeeres . 311. THis King Morindus , valiant more then wise , A ran'ning Monster from the Sea did rise : Which many people to destruction brought , Who kil'd this braue King as he brauely fought . He killed the Monster , after the Monster had deuoured him , for he was in the belly of it liuing , and found dead with his dagger in his hand . Gorbomanus . 303. THis King eleuen yeers wore the Brittain crown . He founded Cambridge , & built Grantham Town ; His subiects peace , past Kingdomes he prefer'd , Lou'd and bewail'd , at London was inter'd . He built the Townes of Cambridge and Grantham . Archigalo , and Elidurus . 392. THese brothers were not Kings both at one time , But for extortion ( an vnkingly crime , The Eldest hauing gaind his Subiects hate ) Depos'd , and Elidurus got the State. But he ( not greedy after worldly reigne ) To Archigalo gaue it vp againe . Rul'd tenne yeeres more : thus twenty yeeres in all , His State Maiesticke , did twice rise and fall . Archigalo put away from him and reiected the true and 〈◊〉 Nobility and Gentry : and in their roomes was ●…pplyde with the counsels of flatterers and parasites , which was his downefall . Elidurus , 272. Vigenius , Peredurus , 270. THen Archigale beeing dead and gone , Good Elidure two yeers kept Brittaines Throne . Vigenius , Peredurus two yeeres more , Thrust Elidure from all the sway he bore , But they both dy'd the third time he was crown'd , Elidurus , 261. And reigned foure yeeres more , belou'd , renown'd . Once subiect , twice a slaue , and thrice a King ; Thus Fortunes fauours vp and downe did fling . In these often changes of Princes estates , this Land was miserably vexed . Heere because Hystories make little or no mention of any the doings of the Kings , from the reigne of Elidurus to King Lud , I thinke it fit , onely to insert their names , and the times of their reignes , with their yeeres before Christ. 258. Gorbonian reigned ten yeeres . 248. Morgan foureteene yeeres . 234. Emerianus seuen yeeres . This King was deposed from all Regall gouernment for h●… tyranny . 227. Iuall twenty yeeres . This King was a iust and prudent Prince . 207. Rimo sixteen yeeres . His reigne was blest with abundance of Peace and Plenty . 191. Geruncius twenty yeeres . 171. Catillus ten yeeres . Catillus caused all the oppressors of the poore to be hanged vp : but since his time they are doubly increased . 161. Coylus twenty yeeres . A peaceable King , and a quiet reigne . 141. Porrex fiue yeeres . A good Prince . 136. Chirimus one yeere . Chirimus through excessiue drinking gat his death . 135. Fulgon two yeeres . 133. Eldred one yeere . 132. Androgius one yeere . 131. Varianus o●…●…re . Varianus giuen ●…to lust , purchsed himselfe a short reigne●… and it may bee perceiued , that all these Prince : either by treason , or their ow●… bad liues , were soon brought to their ends , for 25 of them did not reign●… aboue 62 yeeres . 129. Fliud fiue yeeres . 120. Dedamius fiue yeeres . 118. Gurginius three yeeres . 115. Mercianus two yeeres . 113. Bladunus two yeeres . 110. Cupenus three yeeres . 108. Quinus two yeeres . 106. S●…ius two yeeres . 94. Bledgabredus ten yeeres . A great louer of Musicke , and a good Patron to Musician●… . 92. Archemalus two yeeres . 90. Eldolus two yeeres . 88. Rodianus two yeeres . 86. Redargius three yeeres . 84. Samullius two yeeres . 81. Penisellus three yeeres . 78. Pirrhus two yeeres . 76. Caporus two yeeres . 74. Dinellus foure yeeres . A Noble and vertuous Prince . 70. Hellius one yeere . The I le of Ely tooke the nomination from this Prince . There hee built a Palace , and there he dying was buried . Lud reigned 11. yeeres , 66. A Long time after Troynouant was fram'd , It was by Lud , Kair-Lud , or Lud-stone nam'd , He made 〈◊〉 strong with Battlemen●…s and Towres , Defensiue against foes inuasiue pow'rs . Of free Stone for Free-men Ludgate hee founded , Where freemen ( wanting freedom ) are confounded . He dy'd and left two Sonnes , too young for reigne , Wherefore his brother did the Crowne obtaine . Some Writers doe affirme , that this King b●…ilded ●…ondon from Ludgate to London-stone , and that the stone in memory thereof was called Luds stone . Cassibelan , 17. yeeres . 58. LVd deed , the Nobles crown'd Cassibelan , In whose reigne her●… the Romane conquest ●…an , Great Iulius Caesar sailed out of France , And in this Land his Eagle did aduance . But Brittaines bold scorn'd base at first to stoope , Twice Caesar f●…ed , before their warlike troope . The ●…iuill warres , this Kingdome ouer 〈◊〉 , Betwixt Cassibelan , and Luds two Sonnes , Whilst they ( vnnaturall ) sought each others fall , The Romanes tooke aduantage , conquer'd all : Where Caesar , by his high Imperiall doome , Made Brittaine Tributary vnto Rome . Nennius a valiant Duke of this Kingdome , receiued his de●…ths ●…und of Caesar : Yet after that he tooke Caesars Sword from him , and with the same kil●…d La●…ianus a Romane Tribune , and lastly , ma●… the fi●…ld and 〈◊〉 . Caesar built the Castles of Dou●… , Canterbury , and the Tower of London . Theomantius , 37. THen Theomantius ( 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all blood ) The 〈◊〉 Sonne 〈◊〉 o●… his Father 〈◊〉 : Reign'd three and twenty yeeres , a King in 〈◊〉 Whose Picture stands on Luds 〈◊〉 gate . Cimbelinus . IN this Kings reigne , ( the glorious King of Kings In person came , and mans saluation brings ) When through the world all bloody wars did cease , ( For our soules peace ) then came the Prince of peace . Our Sauiour Iesus Christ was borne in his reigne , in the 42. yeere of Augustus Caesar , then being Emperour of Rome : Cimbelinus was the Sonne of Iheomantius , Yeeres after Christ. Guiderius , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , 21. THis King and Sub●…cts , brauely , nobly ioyne , To hold from Rome the tributary Coyne : But Claudius Caesar with an Army came , The B●…t bold rebellious hearts to tame ; One Hamon there ( a Romane ) di●… 〈◊〉 , Himselfe like to a Britaine to 〈◊〉 , Guiderius brauely cha●…de his fo●…s amaine , Was by disg●…ifed Hamon falfely slaine . When Guiderius was King of Britaine , our Redeemer suffered vnder Claudius Tiberius Caesar , being the Romane Emperour . Guiderius was a valiant Prince . Aruiragus , 44. STout Aruiragus being in the fight , The Kings death added fury to his might : Perceiu'd the Britaine Host , almost dismaide , In 's brothers Armour hee himselfe array'd , The Souldiers thought the King againe suruiu'd . With co●…rage new through euery veine deriu'd , Braue Aruiragus , like a Tempest goes , And pell mell topsieturuy throwes his foes . Grear Caesar with his Romane army fled , The King tooke Hamon , and cut off his head , And more , with sharp reuenge his wrath t' appease , Hew'd him piece-meale , and cast him in the Seas , The place long time , this name did then allow , Of Hamons hauen , or Southampton now . The Emperour would quite the tribute free , If Brittaines King his Sonne in law would be . Then Aruarigue did faire Genisse marry , And Claudius Caesar heere a while did tarry , He builded Gloster , whil'st he heere remain'd : The King dyed hauing twenty eight yeeres reign'd . Marius , 73. IN this Kings reigne the lawlesse proling Pict , ( A Nation strange ) did the North part afflict : But Marius , in a battell slew their King , And all their power did to subiection bring . The Picts from Scythia , into Scotland came , Rude , barbarous , ingratefull , hard to tame : For by the Scotsh Kings fauour hauing got Possession , they oft warr'd vpon the Scot. And more and more that Kingdome they annoy'd , Till Kennith Scotlands King , them all destroy'd : Yeeres fifty three reign'd Marius iust and wise , Dyed : and at Carleile his Corps royall lies . Much about this time , Ioseph of Arimathea , after he had buried Christ ( being hated for it of the mis-beleeuing Iewes ) came into this Land , and first planted Christianity heere , built a Chappell at Glastenburgh : Some writers say , that he repaired Chester , and was buried there . Coylus , 124. IN Rome this King was fostred all his youth , He lou'd Peace , Iustice , Fortitude and Truth : He builded Colchester , and did suruiue , Till he had reign'd a Kings yeeres , fifty fiue . Coylus was the Sonne of Marius , hee was buried at Yorke . Lucius , 179. THe first of Kings that was a Christian nam'd , Was Lucius ( with the spirit of God inflam'd ) The Bread of life he did receiue with ioy , The Pagan Idols hee did all destroy , The Flamines and Archflamines he downe cast , And Bishops and Archbishops here he plac'd , He lou'd and fear'd th' eternall Three in one , And dyed when he had 12 yeeres kept the Throne . This was the first Christian King of Brittaine , he caused twentie eight Idolatrous Temples of the ●…agan gods to be made Cathedrall Churches , for the seruice of the 〈◊〉 God ; Elutherius was then Bishop of Rome , King Lucius was buried at Glocester : hee dyed leauing no 〈◊〉 , so that this Land was in a burly-burly 15. yeeres , through want of a King. Seuerus , 194. THis was a Romane Emperour , and was slaine At York the eighteenth yeere of his proud reigne●… Hee was an Alien and a stranger heere , And therefore bought his vsurpation deare : Seuerus was 60. yeeres old when hee tooke the crowne , and caused a wall of Turfe to be made betwixt England and Scotland to kepe this Land from the incursions of the Scots and Picts : the wall reached from Tyne to the Scottish Seas , 112. miles . Bassianus , 212. SEuerus here did wed a Brittish Dame , By whom this King ( their Son ) the Crowne did claime . But after sixe veeres time , he left this Land , And had the Romane Empire at 's command . Bassianus was brought from Rome by his Father Seuerus . Carausius , 290. When Carausi●… reigned , Dioclesian was ●…mperor . Alectus , 292. THis King ( of meane birth ) did the Crown attain After seuen yeeres , was by Alectus slaine : Thre yeeres Alectus did in state recide , Our Protomartyr then Saint Alban dyde . Dioclesian and Maximilian ruled the Romane Empire , when Saint Albane suffered ; Alectus was sent from Rome against Carausius : this Alectus was a cruell Tyrant , and was also slame by Asclepiodatus . Asclepiodatus , 299. ASclepiodatus , ( in a mortall Fight ) Suodude the Romane Generall Gallus might , Kil'd him , and cast him head-long in a Brooke , Whence Gallus or Wallbrooke , for name it tooke , And as Alectus did Carausius kill , So did this King Alectus life bloud spill , And after two yeeres reigne in mortall strife , Asclepiodatus slaine lost Crowne and life . Gallus Brooke or Wallbrooke tooke the name from Gallus a Romane Captaine , slaine by Asclepiodatus , and throwne into that Brooke . Asclepiodatus was after slaine by Coil Duke of Colchester . Some write that Asclepiodatus reigned 30. yeeres . Coil raigned 14. yeeres . 301. COlchesters Duke Coil in the Throne inuested , Was by Constantius Caesar much molested : Till Coil gaue's Daughter to him for his Bride , And paid Romes tribute , that was long denide . The Lady was of beauty most diuine , Faire Hellen , Mother to great Constantine . The King at Colchester , dead , laide in 's Tombe , His Sonne Constantius did supply his roome . This Hellen reedified Ierusalem , and adorned it with ●…oodly Churches . She also walle●… London and Colchester . Constantius , 305. SPaine , Italy , France , Britaines Emperor , Foure yeeres he raign'd heere , with Maiesticke power , True Honour was the ayme at which he shot . Iust , Valiant , these reports his Actions got . This Constantius was Grandfather to Constantine the Great : he came from Rome to this I le , and was buried at Yorke . Constantine , 306 , GReat Emp'ror Constantine , surnam'd the Great : In all respects a worthy Prince compleate , The glorious Gospell , he ador'd , and fear'd , Constantinople famously he rear'd , Maxentius , Romes great Tyrant , ( most abhor'd ) He made him flie from his 〈◊〉 sword . Belou'd , be wail'd , high honor'd and admir'd , In grace with God and men , his dayes expir'd . This worthy Prince Constantine was borne in this Land , the Sonne of Constantius and Hellen. After Constantius decease , our Land was molested by Octauius Maximus and others for many yeers . These times are so diuersly written of in Histories , that a man knowes not which to beleeue most . 84. Constantinus , 337. 85. Constans , 340. THese two were Brothers of the Royall line , And Sonnes vnto the Emperour Constantine : Ambition and debate for Kingly Raigne , Was the vnnaturall cause they both were slaine . Kings and Louers can brook no partners : for these two brothers were each others destruction . 86. Octauius , 345. 87. Traherus , 349. OCtauius Duke of Windsor to oke the Crowne , Traherus came from Rome and put him downe : The Land was ●…ull with hurly-burlies fild , Traherus by Octtauius last was kild . Theodosius was Emperour of the East ●…d Macri●… of the West : Some write that Octauius 〈◊〉 54. yeeres Noncredo . 88. Constantius the third . 353. The Romane Empire he did closely sway , And as a King this Land did him obay : Th' Apostate Iulian was the Emp'rour next , By whom the Christians all were slaine , or vext . Constantius was a victorious Prince , and triumphed in Rome : yet a cruell oppressor , and an Arian hereticke . 89 Maximinianus . 375. NExt Iulian , raigned Valentinian , And after him , succeeded Gratian Maximi●…nus was of life depriu'd , 'Cause he with Gratian for the Empire striu'd . How like Bauius these tyr●…ts confi●…med one another ; these were all Emperours of Rome , & Kings of Brittaine , 90. Gratian. 376. THen Gratian claim'd this Kingdome as his right●… But hauing gain'd it , he was slaine in fight : Fierce warres the Romane Empire did deuide , And Caesars and their Viceroyes fought and dyde . Honorius Romes Tribunall did obtaine , Next after him did Theodosius raigne , Then did the Scot ioyne with the barbarous Pict , This headlesse , Kinglesse Kingdome to afflict . The Romane Scepter we had long obayd , Foure hundred eightythree yeeres Tribute payd ; And now this land shook off their wrongd comand When Ciuill discord had neer spoyl'd this Land. In one battell the whole nation of the Piets were quite ●…xtinguished about this time the Romanes g●…uernement ●…nded here . Gratian was a Brittaine Emperour but foure 〈◊〉 . 91 Vortiger . 447. THis King through murder did the Throne ascend , And had a troublous Raigne , and murdrous end : Constanes ( Constantines ) lawfull Heyre and Sonne , By Vortigers false meanes to death was done . For which ( to keepe the Crowne vniustly gain'd ) The Saxons for his ayde he entertain'd . Then Hengist , with his Brother Horsus crue , In Britaines best bloud did their blades embrew . King Vortiger with doting loue inthral'd , Match't Hengists daughter , beauteous Rowan cal'd : But Saxons troopes , on troopes came in so fast , That Britaines did depriue the King at last . Hee murdered his lawfull Prince , and vsurping the Throne , was enforced to haue ayd of the Saxons , who at the last almost ouer-ran this Kingdome , but the Brittaines deposed Vortiger , and crowned his Sonne Vortimer . 92. Vortimer . 454. THen a Vortimer , the Sonne of Vortiger , Vpon the Saxons made successfull warre : Till he by Rowan was by craft o'r-●…ane , From whose false hands , he dy'd by poys'nous 〈◊〉 Deposed Vortiger ( his Sonne once slaine ) His ill gain'd , ill kept Crowne he gain'd againe : Hengistus with his Saxon fresh supplies , The Plaines of Salisbury did all surprize . The King tooke counsell of his Brittaine Lords , And all in generall to a Peace accords . The Saxons and the Brittaines did agree , That at this meeting all vnarm'd should be : But traitrous Hengist did a watch-word speake , Which did the Law of Armes , and Honour breake , The Saxons vnsuspected drew forth Kniues , Foure hundred , threescore Lords , all lost their liues , All Brittaine Nobles , then the Saxons there , Surpris'd the King , constraining him through feare To giue Kent , Sussex , Suffolke , Norfolke , and That Hengist , King should in those Lands command , But after nineteene yeeres were quite expir'd , * Reuenging Fire , the King in 's Castle fir'd . And thus the Saxons , and Great Hengists Heyres , Won Shire to Shire , till Brittaine all was theirs . 93. Aurelius Ambrose . 466. IN honour of the Nobles basely slaine , This King set vp the Ston●…s on Saru●… 〈◊〉 The Gospell with great zeale he dignifi'd , Raign'd thirty two yeeres , and by poyson dy'd . This King was a Rom●…ne , and brother to Vter Pendragon that succeeded him . 94. Vter Pendragon raigned 18 yeeres . 498. THis King ( by Merlins meanes a skilfull man ) Igrene , the Duke of Cornewals Dutchesse wan : On her he got , ( though illegittimate ) The Christian Worthy , Arthur , stilde the Great . Vter Pendragon poysoned by the Saxons , after he had reigned 18. yeeres . 95. Arthur . 516. OF the nine Worthies was this Worthy one , Denmarke , and Norway , did ●…y his Throne : In twelue set Battels he the Saxons beat , Great , and to make his Victories more great , The Faithlesse Sarazons he ouercame , And made them honour high Iehonah's Name . The Noble order of the Table round , At Winchester , his first inuention found . Whilst he beyond Sea fought to win Renowne , His Nephew Mordred did vsurpe his Crowne , But he return'd , and Mordred did confound , And in the fight great Arthur got a wound , That prou'd lo mortall , that immortally It made him liue , although it made him dye . Full sixteene yeeres the Diadem he wore , And euery day gaind Honour more and more . Arthur the great was buried at Glastenbury . 96 Constantine , the fourth . 542. 97 Aurelius Conanus . 545. COnstantine was by King 〈◊〉 kil'd : Aurelius ( 〈◊〉 ) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yeeres held , Seuen Kingdomes heere at once the Saxons held , And slaughter launc'd , when proud ambition sweld . This Constantine was kinsman to King Arthur , and was slaine by Conanus . Constantine was a wicked Prince , and slaine in battell by his kinsman Conanus , when he had reigned neere 3. yeeres . Of the tyme of this Aurelius Conanus his reigne , there is much variation in Histories . Heere beganne the Heptarchy , or 7 Kingdomes in this Land , namely , Kent , South-Saxons , West-Saxons , East-Saxons , Northumberland , Mercia , and East-Angles : which diuision continued more then 600. yeeres , before it was all vnited into one Monarchy the names of the Kings , & times of their reignes , and limits of their Kingdomes , are hereunder expressed . 1 KEnt was only a kingdome which had 17 Kings , namely , 1 Hengist , 2 Eske , 3 Octa , 4 Ymerick , 5 Ethelbert , who was the first Christian King of Kent , hee was an ayde and helper of Sebert , King of the East-Saxons , in the famous and memorable buildings of S t. Pauls Church in London , and Saint Peters at Westminster . 6 Eabald , 7 Ercombert , 8 Egbert , 9 Lother , 10 Edrick , 11 Withred , 12 Edbert , 13 Edelbert , 14 Alick , 15 Ethilbert , 16 Cuthred , 17 Baldred . These Kings reigned in Kent 372. yeeres , from the yeere of Grace 455. till the yeere 827. 2 The kingdome of the South-Saxons contained the Counties of Sussex and Surrie , it continued from the yeere 488. vntill the yeere 601. being 113 yeeres : they had three Kings , namely , 1 Ella , 2 Cissa , 3 Ethelwolfe a Christian King , 4 Berthrum , 5 Authum . 3 The West-Saxons kingdome , whose beginning was in the yeer 519. and ended , Anno. 166. lasted 561 yeeres , hauing 17 Kings , namely , 1 Cherdick , 2 Kenrick , 3 Chequilin , 4 Cealick , 5 Chelwold , 6 Kingils , a Christian , 7 Kenwald , 8 Eskwin , 9 Kentwin , 10 Ceadwald , 11 Inas , 12 〈◊〉 , 13 Cuthred , 14 Sigebert , 15 Kenwolfe , 16 Brightrik , 17 Egbert , : These Kings had vnder their gouernments , the Counties of Cornewall , Deuonshire , Somersetshire , Wiltshire , Hampshire and Barkshire . 4 The East-Saxons reigned 281 yeeres , beginning , Anno. 527 , and ending in the yeere 827. Their bounds were Essex and Middle-Sex , and their Kings were in number 14 , namely , 1 Erchenwin , 2 Sledda , 3 Sebert a Christian King , that assisted Ethelbert , King of Kent , in the building of the Churches of Saint Paul and Saint Peter aforesaid . 4 Seward , 5 Sigebert , 6 Sigibext , 7 Switheline , 8 Sighere , 9 Sebba , 10 Sigherd , 11 Seofrid , 12 Offa , 13 Selred , 14 Suthred . 5 Northumberland was sometimes diuided into two kingdomes . It contained the Coūties of Yorkshire , Durham , Lancashire , Westmerland , Cumberland and Northumberland : this Kingdome beganne in the yeere of our Lord , 547. and expired in 926. continuing 379. yeeres vnder 23 Kings , whose names were , 1 Ella , 2 Adda , 3 Theodwald , 4 Frethulse , 5 Theodrick , 6 Ethelrick , 7 Ethelfrid , 8 Edwin , 9 Oswald , 10 Oswy , 11 Egfrid , 12 Alkfrid , 13 Ofred , 14 Kenred , 15 Oswicke , 16 Ceolnuph , 17 Egbert , 18 Oswolfe , 19 Edilwald , 20 Alured , 21 Ethelred , 22 Alswald , 23 Osr●…d . Amongst these , Edwin was their first Christian King. 6 The East Angles vnder 15 seuerall Kings , continued 353 yeeres , beginning in Anno , 575. and 〈◊〉 III 914. their Territories were Su●… Nor●…olk , Cambridgeshire and the I le 〈◊〉 , Ely , th●…ir Kings names were , 1 Vffa , 2 Ti●…us , 〈◊〉 Red●…ald their first Christian King , 4 〈◊〉 , 5 Sigebert , 6 Egrik , 7 Anna , 8 Ethelbert , 9 Ethwald , 10 Aldwol●…e , 11 Aswald , 12 Beorn , 13 Ethelred , 14 Ethelbert , 15 Edmund . 7 The seuenth Kingdome were the Mercians , who had 20 Kings and 17 shires vnder their command : their Kings were , 1 Creda , 2 Wibba , 3 Cheorle , 4 Penda , 5 Peada their first Christian King , 6 Wolfere , 7 Ethelred , 8 Kenred , 9 Chelred , 10 Ethebald , 11 Offa , 12 Egfrid , 13 Kenwolfe , 14 Kenelme , 15 Chelwolse , 16 Bernulfe , 17 Ludecan , 18 Whitlafe , 19 Bertwolfe , 20 Burdred . Their bounds and dominions were 17 Counties , as of Northampton , Leister , Darby , Lincolne , Huntington , Rutland , Notingham , Chesshire , Oxfordshire , Staffordshire , Worcestershire , Glostershire , Shropshire , Warwickeshire , Bedfordshire , Buckinghamshire , and Hartfordshire . 98 Vortiporus . 578. 99 Malgo. 581. THis Vortipore from good Kings did decline , Kept his wiues Daughter as his Conc●…ine : And Malgo put his Wife to bloudy slaughter , To liue in ●…ncest with his brothers Daughter . About this time Augustine the Monke , Mellitus , Iustus and Iohn , all learned men , came from Rome , and preached the Gospell to the English men . Vortipore reigned 4. yeeres . Malgo , his raigne was short and wicked . 100. Careticus . 586. GVrmundus hither out of Ireland came , And with the Saxons ioyn'd with sword and flame : The King to Wales did flye , his life to saue , Whereas he chang'd his Kingdome for a Graue . He reigned 3. yeeres : and now the Saxons had all England , the Brittaines and their Kings being expulsed and chased to the West sides of the Riuers Seauerne , and d ee . Cadwane . 613. THis Cadwane did the Saxon force withstand , Of Ethelfridus of Northumberland : And made him to intreate and sue for peace : Raign'd two and twenty yeeres , then did decease . 102. Cadwallin . 635. CAdwallin slew King Edwin , Egfrids Sonne , He Penda Mercias King did ouer-runne : He neuer fought but Conquest home did bring , And eight and forty yeeres did raigne a King. Cadwallin was buried at London in Saint Martins Church neere Ludgate . 103. Cadwallader . 685. THis King renowned was both neere and farre , The last of Brittaines Kings , Cadwallader , The name of Brittaine was quite alterd then , The Kings of England , subiects , Englishmen . Then in this Land , of Kings there raign'd so many , That Subiects knew not to obey all , or any : Their names and times of raigne I meane to tell , Should I write more , my Book too big would swell . Here the inhabitants lost the name of Brittaines , the land being called Anglia , or England , and the people Englishmen . 687. Cadwallader left his Crowne , went to Rome , and dyed there . These Kings following were of the West Saxons . 726 Ethelard was King of the West Saxons . 740. Cuthred succeeded him . 757. Sigebert next him , was slaine by a Swineheard . 758. Kenulphus was slaine by a kinsman of Sigebert . 786. Brithricus . In his time it rained blood . IN the 800. ●…re of Christ , the Danes landed at Portland , but Brithricus beat them backe , and afterwards was poysoned by his wife Ethelburga . Eghricus , King of West-Saxons . 839. Adelnulphus ouercame 〈◊〉 Danes , that came to inuade the kingdome with 350. ships . 857. Athelbald . 860. Athelbrict . 866. Etheldrid . 872. Aelfred . 900. Edward surnamed Senior . Heere end the Kings of the West-Saxons , now follow the Kings of Britaine . 104. Athelstane reigned 15. yeeres . 905. THis King did tame the Welsh , the Danes sub du'd , He conquerd Scotland and the Marches rude : The Danish Gyant Colebrand in Hyde-meade , By Guy the Earle of Warwicke was strucke dead . King Athelstane was crowned at Kingstone , hee brought this Land againe to one sole Monarchy , he was buried at Malmsbury . 105. Edmund . 940. 106. Eldred . 946. EDmond , reigned next his brother Athelstane , And after fiue yeeres was vntimely slaine : Nine yeeres was Eldred Englands King inst●…d , Th' insulting Danes , he from this Realme exilde . Edmund was buried at Glastenbury . Eldred was brother to Edmund , he was crowned at Kingstone , he expelled the Danes , and was buried at Winchester . 107 Edwin . 955. 108 Edgar . 959. THen Edwin ( as his right ) obtain'd the Crowne , For Rape , and brutish Iust he was put downe , His brother Edgar a man iust and w●…se , By Edwin●… fall , vnto the Throne did rise . The Church and Commonweale ( long time deform'd ) He by his Iustice and good Lawes reform'd . Raign'd sixteen yeeres , and then by death assail'd , As he had liu'd belou'd , he dy'd bewail'd . Edwin was Eldreds kinsman crowned at Kingstone : he defloured his owne kinswoman and slew her husband , for which odious acts hee was deposed of all Kingly dignity , and his brother Edgar was in his stead crowned at Bathe . Edgar had 3600 ships to withstand the inuasion of his enemies , hee founded and repaired 47. relligious houses , hee was buried at Glastenbury . 109 Edward . 975. 110 Etheldred . 978. EDward was slain by his accurst Stepmother , Ayded by Etheldred his cruell brother . This Etheldred caus'd all the Danes be slaine : And dyed the thirty eight yeere of his raigne . He was crowned at Kingstone : he reigned 3 yeeres , and was buried at Shaftsbury . Etheldred was buried in S. Pauls Church in London . 111 Edmond Ironside . 1016. THe Danes came to reuenge with sword and fire , Both Kings to Combat single did desire : On equall termes , their valours both were tride , In loue the Realme betwixt them they deuide . Edricus a traitor murdered King Edmond Ironside , for the which Canutus the Dane caused him to bee tormented to death grieuously as he deserued . 112 Canutus . 1018. THis mighty Danish King foure Kingdomes hel●… Danes , Norway , England , Scotland he compeld , Taxes and toles he rais'd in England here , And dyed when he had gouern'd twenty yeere . In Canutus his raigne the Danes possessed all England : he lies buried at Winchester . 113 Harold . 10●…8 . 114 Hardicanutus . 1041. HArold from England did exile his Mother , And kild Allured his King and his Brother : Hardicanutus then the Crowne obtain'd , Who quaffing died , when he 3. yeeres had raig●…'d . Harold was a Tyrant : hee was called Hartfoote for his swift running : he murdered Prince Allured hee raigned three yeeres , and was buried at Westminster . Hee caused the body of Harold to be digged out of the graue , and ●…ast into the Thames , in reuenge of his brother Allureds death : he was buried at Winchester . 115. Saint Edward . 1043. 1●…6 . Harold the second . 1066. SAint Edward from the Danes this Ki●…gdom freed , And for he had no Heyre , he heere decreed , That William Duke of Normandy ●…hou'd be Next King , but Harold seeming to agree , Assoone as Edward was laid in his Toombe , This hasty Harold mounted in his roome , But William came from Normandy amaine , By whom King Harold was vnking'd and slaine . The end of the first part . The second part . William Conquerour . An. Dom. 1066. VVHen Britains , Romanes , Saxons , Danes had done , The Normans ( fiftly ) Englands glory won , ●…w Lords brought in new Lawes incontinent , ●…nd all were Conquer'd but the County Kent . King William ( after he had all surpriz'd ) ●…lted , domineer'd , and tyranniz'd , 〈◊〉 Englishmen ( like slaues ) their doores must lock , 〈◊〉 paine of death , each night at eight of clocke . 〈◊〉 English from all Office were disgrac●…d , 〈◊〉 in their places the proud French were plac'd . 〈◊〉 beating down the right , with wrong on wrong , ●…aining men should speake the English tongue . 〈◊〉 so to bring o●…r memory to naught , 〈◊〉 Grammar and the Lawes in French were taught , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sonnes , with Danes a mighty band , 〈◊〉 in ●…umber to inuade the Land , Then Yorke was burnt , the wealth away was borne And Danes on Composition home did turne . A dearth in England was so great , that heere Cats , Dogs , and mans flesh , was our wofull cheere . The Mercians and Northumbers they rebel'd , Strong warres the Scots within our Country held : The I le of Ely did the King surprize , He caus'd the Rebels lose hands , feet , and eyes . The Normans did rebell and were subdu'd , Danes came and fled , with all their multitude . The Kings sonne ( Robert ) by the French Kings ayd , Did diuers parts of Normandy inuade . The Scots spoild England , with all might and maine , And Durhams Bishop in a broyle was slaine , Heere euery Acre of mens Lands were measur'd . And by a heauy taxe the King was treasur'd : Slaine by a Deere the Kings sonne lost his life , And Glassenbury Monkes were kill'd in strife . The English Nobles almost were decay'd , And euery place of rule the Normans swai'd . And all mens goods and lands , and coyn were rated Through England , and vnto the King related . The French mens pride did England ouerwhelme , And grieuous tributes did oppresse the Realme . Churches and Chappels were throwne down with speed , To make New Forrest as the King decreed : Who hauing rul'd in trouble , toyle and care , And tryannously pol'd this Kingdome bare , Neere twenty one yeeres , death was then his bane : He lyes in Normandy , enterr'd at Cane . William Conquerour was crowned on Christmas-day , 1067. the yeere then beginning on that day . In the 〈◊〉 Forrest in Hampshire called New Forrest , where this King had defased many Churches ( wherein the name of God was called vpon ) and placed wild Beasts for his disport : in the same Forrest two of his owne sonnes were slaine , Prince Robert killed by a Deere , and William Rufus by a Knight shooting at a Deere . William Rufus . An. Dom. 1087. WIlliam the cruell Conquerours second Sonne , With ease , got what his Fathers paines had won , Oppressed England he opprest and prest , And great Exactions wrongfully did wrest . For Symony , and base corrupting gold , The King most Churches and Church-liuings sold , And more , ( his Subiects vilely to abuse ) Against them he in armes did arme the Iewes , And swore if they the victory did gaine , That he their faithlesse faith would entertaine . Vpon his eldest brother hee rai'sd warres , His youngest brother troubled him with iarres . At London , such a furious winde did blow , Which did sixe hundred houses ouerthrow . The City Gloster was by Welshmen sack'd . Northumberland was by King William wrack'd : William de Oue , and William de Aluery , In cruell torments dyed at Salisbury . Duke Robert laid all Normandy to gage Vnto the King , warres with the Turkes to wage . Westminster Hall was built , the Danes came in , And th' Orchades , and the I le of Man did win . But as the King was hunting in Hampshire , Sir Walter Tirr●…ll shooting at a Deere , The Arrow glauncing'gainst a Tree by chance , Th' vnhappy King kild , by the haplesse Glaunce . A Colliers Cart to Winchester did bring The Corps , where vnbemoand they laid the King. Rufus . In the 8. yeere of his reigne , the Christian Army went to Ierusalem vnder the conduct of Godfry Duke of Bulleine , in which warres serued Robert Duke of Normandy the Kings eldest brother , who pawned his Dukedome for 16666 pounds weight of siluer . In the 11. yeere the Lands of the late Earle Godwine sunk in the sea , and are to this day called Godwine sands . This King died the 2. of August 1100. he reigned 12. yeeres , 11. moneths , and was buried at Winchester . Henry the first . An. Dom. 1100. THis Henry ( for his wisedome Beuclarke nam'd ) Th'vnlawfull Lawes and measures he reclaim'd . The Norman Duke , eld'st Brother to the King , To claime the Crowne a mighty Hoast did bring . Saint Bartholomewes was founded and Saint Gyles , And Henry stop'd Duke Roberts mouth with wiles . Then peace was made ; but after , warres did rise , The King tooke's brother , and put out his eyes . Here Windsor Church and Castle were erected , And Wales ( rebeld ) most sharpely was corrected . All the King's Sonnes and eight score persons more , Were drown'd by tempest neere the Norman shore . Thus all his Ioy in Childrens losse bereft , Saue onely Maud , the Widdow Empresse left , Whom Geffrey Anioy's Earle to wife did get , From whom did spring the name Plant●…genet . The King proclaim'd his Daughter , or her seede , After his death should in the Realme succeede , And after thirty fiue yeeres time was past , King Henry by a surfet breath'd his last . Much trouble in his dayes this Kingdome wearied , He dyed , and dead , at Redding he lies buried . Thus God that lifts the low , casts downe the high , Caus'd all the Conquerors sonnes vntimely dye . Henry the 1. He held the Crowne wrongfully from his elder brother Robert Duke of Normandy , and ouercomming him in battell , most vnnaturally put out his eies : he reigned 35. y●…res , his braines , eyes and bowels were buried at Roane in France , and the rest of his body at Redding : his Phisician that opened his head , was killed suddainely with the stench of his braines . King Stephen . An. Dom. 1135. STephen Earle of B●…loign , ( th' Earle of Bloys his son ) From th' Empresse Maud this famous Kingdome won . Domestike , forraigne , dangerous discords , 'Twixt factions f●…ctions , of the King and 's Lords , Wars 'twixt the King and th' Empresse for the crown , Both tasted Fortunes fauours , and her frowne , Now vp , now downe , like balles at Tennis tost , Till Stephen gain'd the goale , and th' Empresse lost . And after eighteene yeeres were come and gone , The King not hauing any lawfull Sonne , He dyed , and chang'd his Kingdome & his strength , For a small Sepulcher of sixe foote length . King Stephen . He was noble , valiant , liberall , and politique , and almost in continuall trouble . In the 1. yeere of his reigne a fire burnt all the streete , from London-stone East , to Pauls , and West , to Algate , and within 2. yeeres after , the ci●…ties of York , Rochester , and Bathe , were burnt . Hee reigned 18. yeeres , 10. moneths , and was buried at Feuersham . Henry the second . An Dom. 1154. THis King vnto the Empresse Maud was Heyre , And lawfully obtain'd the Regall Chayre , He was couragious , and yet most vnchaste , Which Vice , his other Vertues all defac'd . He lou'd faire Rosamond , the worlds faire Rose , For which his wife and children turn'd his foes . He made his sonne Copartner in his Crowne , Who rais'd strong warres to put his Father downe . Faire Rosamond at Woodstock by the Queene Was poyson'd , in reuengefull-iealous spleene . In toyle , and trouble , with his Sonnes and Peeres , The King raign'd almost fiue and thirty yeeres . Hee neere his death did curse his day of birth , Hee curst his Sonnes , and sadly left the earth , Hee at Founteuerard in his Tombe was laid . And his Son Richard next the Scepter swaid . Henry the 2. In the 12. yeer of this King an earthquake in Norfolk , Suffolk , and Elye , that made bels ring with shaking the steeples , and ouerthrew men that stood on their feete . Nicholas Breakespeare , an Englishman was Pope of Rome , and was named Adrian the fourth , hee gaue the Lord-shippe of Ireland to King Henry . Richard Cordelion . An. Dom. 1189. THis braue victorious Lyon-hearted Prince , The foes of Christ , in Iury did conuince : Whilst at Ierusalem he wan Renowne , His Brother Iohn at home vsurp'd his Crowne . And as he home return'd , ( his owne to gaine ) By Austria's Duke the King was Prisoner tane . His ransome was an hundred thousand pound , Which paid , in England he againe was crown'd . Yet after nine full yeeres , and 9. months raigne , Hee with a Shot was kild in Aquitane , His buriall at 〈◊〉 was ●…hought meet , At his dead Fathers , second Henries feet . Richard the 1. he conquered the kingdome of Cypresse , and he tooke from the Infidels the Cities of Acon , & Ioppa , and deliuered them to Christians . In his 2. yeere , the bones of the renowned King Arthur were found at Glastenbury . King Richards bowels were buried at Chalne Castle in Aquitane , his heart at Roane , and his body at Founteuerard . King Iohn . An. Dom. 1199. John Earle of Morton tooke the regall Seate , His state , his toyle , his pompe , his cares , all great : The French , the Welsh , the Scotsh , all prou'd his foes , The Pope King Iohn did from his Crowne depose . His Lords rebel'd , from France the Dolphin came , And wasted England much with sword and flame . And after seuenteene yeeres were full expir'd . King Iohn being poysoned , to his graue retir'd . King Iohn . In the 8. yeere many men , Women , and cattell were slaine with thunder , and many houses burnt , and the corne was beaten downe with haile as bigge as goose egges . Some say , the King was po●…son'd by a monke , and others write that he died of a surfeit at Newark , but his life was full of troubles , and after his death he was by base villaines rob'd and left naked without any thing to couer the corpes , hee was buried at Worcester . Henry the third . An. Dom. 1216. WArs , bloody wars , the French in Englād made , Strong holds , Towns , Towres & Castles they inuade . But afterwards it was K. Henries chance , By force perforce to force them backe to France . Great discord 'twixt the King and Barons were , And factions did the Realme in pieces teare . A world of mischiefes did this Land abide , And fifty sixe yeeres raign'd the King , and dy'd . Henry the 3. This King was born at Winchester , crowned at Glocester , & buried at Westminster . In the 17. of his reigne on the 8. of Aprill 1233. there were 5 Sonnes in the firmament , and the naturall Sun was as red as blood . Edward Long-shanks . An. Dom. 1272. THis was a hardy , wise , Victorious King , The Welshmen he did to subiection bring : He Scotland wan , and brought from thence ( by fate ) Their Crowne , their Scepter , Chaire , and Cloth of state , That Kingdome with oppression sore he brusde , Much tyranny and bloodshed there he vsde . When thirty fiue yeeres he the Crowne had kept , At Westminster , he with his Father slept . Edward the 1. In the 13. yeere his sonne Edward was borne at Carnaruan , who was the first sonne of any King of England that was Prince of Wales . An. 17. Wheat at 3. pence the Bushell . Edward of Carnaruan . An. Dom. 1307. THe hard mis haps that did this King attend , The wretched life , and lamentable end , Which he endur'd the like hath ne'r bin seene , Depos'd , and poyson'd by his cruell Queene . Which when the poyson had no force to kill , Another way she wrought her wicked will. Into his Fundament a red hot Spit Was thrust , which made his Royall heart to split . In his 8. yeere such a dearth , that dogges and horses were good food , many ate their owne children , and old prisoners tore such as were newly committed in pieces , and deuoured them halfe liuing . The King reigned 19. yeeres 6. moneths . Edward the third . An. Dom. 1316. IN Peace and warre , ●…his King was right , & good , He did reu●…nge his murdred Fathers blood : Hee , and the blacke Prince , his most valiant Sonne , The field at Cress●… and at Poytiers wonne , At first and l●…st in his victorious raigne , Of French and Scots , were six score thousand slaine . And more , ( his glory further to aduance ) He tooke the Kings of Scotland and of France . The noble order of the Garter , he At Windsor , instituted caus'd to be . When fifty yeeres this Land had him obaid , At Westminster he in his tombe was laid . In his 12. yeere he quartered the Armes of England and France , as they are at this day . Henry Pichard Vi●…tner , in his Maioralty feasted at once , Edward King of England , Dauid King of Scotland , Iohn King of France , the King of Cypres , the Prince of Wales , the Dolphin of France , with many other great Personages of Honour and Worship . Richard the second . An. Dom. 1377. YOng King , rash coūsell , lawes & right neglected , The good put downe , the bad in State ●…rected : The Court with knaues & flat'rers here did swarm , The Kingdome , ( like a Farme ) was let to Farme . The Commons rose in Armies , Rou●…es , and throngs , And by foule treason , would 〈◊〉 foule wrongs . In this Kings raigne , began the Ciuill warre , ( Vnnaturally ) 'twixt Yorke and Lancaster . Oppression on oppression , breedes Confusion , Bad Prologue , bad Proceeding , bad Conclusion : King Richard , twenty two yeeres raign'd , misse-led , Deposed and at Pomfret knock'd ith'head . This King was Grandchild to Edward the 3. and sonne to the black Prince , he was borne at Burdeux in France , and was but 11. yeeres old when he was crowned , so that all his miserable calamity may be imputed to his not hauing or not regarding good counsell . Henry the fourth . An. Dom. 1399. THe Crown wrong got frō the wrong ' doing king , More griefe then ioy did to King Henry bring : France , England , Scotland , Wales , arose in Armes , And menac'd Henry , with most fierce Alarmes : Hot Percy , Dowglas , Mortimer , Glend●…wre , At Shrewsbury , the King or●…threw their power , He fourteene yeeres did raigne , and then did dye , At Cant●…rbury buried , he doth lye . Henry the 4. Hee began his reigne the 29. of September , 1399. and the 14. of February following , King Richard the 2. being in prison at Pomfret-Castle , was murdered . The raigne of King Henry was a continuall warre and trouble . Henry the fift . An. Dom. 1412. THis was a King Renowned n●…ere and farre , A Mars of men , a Thunderbolt of warre : At Agencourt the French were ouerthrowne , And Henry heyre proclaim'd vnto that Crowne . ●…ine yeeres raigne this valiant Prince wan more , I hena●… the Kings did after or before . Intomb'd at Westminster his Carkas lyes , His soule did ( like his Acts ) ascend the skies . Henry the 5. In his 3. yeere hee past the sea with 1000. 〈◊〉 of Ships and Vessels into France . His tombe or statue was couered with siluer , but this yron age hath deuoured Henry the sixt . An. Dom. 1422. THis Infant Prince scarce being nine moneths old , The Realmes of France and England he did hold But he vncapable through want of yeeres , Was ouer-gouern'd by mis-gouern'd Peeres . Now Yorke and Lancaster , with bloudy wars , Both wound this kingdome , with deep deadly scars . Wh●…st this good King by Yorke oppos'd , depos'd , Expos'd to dangers , is captiu'd , 〈◊〉 ' d , His 〈◊〉 ●…xilde , his sonne and many friends , F●…d , murdred , slaughtred ; lastly , ●…ate contends To crowne him once againe , who then at last Was murdred , thirty nine yeeres being past . King Henry the fixt , being 10. yeers old , was crowned King of France in Paris , but with the strife betwixt the Nobility , and the Commons in England , the most part of France was lost againe , which was neuer recouered since . Edward the fourth . An. Dom. 1460. EDward , the 4 the house of Yorks great heire , By bloudy wars attain'd the Regall Chair●… , The poore King Henry into Scotland fled , And foure yeeres there was royally cloath'd and fed , Still good success●… with him was in the wane , He by King Edwards power at last was tane . But yet before the tenth yeere of his reigne , Hence Edward fled , and Henry crown'd againe . By Warwicks meanes sixe moneths he held the same , Till Edward backe in armes to England came , And fighting stoutly , made this kingdome yeeld , And slew great Warwicks Earle at Barnet field . Thus Ciuill wars on wars , and broyles on broyles , And England against England spils and spoyles , Now Yorke , then Lancaster , then Yorke againe Quels Lancaster ; thus ioy , griefe , pleasure , paine , Doth like inconstant waters ebbe and flow : Ones rising is the others ouerthrow . King Edward , twenty two yeeres rul'd this Land , And lies at Windsor , where his Tombe doth stand . Edward the 4. In the first yeere on Palme-sunday , 1460. there was a battell fought betwixt King Edward and King Henry , neere Todcaster , wherein were slaine of English-men on both sides 53000 , 700 , and 11. persons : The bloudy victory fell to King Edward . In the 10. yeere of his reigne , he was forced to forsake this Land , whereby King Henry was restored againe to the Crowne . But shortly after , Edward returned , and Henry was ●…urthered . Edward the fifth . An. Dom. 1483. HIgh birth , blood , state , and innocent in yeeres , Eclips'd , and murdred by insulting Peeres : This King was neuer crown'd , short was his raigne : For to be short , hee in short space was slaine . Edward the 5. Within 3. moneths after the death of his father , hee and his brother Richard Duke of Yorke , were depriued both of their liues , and he of the Crowne , by their tyrannous Unkle Richard , Duke of Gloster . Richard the third . An. Dom. 1483. BY reason , mischiefe , murder and debate . Vsurping Richard wonne the royall state : Vnnatnrally the children of his brothe . The King , and Duke of Yorke he caus'd to smother . For Sir Iames Tirrell , Dighton and Blacke Will , Did in the Tower these harmlesse Princes kill , Buckinghams Duke did raise King Richard high , And for reward he lost his head thereby . A fellow to this King I scarce can finde . His shape deform'd , and crooked like his minde . Most cruell , tyrannous , inconstant , stout , Couragious , hardy , t' abide all dangers out , Yet when his sinnes were mellow , ripe and full , Th' Almighties Iustice then his plum●…s did pull : By bloudy meanes he did the kingdome gaine , And lost it so , at Bosworth being slaine . This Richard was neuer a good subiect ; but wh●… he had got the Crowne , he striued by all meanes to be a good King , for in his short reigne of two yeeres , two mo●…s , he made very profitable Lawes , which are yet in force : by which it may be perceiued how willing he was to 〈◊〉 his mis-spent time . Henry the seuenth . An. Dom. 1485. VVHen Ciuill wars , full fourescore yeers & more , Had made this kingdome welter in her Gore : When eightie of the royall blood were kild , That Yorke and Lancasters crosse faction held , Then God in mercy , looking on this Land , Brought in this Prince , with a triumphant band , The onely Heire of the Lancastrian line , Who grac●…ously consented to combine , To ease poore England of a world of anone , And make the red Rose and the white but one , By Marriage with Elizabeth the faire , Fourth Edwards daughter , and Yorks onely heire . But Margret Burgunds Lancaster storm'd & frown'd , That th' heire of Lancaster in state was crown'd . A counterfeit , one Lambert she suborn'd , ( Beign with Princely ornaments adorn'd ) To claime the State in name of Cla●…ce sonne , Who in the Tower before to death was done . Wars ' gainst the French King Henry did maintaine , And Edward braue Lord Wooduil●… there was slaine . Northumberlands great Earle ( for the Kings right ) Was slaine by Northerne rebels in sharpe fight . The King besiedged Boloigne , but a Peace The French king sought , and so the siedge did cease . Still Burgunds Dutchesse , ( with inueterate hate ) Did seeke to ruine Henries Royall state : She caus'd one Perkin Warbecke , to put on The name of Richard , Edwards murdred sonne , Which Richard , was the youngest of the twaine Of Edwards sonnes that in the Tower was slaine . The King at last these traitors did confound , And Perkin for a counterfeit was found . Sir William Stanley , ( once the Kings best friend ) At Tower hill , on a Scaffold had his end . On Blacke Heath Cornish rebels were o'rthrowne , A Shoomaker did claine King Henries Crowne . The Earle of Warwicke lost his haplesse head , And Lady Katherine did Prince Arthur wed . But ere sixe moneths were fully gone and past , In Ludlow Castle , Arthur breath'd his last . King Henry built his Chappell from the ground , At Westminster , whose like can scarce be found . Faire Margret eldest daughter to our King , King Iames the fourth of 〈◊〉 home did bring , Where those two Princes , with great pompe and cheare , In State at Edenborough married were . But as all Mortall ●…hings are tra●…ory , So to an end came H●…nrie ●…arthly glory . Twenty three yeeres , and 8. months here he swaid , And then at Westminster , i●…s Tombe was laid . He all his Life had variable share , Of Peace , Warre , Ioy Griefe , Royaltie and Care. In his 1. yeere in 7. weekes space , there dyed in London 2. Masors , and 6. Aldermen , besides many hundred others of a strange sweating sicknesse , 1485. Anno Reg. 12. at Saint Needs in Bedfordshire , there fell bail-stones 18. inches about . King Iames the 4. of Scotland , married Margret , eldest daughter to Henry the 7. from whom our gracious Soueraigne is lineally descended . Henry the eight . An. Dom. 1509. FRom both the Lines , and both the loynes did spring Of York & Lancaster , this mighty King : Katherine that was his brothers wife of late , He tooke to wife , and crown'd her Queene in state . Empson and Dudley lost their heads at Tower , For racking the poore Commons by their power . Warres , dreadfull wars , arose 'twixt vs and France , Lord Edward Howard , drowned by mis-chance At Brest , he was high Admirall in fight , Cast ouerboord , dy'd like a valiant Knight . In England Suffolks Duke did lose his head , The King to Tur●…in d●…d an army lead , Turney he wonne with his victorious blade , King Iames of Scotland , England did inuade : But Surries Earle , the Sco●…sh King ouercame , Who lost life there , but wonne immortall fame . Now Cardinall Wol●…ey , in the Kings high Grace , Was rais'd to honours , from great place to place , Lordship on Lordship laid vpon his backe , Vntill the burthen was the bearers wracke . The Duke of Buckingham , his head did lose , And Luther stoutly did the Pope oppose , Blinde ignorance that long had look'd awry , Began to see Truth with a clearer eye , And then the King ( inspir'd with feruent Zeale ) Reformed both the Church and Common weale , Iehouah with his power Omnipotent , Did make this King his gracious instrument , T' vnmaske his Truth from Antichristian fables , And purge this wofull Land from Babel●… bables . This King at Boloigne was victorious ; In peace and warre , Magnifique , Glorious ; In his rage bounty he did oft expresse , His Liberality to bee excesse , In Reuels , Iusts , and Turnies he spent more , Then fiue of his Fore-fathers did before , His Auarice was all for Noble fame , Amongst the Worthies to inrole his Name , A valiant Champion for the Faiths defence , Was the great Title of this mightie Prince . Sixe wiues he had , 3. Kates , 2. Annes , one Iane , Two were diuorc'd , two at the blocke were slaine : One sonne and two faire daughters he did leaue , Who each from other did the Crowne receiue : The first was Edward ; Mary next , whose death Left State , and Realme , to Queene Elizabeth . He thirty eight yeeres kept this Royall Roome , At Windsor hee 's enter'd without a Tombe . Leeth , Edenbourgh , and diuers other parts of Scotland were spoyled by Sir Iohn Dudley , Lord Viscount Lisle , Lord high Admirall of England , with a Nauy of 200. tall Ships . Anno 1544. King Henry went to Boloigne , hee entred France the 13. of Iuly , and into Boloigne the 25. of September , in which yeere were taken 300. French Ships for prizes . Edward the sixt . An. Dom. 1546. HAd this Kings reigne bin long , as it was good , Religion in a peaceable state had stood , What might haue his age bin , when his blest youth , So valiantly aduanc'd Gods sacred truth ? At nine yeeres age , the Crowne on him hee tooke , And ere sixteene , he Crowne and life forsooke . Too good for earth , th' Almighty tooke his spirit , And Westminster his Carkas doth inherit . In his 5. yeere a strange Earth-quake did much harme in diuers places of Surry , and a sweating sicknesse generally ouer England , that dispatched those that were in good health , in 12. houres , or 24. at the most . In one weeke there dyed of it in London 806. the most of them being men of best strength . Queene Mary . An. Dam. D●… AFter a while this Queene had worne the Crown , Idolatry was rais'd , and Truth put downe , The Masse , the Images , the Beades and Altars , By tyrannie , by fire , and sword and Halters , Th' vngodly bloudy Antichristian sway , Men were force , perforce forced to obey . Now burning Bonner , Londons Bishop , he Was from the Marshal-sea againe set free : Iohn Dudley , great Duke of Northumberland , And Sir Iohn Gates dyed by the Headsmans hand . With them Sir Thomas Palmer likewise dy'd . Hoping for heau'n , through Iesus Crucified . In Latine Seruice must be sung and said , Because men should not know for what they prai'd . The Emp'rors sonne , great Philip King of Spaine , A marriage with Queene Mary did obtaine : Against which match , Sir Thomas Wyat rose , With powers of Kent the Spaniards to oppose . But Wyat was or'throwne , his armie fled , And on the Tower hill after lost his head . Lord Gray the Duke of Suffolke also dy'd , An Axe his Corps did from his head diuide , A little after , the Lord Thomas Gray , The Dukes owne brother went that headlesse way . A Millers sonne asl●…m'd King Edwards name , And fa sely in that n●…me the Crowne did claime , But he was tane and iustly whip'd and tortur'd , And claiming it once more , was hang'd & quarterd . King Pl●…lip won Saint . Quintins with great cost . But after to our shame was Callice lost , Calli●…e was lost , which threescore yeeres and ten , Had beene a Garrison for English men . Thus by Gods mercy Englands Queene did dye , And England gain'd much ease and rest thereby . Fiue yeeres and 4. months was her bloudy reigne , And all her glory doth one graue containe . Though of her selfe this Queene was well inclin'd , Bad-minded counsell al●…red much her minde . She married Philip King of Spaine , on Saint Iames his day , 1554. at Winchester . Callice was won by Edward the 3. in the 21. of his reigne , 1347. and it was lost the 1. of Ianuary 1557. after the English-men had possest it 210. yeeres . August 7. 1558 a tempest neere Nottingham , beat damne 2 Townes and Churches , and cast the Bels to the further side of the Church-yard , threw whole sheetes of Lead 400. foot into the fields , where they were crumpled together like burnt parchment : the streame and mud of the K●…er of Trent was blowne a-land a quarter of a mile : a childe blowne out of a mans hand 100. foot and kild , there fell hayle 15. Inches about . Queene Elizabeth . An. Dom. 1558. A Debora , a Iudith , a Susannae , A Virgin , a Virago , a Diana : Couragious , Zealous , Learned , Wise and Chaste , With heauenly , earthly gifts , adorn'd and grac'd , Victorious , glorious , bountious , gracious , good , And one , whose vertues dignifi'd her bloud , That Muses , Graces , Armes , and liberall Arts , Amongst all Queens , proclaim'd her Queen of hearts , She did repurifie this Land once more , From the infection of the Romish whore . Now Abbies , Abbots , Fri'rs , Monks , Nuns & Stews , Masses , and Masse-priests , that mens soules abuse , Were all cast downe , Lamps , Tapers , Relikes , Beads , And Superstitions that mans soule misse-leads , All Popish pardons , Buls . Confessions , With Crossings , Christening bels , Saints Intercessions , The Altars , Idols , Images downe cast , All Pilgrimage , and Superstitious Fast , Th' acknowledging the Pope for supreme head , The holy water , and the god of bread , The mumbling Mattins , and the pickpurse Masse , These bables this good Queene did turne to grasse . She caus'd Gods seruice to be said and sung , In our owne vnderstanding English tongue . In Scotland and in France , fierce warres she held , The Irish she subdu'd when they rebeld , The Netherlands her name doe still admire , And Spaine her like againe doth not desire . When forty foure yeers reigne was past and gone , She chang'd her earthly for a heauenly Throne , At Greenwich she was borne , at Richmond dy'd , At Westminster she buried , doth abide ; And as the fame of this Imperiall Maide , Is through the world , ( by the foure winds ) displaid , So shall her memory for euer grace Her famous birth , her death , and buriall place . At Teuxbury Anno 1574. the 24. of February , being a hard frost , the Riuer of Seuerne was couered with Flies and Beetles , so that it was thought , within the length of a paire of Buts , to be 100. quarters of them the ●…ils were stopped with them , but from whence they came , is vnknown . 1582. A piece of Land of three Acres in Dorsetshire , in the Parish of Armitage , was suddenly remooued 600. foot from the place where formerly it stood . King Iames. An. Dom. 1601. VVHen as Elizaes wofull death was act●…d : When this lamenting land was halfe 〈◊〉 : Whē tears e●…ch loyall heart with grief had drownd , Then came this King and made our ioves abound , Ordain'd for vs by heauenly power diuine , Then from the North this glorious starre did shine , The Royall Image of the Prince of Peace , The blest Concorder that made warres to cease ; By Name a S T E V V A R D , and by Nature one , Appointed from Iehonahs sacred Throne , And by th' almighties hand supported euer , That Treason or the Diuell should hurt him neuer : And as his Zeale vnto his God was great , Gods blessings on him were each way compleat , Rich in his Subiects loue ( a Kings best treasure ) Rich in content , ( a Riches aboue measure ) Rich in his Princely Issue , and in them , Rich in his hopefull Branches of his stemme ; Rich in Munition and a Nauy Royall , And richer then all Kings in seruants Loyall . When Hell and Ro●… together did conspire , ●…o blow him and his Kingdome vp with fire , Then did the King of Kings preserue our King , And all the Traytors to confusion bring . And whoso reckons vp from first to last , The many hel-hatch'd dangers he hath past Through all his daies , he will beleeue ( no doubt ) That he with heauenly pow'rs was wall'd about . All Christian Princes held his friendship deare , Was fear'd for loue , and not belou'd for feare : And Pagan Monarchs were in L●…ague combin'd With him , as farre as is the Easterne Ind●… . And like a flame a midst a Riuer fix'd , So was his Iustice with his m●…rcy mix'd : He striu'd to imitate his Ma●…er still , And clemency preseru'd where Law 〈◊〉 : He hath cur'd England and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wounds , And made them both great ( 〈◊〉 ) Britains bounds All bloudy deadly fewds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And canker'd hate he turn'd to Christian 〈◊〉 , The mouth of warre he muzzled mu●…e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , He still'd the roaring Cannon and the 〈◊〉 Secure in peace , his people sup and dine , 〈◊〉 With their owne fig-trees shaded and 〈◊〉 Whilst in an vprore most of Christendome , One Nation doth another 〈◊〉 . Vnto the King of Kings let 's praises sing . For giuing vs this ●…appy peacefull King. None know so well how they should peace prefer , As those that know the miseries of warre : T is true ( though 〈◊〉 ) and must not be forgot , The warres are sweet to such as know them not . Peace ( happy peace ) doth spread tranq●…illity , Through all the bounds of Britaines Monarchy ; And may we all our actions still addresse , For peace with God , and warre 'gainst wickednesse . Vnto which peace of God this King's 〈◊〉 , To reigne in glory that shall ne'r be ended . His mortall part at Westminster enter'd , His soule and Fame immortally prefer'd . God did wonderfully preserue him ( vpon two seuerall Tuesdaies ) from 2 most dangerous treas●… , the one at the Towne of Saint Iohnston in Scotland , on Tuesday the 5. of August , 1600. where the Earle of Gowry attempted to kill his Maiesty . The ●…her was in England , in that fearfull treason and deliuerance from the Powder-plot , on Tuesday the 5. of Nouember . 1606. King CHARLES . TWo Williams , Henries 8. 1. Steuen , 1. Iohn , Sixe Edwards , Richards 3. and 1. Queene Mary : Elizabeth , and Iames , all dead and gone , Our gracious Charles doth now the Scepter carry ; And may they liue and dye of God accurst , Who wish the pre●…dice of Charles the first . Iust 25. Kings and Queenes of England since the Norman Conquest . FINIS . THIS AVTHOR HATH newly caused all his works ( being aboue 60. ) to bee printed into one Volume , the Names of all which Works are set downe in this following Catalogue . TAylors Vrania . The life and death of the Virgin Mary . The whip of Pride . Against cursing and swearing . The fearefull Summer . Christian Admonitions . The trauell of tweluepence . The Armado . The Begger . Taylors Goose. Iacke a Lent. Taylors peninlesse Pilgrimage , The Sculler . The Dolphins danger . The Cormorant . A sea-fight by Captaine Wedall . The praise of Hempseed . Taylors Pastorall . Prince Charles his welcome from Spaine . An English mans loue to Bohemia . Three weeks and three daies trauels Taylors farewell ●…o Bohemia . Sir Gregory Nonsence . A very merry Whir●…y voyage . The great O Tnole . A voyage to the West . The scourge of basenesse . Taylors Motto . Odcombs complaint . Coriats resurrection . Laugh and be fat . Coriats newes . A Bawd. A Whore. A Thiefe . A Hangman . The vnnaturall Father . Taylors reuenge . Fenners defence . A cast ouer the water . The praise of cleane Linnen . The Water-mans suit . Wit and mirth . A Dogge of Warre . The world runs on Wheeles . The nipping or snipping of abuses . A Chronicle from Brute . A Briefe from the conquest . A Farewell to the Towre bottles . The marriage of the Princesse Elizabeth . An Elegie for King Iames. An Elegy for the Earle of Nottingham . An Elegy for the Earle of Holdernesse . An Elegy for the Bishop of Winchester . An Elegy for the Duke of Richmond . An Elegy for Iohn Moray Esquire . The summe of the Bible in verse . The sum of the Booke of Martyrs in verse . The Churches deliuerances . Archies making peace with France . The Acts and exployts of Wood the great Eater , in Kent . FINIS . Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A13472-e220 a The 7 Kingdomes were , 1. Kent . 2 South-Saxons , Sussex and Surry . 3 East-Angles , Norfolke , and Cambridge-shire . 4 West Saxon , Barkshire , Deuonshire , Somersetshire , and Cornewell . 5 Mertia , Glostershire , Herefordshire , Worcester , Shropsh●…re , Scaffor●…shire , Cheshire , Warwike , Leycester , Noreb , Oxford , ●…ingham , Bedford , and halfe Hartfordshire . 6 East-Saxon , Essex , Middlesex , and halfe Hartfordshire . 7 Northumberland diuided to two Kingdomes , 〈◊〉 ●…nd Bernicia , all brought to one Monarchy by Egler●… : 〈◊〉 West-Saxons , and called England , 196●… yee●…s after 〈◊〉 . Notes for div A13472-e980 * Brute being of the age of 15 yeeres , as he shot at a wild beast , the arrow glanced vnfortunately and slew his Father Siluius Aeneas , for the which he was exilde , and came into this Land , then called Albyon . I follow the common opinion : for many Writers doe neither write or allow of Brutes being here , accounting it a dishonor for our Nation , to haue originall from a Par●…ide , and one that deriued his descent from the Goddesse ( alias strumper ) Venus . Howsoeuer , Histories are obscured and clouded with ambiguities , some burnt , lost , defaced by antiquity ; and some abused by the malice , ignorance , or partialitie of Writers , so that truth is hard to be found . Amongst all which variations of Times and Writers , I must conclude there was a BRVTE . a The Riuer of Humber tooke the name from the drow●…d King of the Huns , now Hungarians . b Guendoline was daughter vnto Corineus , Duke Cornewall . Estrild was a beautious Lady of King ●…umbers , whom Locrinus tooke prisoner . Notes for div A13472-e9350 a On the Plaine of Salisbury at Stonehing ( where the Stones are to be seene at this day . ) * The King & Queene burnt to death . Vortiger married his owne daughter 〈◊〉 his third wife .