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+ England (3 of 8) - Raphael Holinshed</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Chronicles (1 of 6): The Historie of
+England (3 of 8), by Raphael Holinshed
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. 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 (1 of 6): The Historie of England (3 of 8)
+
+Author: Raphael Holinshed
+
+Release Date: August 11, 2005 [EBook #16511]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRONICLES (1 OF 6): THE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Lesley Halamek and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <span class="page">[<a name="page451" id="page451">Page
+ 451</a>]</span>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <h3>THE THIRD BOOKE</h3>
+
+ <h5>OF THE</h5>
+
+ <h2>HISTORIE OF ENGLAND.</h2>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+ <table width="80%" align="center" border="0" summary="contents">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%">&nbsp;
+ <br /></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top">Page</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#first3">THE FIRST CHAPTER</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page451">451</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#second3">THE SECOND CHAPTER</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page452">452</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#third3">THE THIRD CHAPTER</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page453">453</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#fourth3">THE FOURTH CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page455">455</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#fift3">THE FIFT CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page457">457</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#sixt3">THE SIXT CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page458">458</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#seuenth3">THE SEUENTH CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page459">459</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#eight3">THE EIGHT CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page461">461</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#ninth3">THE NINTH CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page463">463</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#tenth3">THE TENTH CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page464">464</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#eleuenth3">THE ELEUENTH CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page466">466</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#twelft3">THE TWELFT CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page467">467</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#xiij3">THE XIIJ CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page468">468</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#xiiij3">THE XIIIJ CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page471">471</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#xv3">THE XV CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page473">473</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#xvj3">THE XVJ CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page475">475</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#xvij3">THE XVIJ CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page477">477</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#xviij3">THE XVIIJ CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page478">478</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="left" width="70%" valign="top"><a class="contents"
+ href="#xix3">THE XIX CHAPTER.</a></td>
+
+ <td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#page480">480</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="first3" id="first3"></a> <i>Of Mulmucius the first king
+ of Britaine, who was crowned with a golden crowne, his lawes, his
+ foundations, with other his acts and deeds.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE FIRST CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">MULMUCIUS. <i>Matth. West.
+ Polyd.</i></span> Now to proceede with the aforesaid authors,
+ Mulmucius Dunwall&#333;, or as other saie Dunuallo Mulmucius, the
+ sonne of Cloton (as testifieth th'english chronicle and also Geffrey
+ of Monmouth) got the vpper hand of the other dukes or rulers: and
+ after his fathers deceasse began his reigne ouer the whole monarchie
+ of Britaine, in the yéere of the world 3529, after the building of
+ Rome 314, and after the deliuerance of the Israelites out of
+ captiuitie 97, and about the 26 yéere of Darius Artaxerxes
+ Longimanus, the fift king of the Persians. This Mulmucius Dunuallo is
+ named in the english chronicle Donebant, and prooued a right worthie
+ prince. He builded within the citie of London then called Troinouant,
+ <span class="rightnote"><i>Fabian.</i> See more in the
+ description.</span> a temple, and named it the temple of peace: the
+ which (as some hold opinion, I wote not vpon what ground) was the
+ same which now is called Blackwell hall, where the market for buieng
+ and selling of cloths is kept. The chronicle of England affirmeth,
+ that Mulmucius <span class="leftnote">Malmesburie and the Vies built.
+ <br />
+ <i>Matth. West.</i> Lawes made.</span> (whome the old booke nameth
+ Molle) builded the two townes Malmesburie and the Vies. He also made
+ manie good lawes, which were long after vsed, called Mulmucius lawes,
+ turned out of the British spéech into the Latine by Gildas Priscus,
+ and long time after translated out of latine into english by Alfred
+ king of England, and mingled in his statutes. He moreouer gaue
+ priuileges to temples, to plowes, to cities, and to high waies
+ leading to the same, so that whosoeuer fled to them, should be in
+ safegard from bodilie harme, and from <span class=
+ "rightnote"><i>Caxton</i> and <i>Polychron</i>.</span> thence he
+ might depart into what countrie he would, with indemnitie of his
+ person. Some authors write, that he began to make the foure great
+ high waies of Britaine, the which were finished by his sonne Blinus,
+ as after shall be declared.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">The first king that was crowned with a
+ golden crowne.</span> After he had established his land, and set his
+ Britains in good and conuenient order, he ordeined him by the aduise
+ of his lords a crowne of gold, &amp; caused himselfe with great
+ solemnitie to be crowned, according to the custome of the pagan lawes
+ then in vse: &amp; bicause he was the first that bare a crowne héere
+ in Britaine, after the opinion of some writers, he is named the first
+ king of Britaine, and all the other before rehearsed are named
+ rulers, dukes, or gouernors.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="leftnote"><i>Polyd.</i> Weights and measures.</span>
+ Amongst other of his ordinances, he appointed weights and measures,
+ with the which men should buy and sell. And further he deuised sore
+ and streight orders for the punishing <span class="rightnote">Theft
+ punished. <i>Fabian.</i></span> of theft. Finallie, after he had
+ guided the land by the space of fortie yéeres, he died, and was
+ buried in the foresaid temple of peace which he had erected within
+ the citie of Troinouant now called London, as before ye haue heard,
+ appointing in his life time, that his <span class="page">[<a name=
+ "page452" id="page452">Page 452</a>]</span> kingdome should be
+ diuided betwixt his two sonnes, Brennus and Belinus (as some men doo
+ coniecture.)</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="second3" id="second3"></a> <i>The ioint-gouernment of
+ Belinus and Brennus the two sonnes of Mulmucius, their
+ discontentment, the stratagems of the one against the other, the
+ expulsion of Brennus out of Britaine.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE SECOND CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">Belinus and Brennus. 3574.</span> Brennus
+ and Belinus began to reigne iointlie as kings in Britaine, in the
+ yéere of the world 3574, after the building of the citie of Rome 355,
+ and after the deliuerance of the Israelites out of captiuitie 142,
+ which was about the seuenth yéere of Artaxerxes surnamed <span class=
+ "leftnote"><i>Matth. West.</i></span> Mnenon, the seuenth king of the
+ Persians. Belinus held vnder his gouernment Loegria, Wales, and
+ Cornwall: and Brennus all those countries ouer and beyond Humber. And
+ <span class="rightnote"><i>Polyd.</i> saith 5.</span> with this
+ partition were they contented by the tearme of six or seuen yéeres,
+ after which <span class="leftnote">Brennus not content with his
+ portion.</span> time expired, Brennus coueting to haue more than his
+ portion came to, first thought to purchase himselfe aid in forreine
+ parties, &amp; therefore by the prouocation and counsell of yong
+ <span class="rightnote">Elsingius.</span> vnquiet heads, sailed ouer
+ into Norway, and there married the daughter of Elsung or Elsing, as
+ then duke or ruler of that countrie. Beline, offended with his
+ brother, that he should thus without his aduice marrie with a
+ stranger, now in his absence seized all his lands, townes, and
+ fortresses into his owne hands, placing garisons of men of warre
+ where he thought conuenient.</p>
+
+ <p>In the meane time, Brenne aduertised hereof, assembled a great
+ nauie of ships, well furnished with people and souldiers of the
+ Norwegians, with the which he tooke his course <span class=
+ "rightnote">Guilthdacus king of Denmarke.</span> homewards, but in
+ the waie he was encountred by Guilthdacus king of Denmarke, the which
+ had laid long in wait for him, bicause of the yoong ladie which
+ Brenne had maried, for whome he had béene a sutor to hir father
+ Elsing of long time. When these two fléetes of the Danes and
+ Norwegians met, there was a sore battell betwixt them, but finallie
+ the Danes ouercame them of Norway, and tooke the ship wherein the new
+ bride was conueied, and then was she brought aboord the ship of
+ Guilthdacus. Brenne escaped by flight as well as he might. But when
+ Guilthdacus had thus obtained the victorie and prey, suddenlie
+ therevpon <span class="rightnote">A tempest.</span> arose a sore
+ tempest of wind and weather, which scattered the Danish fleete, and
+ put the king in danger to haue béene lost: but finallie within fiue
+ daies after, being driuen by <span class="leftnote">Guilthdacus
+ landed in the north.</span> force of wind, he landed in
+ Northumberland, with a few such ships as kept togither with him.</p>
+
+ <p>Beline being then in that countrie, prouiding for defense against
+ his brother, vpon knowledge of the king of Denmarks arriuall, caused
+ him to be staied. Shortlie after, Brenne hauing recouered and gotten
+ togither the most part of his ships that were dispersed by the
+ discomfiture, and then newlie rigged and furnished of all things
+ necessarie, sent word to his brother Beline, both to restore vnto him
+ his wife wrongfullie rauished by Guilthdacus, and also his lands
+ iniuriouslie by him seized into his possession. These requests being
+ plainlie and shortlie denied, Brenne made no long delaie, but
+ spéedilie made toward Albania, and landing with his armie in a part
+ thereof, incountred with his brother Beline néere vnto a wood named
+ <span class="rightnote">Calater wood is in Scotland.</span> as then
+ Calater, where (after cruell fight, and mortall battell betwixt them)
+ at length the victorie abode with the Britains, and the discomfiture
+ did light so on the Norwegians, that the most of them were wounded,
+ slaine, and left dead vpon the ground.</p>
+
+ <p>Hereby Brenne being forced to flée, made shift, and got ouer into
+ Gallia, where after he <span class="rightnote">Seguinus or Seginus
+ duke of the Allobrogs, now the Delphinat of Sauoy.</span> had sued to
+ this prince, at length he abode, and was well receiued of one
+ Seguinus or Seginus duke of the people called then Allobrogs (as
+ Galfrid of Monmouth saith) or rather Armorica, which now is called
+ Britaine, as Polychronicon, and the english historie printed by
+ Caxton, more trulie maie seeme to affirme. But Beline hauing got the
+ vpper hand of his enimies, assembling his councell at Caerbranke, now
+ called York, tooke aduise what he should doo with the king of
+ Denmarke: where it was ordeined, that he should be set at<span class=
+ "page">[<a name="page453" id="page453">Page 453</a>]</span> libertie,
+ with condition and vnder couenant, to acknowledge himselfe by dooing
+ homage, <span class="rightnote">The Danes tributarie of the
+ Britains.</span> to hold his land of the king of Britaine, and to
+ paie him a yéerelie tribute. These couenants being agréed vpon, and
+ hostages taken for assurance, he was set at libertie, and so returned
+ into his countrie. The tribute that he couenanted to paie, was a
+ thousand pounds, as the English chronicle saith.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">The foure high waies finished.</span> When
+ Beline had thus expelled his brother, and was alone possessed of all
+ the land of Britaine, he first confirmed the lawes made by his
+ father: and for so much as the foure waies begun by his father were
+ not brought to perfection, he therefore caused workmen to be called
+ foorth and assembled, whom he set in hand to paue the said waies with
+ stone, for the better passage and ease of all that should trauell
+ through the countries from place to place, as occasion should
+ require.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><br />
+ The Fosse.</span> The first of these foure waies is named Fosse, and
+ stretcheth from the south into the north, beginning at the corner of
+ Totnesse in Cornewall, and so passing foorth by Deuonshire, and
+ Somersetshire, by Tutherie, on Cotteswold, and then forward beside
+ Couentrie vnto Leicester, and from thence by wild plaines towards
+ Newarke, and endeth at the citie of Lincolne. <span class=
+ "leftnote">Watling stréet.</span> The second waie was named Watling
+ stréete, the which stretcheth ouerthwart the Fosse, out of the
+ southeast into the northeast, beginning at Douer, and passing by the
+ middle of Kent ouer Thames beside London, by-west of Westminster, as
+ some haue thought, and so foorth by S. Albons, and by the west side
+ of Dunstable, Stratford, Toucester, and Wedon by-south of Lilleborne,
+ by Atherston, Gilberts hill, that now is called the Wreken, and so
+ foorth by Seuerne, passing beside Worcester, vnto Stratton to the
+ middle of Wales, and so vnto a place called Cardigan, at the Irish
+ sea. The third way <span class="rightnote">Erming streét.</span> was
+ named Ermingstréet, which stretched out of the west northwest, vnto
+ the east southeast, and beginneth at Meneuia, the which is in Saint
+ Dauids land in west Wales, and so vnto Southampton.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="leftnote">Hiknelstréet.</span> The fourth and last
+ waie hight Hiknelstréete, which leadeth by Worcester, Winchcombe,
+ Birmingham, Lichfield, Darbie, Chesterfield, and by Yorke, and so
+ foorth vnto Tinmouth. <span class="rightnote">Priuilegs granted to
+ the waies.</span> After he had caused these waies to be well and
+ sufficientlie raised and made, he confirmed vnto them all such
+ priuileges as were granted by his father.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="third3" id="third3"></a> <i>Brennus marrieth with the
+ duke of Alobrogs daughter, groweth into great honour, commeth into
+ Britaine with an armie against his brother Beline, their mother
+ reconcileth them, they ioine might &amp; munition and haue great
+ conquests, conflicts betweene the Galles and the Romans, the two
+ brethren take Rome.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE THIRD CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>In the meane time that Beline was thus occupied about the
+ necessarie affaires of his realme and kingdome, his brother Brenne
+ that was fled into Gallia onelie with 12. persons, bicause he was a
+ goodlie gentleman, and séemed to vnderstand what apperteined to
+ honour, grew shortlie into fauour with Seginus the duke afore
+ mentioned, and declaring vnto him his aduersitie, and the whole
+ circumstance of his mishap, at length was so highlie cherished of the
+ said Seginus, deliting in such worthie qualities as he saw in him
+ dailie appearing, that he <span class="rightnote">Brenne marieth the
+ duke of Alobrogs daughter.</span> gaue to him his daughter in
+ mariage, with condition, that if he died without issue male, should
+ he inherit his estate &amp; dukedome: and if it happened him to leaue
+ anie heire male behind him, then should he yet helpe him to recouer
+ his land and dominion in Britaine, béereft from him by his
+ brother.</p>
+
+ <p>These conditions well and surelie vpon the dukes part by the
+ assent of the nobles of his land concluded, ratified, and assured,
+ the said duke within the space of one yéere after died. And then
+ after a certeine time, being knowne that the duches was not with
+ child, all the lords of that countrie did homage to Brenne, receiuing
+ him as their lord and supreme gouernour, vpon whome he likewise for
+ his part in recompense of their curtesie, bestowed<span class=
+ "page">[<a name="page454" id="page454">Page 454</a>]</span> a great
+ portion of his treasure.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">Brenne with an armie returneth into
+ Britaine.</span> Shortlie after also, with their assent he gathered
+ an armie, and with the same eftsoones came ouer into Britaine, to
+ make new warre vpon his brother Beline. Of whose landing when Beline
+ was informed, he assembled his people, and made himselfe readie to
+ méete <span class="leftnote">Brenne and Beline made friends by
+ intercession of their mother.</span> him: but as they were at point
+ to haue ioined battell, by the intercession of their mother that came
+ betwixt them, and demeaned hirselfe in all motherlie order, and most
+ louing maner towards them both, they fell to an agréement, and were
+ made friends or euer they parted asunder.</p>
+
+ <p>After this they repaired to London, and there taking aduice
+ togither with their peeres and councellors, for the good order and
+ quieting of the land, at length they accorded to passe with both
+ their armies into Gallia, to subdue that whole countrie, and so
+ following this determination, they tooke shipping and sailed ouer
+ into Gallia, where beginning the warre with fire and sword, they
+ wrought such maisteries, that within a short time (as saith Geffrey
+ of <span class="rightnote">They inuade Gallia and Italie.</span>
+ Monmouth) they conquered a great part of Gallia, Italie, and
+ Germanie, and brought it to their subiection. In the end they tooke
+ Rome by this occasion (as writers report) if these be the same that
+ had the leading of those Galles, which in this season did so much
+ hurt in Italie and other parts of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>After they had passed the mountaines, &amp; were entred into
+ Tuscan, they besieged the citie <span class="leftnote">Now
+ Clusi.</span> of Clusium, the citizens whereof being in great danger,
+ sent to Rome for aid against their enimies. Wherevpon the Romanes,
+ considering with themselues that although they were not in anie
+ league of societie with the Clusians, yet if they were ouercome the
+ danger of the next <span class="rightnote">Ambassadours sent from
+ Rome. Brennus answere.</span> brunt were like to be theirs: with all
+ spéed they sent ambassadours to intreat betwixt the parties for some
+ peace to be had.</p>
+
+ <p>They that were sent, required the capteines of the Galles, in the
+ name of the senat and citizens of Rome, not to molest the friends of
+ the Romans. Wherevnto answere was made by Brennus, that for his part
+ he could be content to haue peace, if it were so that the Clusians
+ would be agréeable that the Galles might haue part of the countrie
+ which they held, being more than they did alreadie well occupie, for
+ otherwise (said he) there could be no peace granted.</p>
+
+ <p>The Romane ambassadours being offended with these wordes, demanded
+ what the Galles had to doo in Tuscan, by reason of which and other
+ the like ouerthwart wordes, the parties <span class="rightnote">The
+ treatie of peace breaketh off.</span> began to kindle in displeasure
+ so farre, that their communication brake off, and so they from
+ treating fell againe to trie the matter by dint of sword.</p>
+
+ <p>The Romane ambassadours also to shew of what prowesse the Romans
+ were, contrarie to the law of nations (forbidding such as came in
+ ambassage about anie treatie of peace to take either one part or
+ other) tooke weapon in hand, and ioined themselues with the Clusians,
+ wherewith the Galles were so much displeased, that incontinentlie
+ with one voice, they required to haue the siege raised from Clusium,
+ that they might go to Rome. But Brennus thought good first to send
+ messengers thither, to require the deliuerie of such as had broken
+ the law, that punishment might be done on them accordinglie as they
+ had deserued. This was done, and knowledge brought againe, that the
+ ambassadors were not onelie not punished, but also chosen to be
+ tribunes for the next yeare.</p>
+
+ <p>The Galles then became in such a rage (because they saw there was
+ nothing to be looked <span class="rightnote">The Galles make towards
+ Rome. The Romans incountring with the Galles are overthrown.</span>
+ for at the hands of the Romans, but warre, injurious wrongs, and
+ deceitfull traines) that they turned all their force against them,
+ marching streight towardes Rome, and by the waie destroied all that
+ stood before them. The Romans aduertised thereof, assembled
+ themselues togither to the number of 40. thousand, and encountring
+ with Beline and Brenne, neare to the riuer Allia, about 11. miles on
+ this side Rome, were slaine and quite discomfited.</p>
+
+ <p>The Galles could scarse beléeue that they had got the victorie
+ with so small resistance: but when they perceiued that the Romans
+ were quite ouerthrowne and that the field was clearelie rid of them,
+ they got togither the spoile, and made towards Rome it selfe, where
+ <span class="rightnote">The Romans in despaire withdraw into the
+ capitoll.</span> such feare and terror was striken into the heartes
+ of the people, that all men were in despaire<span class=
+ "page">[<a name="page455" id="page455">Page 455</a>]</span> to defend
+ the citie: and therefore the senate with all the warlike youth of the
+ citizens got them into the capitoll, which they furnished with
+ victuals and all things necessarie for the maintenance of the same
+ against a long siege. The honorable fathers and all the multitude of
+ other people not apt for warres, remained still in the citie, as it
+ were to perish with their countrie if hap so befell.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><br />
+ The Galles enter into Rome.</span> In the meane time came the Galles
+ to the citie, and entring by the gate Collina, they passed forth the
+ right way vnto the market place, maruelling to sée the houses of the
+ poorer sort to be shut against them, and those of the richer to
+ remaine wide open; wherefore being doubtfull of some deceitfull
+ traines, they were not ouer rash to enter the same; but <span class=
+ "leftnote">The Reuerend aspect of the senators.</span> after they had
+ espied the ancient fathers sit in their chaires apparelled in their
+ rich robes, as if they had bin in the senat, they reuerenced them as
+ gods, so honorable was their port, grauenesse in countenance, and
+ shew of apparell.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><i>Marcus Papirius</i></span> In the meane
+ time it chanced, that Marcus Papirius stroke one of the Galles on the
+ head with his staffe, because he presumed to stroke his beard: with
+ which iniurie the Gall being prouoked, slue Papirius (as he sat) with
+ his sword, and therewith the slaughter being begun with one, all the
+ residue of those ancient fatherlie men as they sat in their chaires
+ were slaine and cruellie murthered. After this all the people found
+ in the citie without respect or <span class="leftnote"><br />
+ Rome sacked. 365.</span> difference at all, were put to the sword,
+ and their houses sacked. And thus was Rome taken by the two brethren,
+ Beline and Brenne, 365 yeares after the first building thereof.
+ Besides this, the Galles attempted in the night season to haue entred
+ the capitoll: and in déed ordered their enterprise so secretlie, that
+ they had atchieued their purpose, if a sort of <span class=
+ "rightnote"><br />
+ The capitoll defended.</span> ganders had not with their crie and
+ noise disclosed them, in wakening the Romans that were asléepe: &amp;
+ so by that meanes were the Galles beaten backe and repelled.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="fourth3" id="fourth3"></a> <i>Camillus reuoked from
+ exile, made dictator, and receiueth peremptorie authoritie, he
+ ouerthroweth the Galles in a pitcht field, controuersie betweene
+ writers touching Brennus and Belinus left vndetermined; of diuers
+ foundations, erections and reparations doone and atchiued by Belinus,
+ the burning of his bodie in stead of his burieng.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE FOURTH CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>The Romans being thus put to their extreame shift, deuised among
+ themselues how to reuoke Furius Camillus from exile, whom not long
+ before they had vniustlie banished out of the citie. In the end they
+ did not onelie send for him home, but also created him dictator,
+ committing into his handes (so long as his office lasted) an absolute
+ power ouer all men, both of life and death. Camillus forgetfull of
+ the iniurie done to him, and mindfull of his dutie towards his
+ countrie, and lamenting the state thereof, without delay gathered
+ such an armie as the present time permitted.</p>
+
+ <p>In the meane time those that kept the capitoll (being almost
+ famished for lacke of vittels) <span class="rightnote">A
+ composition.</span> compounded with Brenne and Beline, that for a
+ thousand pounds weight in gold, the Romans should redéeme their
+ liberties, and the said Brenne and Beline depart with their armie out
+ of the citie and all the territories of Rome. But at the deliuerie of
+ the monie, and by a certeine kind of hap, the Romans name was
+ preserued at that time from such dishonor and ignominie as was
+ likelie to haue insued. For some of the couetous sort of the Galles,
+ not contented with the iust weight of the gold, did cast their swords
+ also into the balance where the weights lay, thereby to haue ouer
+ weight: wherevpon the Romans refused to make paiment after that
+ weight.</p>
+
+ <p>And thus whilest they were in altercation about this matter, the
+ one importunnate to haue, <span class="rightnote">Camillus
+ disappointeth the Galles of their paiment.</span> the other not
+ willing to grant, the time passed, till in the meane season Camillus
+ came in amongst them with his power, commanding that the gold should
+ be had away, and affirming that without consent of the dictator, no
+ composition or agréement might be concluded<span class=
+ "page">[<a name="page456" id="page456">Page 456</a>]</span> by the
+ meaner magistrate. He gaue a signe to the Galles to prepare
+ themselues to battell, <span class="leftnote"><br />
+ The Galles overthrowne</span> whervnto they lightlie agréed, and
+ togither they went. The battell being once begun, the Galles that
+ looked earst for gold, and not for battell, were easilie ouercome,
+ such as stood to the brunt were slaine, and the rest by flight
+ constreined to depart the citie.</p>
+
+ <p>Polybius writeth, that the Galles were turned from the siege of
+ the citie, through wars which chanced amongst their owne people at
+ home, and therefore they concluded a peace with the Romans, and
+ leauing them in libertie returned home againe.</p>
+
+ <p>But howsoeuer the matter passed, thus much haue we stept from our
+ purpose, to shew somwhat of that noble and most famous capteine
+ Brennus, who (as not onelie our histories, but also Giouan Villani
+ the Florentine dooth report) was a Britaine, and brother to Beline
+ (as before is mentioned) although I know that manie other writers are
+ not of that mind, affirming him to be a Gall, and likewise that after
+ this present time of the taking of Rome by this Brennus 110 yeares,
+ or there abouts, there was another Brennus a Gall by nation (say
+ they) vnder whose conduct an other armie of the Gals inuaded Grecia,
+ which Brennus had a brother that hight Belgius, although Humfrey
+ Llhoyd and sir Iohn Prise doo flatlie denie the same, by reason of
+ some discordance in writers, &amp; namelie in the computation of the
+ yeares set downe by them that haue recorded the dooings of those
+ times, whereof the error is growen. Howbeit I doubt not but that the
+ truth of this matter shall be more fullie sifted out in time by the
+ learned and studious of such antiquities. But now to our purpose.</p>
+
+ <p>This is also to be noted, that where our histories make mention,
+ that Beline was abroad with Brennus in the most part of his
+ victories, both in Gallia, Germanie, and Italie; Titus <span class=
+ "rightnote"><i>Titus Liu. Polydor.</i></span> Liuius speaketh but
+ onlie of Brennus: wherevpon some write, that after the two brethren
+ were by their mothers intreatance made friends, Brennus onlie went
+ ouer to Gallia, and there through proofe of his woorthie prowesse,
+ atteined to such estimation amongst the people called Galli Senones,
+ that he was chosen to be their generall capteine at their going ouer
+ <span class="leftnote"><i>Matth. West.</i></span> the mountaines into
+ Italie. But whether Beline went ouer with his brother, and finallie
+ returned backe againe, leauing Brennus behind him, as some write, or
+ that he went not at all, but remained still at home whitest his
+ brother was abroad, we can affirme no certeintie.</p>
+
+ <p>Most part of all our writers make report of manie woorthie deeds
+ accomplished by Beline, <span class="rightnote"><i>Polychr.
+ <br />
+ Gal. M.</i>
+ <br />
+ Caerleon Wiske built by Belline.</span> in repairing of cities
+ decaied, &amp; erecting of other new buildings, to the adorning and
+ beautifieng of his realme and kingdome. And amongst other works which
+ were by him erected, he builded a citie in the south part of Wales,
+ neare to the place where the riuer of Vske falleth into Seuerne, fast
+ by Glamorgan, which citie hight Caerleon, or Caerlegion Ar Wiske.
+ This Caerleon was the principall citie in time past of all Demetia,
+ now called Southwales. Manie notable monuments are remaining there
+ till this day, testifieng the great magnificence and roiall buildings
+ of that citie in old time. In which citie also sith the time of
+ Christ were thrée churches, one of saint Iulius the martyr, an other
+ of saint Aron, and the third was the mother church of all Demetia,
+ and the chiefe sée: but after, the same sée was translated vnto
+ Meneuia, (that is to say) saint Dauid in Westwales. In this Caerleon
+ was Amphibulus borne, who taught and instructed saint Albon.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><i>Fabian.</i></span> This Beline also
+ builded an hauen, with a gate ouer the same, within the citie of
+ Troinouant now called London, in the summitie or highest part wherof
+ afterwards was set a vessell of brasse, in the which were put the
+ ashes of his bodie, which bodie after his deceasse was <span class=
+ "leftnote"><br />
+ <i>Iohn Leland.</i></span> burnt, as the maner of burieng in those
+ daies did require. This gate was long after called Belins gate, and
+ at length by corruption of language Billings gate. He builded also a
+ castell eastward from this gate (as some haue written) which was long
+ time after likewise called <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ The Tower of London built by Beline.</span> Belins castell, and is
+ the same which now we call the tower of London. Thus Beline studieng
+ dailie to beautifie this land with goodlie buildings and famous
+ workes, at length departed this life, after he had reigned with his
+ brother iointlie and alone the space of 26 yeres.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="fift3" id="fift3"></a> <i>Of Gurguintus, Guintolinus, and
+ Sicilius, three kings of Britaine succeeding ech other
+ by</i><span class="page">[<a name="page457" id="page457">Page
+ 457</a>]</span> <i>lineall descent in the regiment, and of their acts
+ and deeds, with a notable commendation of Queene Martia.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE FIFT CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">GURGUINTUS</span> Gurguintus the sonne of
+ Beline began to reigne ouer the Britains, in the yeare of the world
+ 1596, after the building of Rome 380, after the deliuerance of the
+ Israelites out of captiuitie 164 complet, which was about the 33
+ yeare of Artaxerxes Mnenon, surnamed Magnus, the seuenth king of the
+ Persians. This Gurguint in the English chronicle is <span class=
+ "leftnote"><i>Matth. West</i></span> named Corinbratus, and by
+ Matthew Westmin. he is surnamed Barbiruc, the which bicause the
+ tribute granted by Guilthdag king of Denmarke in perpetuitie vnto the
+ kings of Britaine <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Gal. M.</i> Gurguint c&#333;strained the Danes by force to pay
+ their tribute.</span> was denied, he sailed with a mightie nauie and
+ armie of men into Denmarke, where he made such warre with fire and
+ sword, that the king of Denmarke with the assent of his barons was
+ constreined to grant eftsoones to continue the paiment of the
+ aforesaid tribute.</p>
+
+ <p>After he had thus atchiued his desire in Denmarke, as he returned
+ backe towards Britaine, he encountred with a nauie of 30 ships beside
+ the Iles of Orkenies. These ships were fraught with men and women,
+ and had to their capteine one called Bartholin or Partholin,
+ <span class="rightnote"><i>Matth. West. Gal. Mon.</i></span>
+ <br />
+ who being brought to the presence of king Gurguint, declared that he
+ with his people were banished out of Spaine, and were named Balenses
+ or Baselenses, and had sailed long on the <span class=
+ "leftnote">Basques.</span> sea, to the end to find some prince that
+ would assigne them a place to inhabit, to whom <span class=
+ "rightnote">Sée more hereof in Ireland.</span> they would become
+ subiects, &amp; hold of him as of their souereigne gouernor.
+ Therefore he besought the king to consider their estate, and of his
+ great benignitie to appoint some void quarter where they might
+ settle. The king with the aduice of his barons granted to them the
+ Ile of Ireland, which as then (by report of some authors) lay waste
+ and without habitation <span class="rightnote">Polychron.</span> But
+ it should appeare by other writers, that it was inhabited long before
+ those daies, by the people called Hibernenses, of Hiberus their
+ capteine that brought them also out of Spaine.</p>
+
+ <p>After that Gurguintus was returned into his countrie, he ordeined
+ that the laws made by his ancestors should be dulie kept and
+ obserued. And thus administring iustice to his subiects for the
+ tearme of 19 yeares, he finallie departed this life, and was buried
+ at London, <span class="leftnote">Caius.</span> or as some haue at
+ Caerleon. In his daies was the towne of Cambridge with the
+ vniuersitie first founded by Cantaber, brother to the aforesaid
+ Bartholin (according to some writers) as after shall appeare.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">GUINTOLINUS.</span> Guintolinus or
+ Guintellius the sonne of Gurguintus was admitted king of Britaine in
+ the yere of the world 3614, after the building of the citie of Rome
+ 399, and second yere of the 206 Olimpiad. This Guintoline was a wise
+ prince, graue in counsell, and sober in behauior. He had also a wife
+ named Martia, a woman of perfect beautie, &amp; wisedome
+ incomparable, as by hir prudent gouernement and equall administration
+ of iustice after hir husbands deceasse, during hir sonnes minoritie,
+ it most manifestlie appeared.</p>
+
+ <p>It is thought that in an happie time this Guintoline came to the
+ gouernement of this kingdome, being shaken and brought out of order
+ with ciuill dissentions, to the end he might reduce it to the former
+ estate, which he earnestlie accomplished: for hauing once got the
+ place, he studied with great diligence to reforme anew, and to adorne
+ with iustice, lawes and good orders, the British common wealth, by
+ other kings not so framed as stood with the quietnesse thereof. But
+ afore all things he vtterlie remooued and appeased such ciuill
+ discord, as séemed yet to remaine after the maner of a remnant of
+ those seditious factions and partakings, which had so long time
+ reigned in this land. But as he was busie in hand herewith, death
+ tooke him out of this life, after he had reigned 27 yeares, and then
+ was he buried at London.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">SICILIUS.</span> <span class=
+ "page">[<a name="page458" id="page458">458]</a></span> Sicilius the
+ sonne of Guintoline, being not past seuen yeares of age when his
+ father died, was admitted king, in the yeare 3659, after the building
+ of Rome 430, &amp; after the deliuerance of the Israelites out of
+ captiuitie 218, &amp; in the sixt after the death of Alexander.
+ <span class="rightnote">Queene Martia gouerneth in hir sonnes
+ roome.</span> By reason that Sicilius was not of age sufficient of
+ himselfe to guide the kingdoms of the Britains, his mother that
+ worthie ladie called Martia, had the gouernance both of his realme
+ and person committed to hir charge.</p>
+
+ <p>She was a woman expert and skilfull in diuers sciences, but
+ chiefelie being admitted to the gouernance of the realme, she studied
+ to preserue the common wealth in good quiet <span class=
+ "rightnote">She maketh lawes.</span> and wholsome order, and
+ therefore deuised and established profitable and conuenient lawes,
+ the which after were called Martian lawes, of hir name that first
+ made them. These lawes, as those that were thought good and
+ necessarie for the preseruation of the common wealth, Alfred, or
+ Alured, that was long after king of England, translated also out of
+ the British toong, into the English Saxon speech, and then were they
+ called after that translation <span class="leftnote"><br />
+ <i>Matt. West.</i></span> Marchenelagh, that is to meane, the lawes
+ of Martia. To conclude, this worthie woman guided the land during the
+ minoritie of hir sonne right politikelie; and highlie to hir
+ perpetuall renowme and commendation. And when hir sonne came to
+ lawfull age, she deliuered <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Matt. Westm.</i></span> vp the gouernance into his handes. How
+ long he reigned writers varie, some auouch but seuen yeares, though
+ other affirme 15. which agréeth not so well with the accord of other
+ histories and times. He was buried at London.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="sixt3" id="sixt3"></a> <i>Of Kimarus and his sudden end,
+ of Elanius and his short regiment, of Morindus and his beastlie
+ crueltie, all thrée immediatlie succeeding each other in the
+ monarchie of Britaine, with the exploits of the last.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE SIXT CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">KIMARUS. <i>Fabian</i>.</span> Kimarus the
+ sonne of Sicilius began to reigne ouer the Britaines, in the yeare of
+ the world 3657, and after the building of Rome 442, &amp; in the
+ first yeare of the 117. Olimpiad. This Kimarus being a wild yoong
+ man, and giuen to follow his lusts and pleasures, was slaine by some
+ that were his enimies, as he was abroad in hunting, when he had
+ reigned scarselie three yeares.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">ELANIUS.</span> Elanius the sonne of
+ Kimarus, or (as other haue) his brother, began to rule the Britaines
+ in the yeare after the creation of the world 3361, after the building
+ of Rome 445, after <span class="leftnote"><i>Matth. West.</i></span>
+ the deliuerance of the Israelites 229, and in the fourth yeare of the
+ Seleuciens, after which account the bookes of Machabees doo reckon,
+ which began in the 14, after the death of Alexander. This Elanius in
+ the English Chronicle is named also Haran; by Mat. Westm. Danius; and
+ by an old chronicle which Fabian much followed, Elanius and Kimarus
+ should seeme to be one person: but other hold the contrarie, and saie
+ that he reigned fullie 8. yeares.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">MORINDUS.</span> Morindus the bastard
+ sonne of Elanius was admitted king of Britaine, in the yeare of the
+ world 3667, after the building of Rome 451, after the deliuerance of
+ the Israelites 236, and in the tenth yeare of Cassander K. of
+ Macedonia, which hauing dispatched Olimpias the mother of Alexander
+ the great, and gotten Roxanes with Alexanders sonne into his hands,
+ vsurped the kingdome of the Macedonians, and held it 15 yéeres. This
+ Morindus in the English chronicle is called Morwith, and was a man of
+ worthie fame in chiualrie and martiall dooings, but so cruell
+ withall, that his vnmercifull nature could scarse be satisfied with
+ the torments of them that had offended him, although oftentimes with
+ his owne hands he cruellie put them to torture and execution. He was
+ also beautifull and comelie of personage, liberall and bounteous, and
+ of a maruellous strength.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>G. Mon.</i></span> In his daies, a certeine king of the people
+ called Moriani, with a great armie landed in Northumberland, and
+ began to make cruell warre vpon the inhabitants. But Morindus
+ aduertised héerof, assembled his Britains, came against the enimies,
+ and in battell putting<span class="page">[<a name="page459" id=
+ "page459">Page 459</a>]</span> them to flight, chased them to their
+ ships, and tooke a great number of them prisoners, whome to the
+ satisfieng of his cruell nature he caused to be slaine euen in his
+ presence. Some of them were headed, some strangled, some panched, and
+ some he caused to be slaine quicke.</p>
+
+ <p>¶ These people (whome Gal. Mon. nameth Moriani) I take to be
+ either those that inhabited <span class="rightnote">The like may be
+ thought of those Murreis or Morauians of whom <i>H.B.</i> speaketh.
+ <i>Fabian</i>.</span> about Terrouane and Calice, called Morini, or
+ some other people of the Galles or Germaines, and not as some estéeme
+ them, Morauians, or Merhenners, which were not known to the world (as
+ Humfrey Llhoyd hath verie well noted) till about the daies of the
+ emperour Mauricius, which misconstruction of names hath brought the
+ British historie further out of credit than reason requireth, if the
+ circumstances be dulie considered.</p>
+
+ <p>But now to end with Morindus. At length this bloudie prince heard
+ of a monster that was come a land out of the Irish sea, with the
+ which when he would néeds fight, he was deuoured of the same, after
+ he had reigned the terme of 8 yeeres, leauing behind him fiue sonnes,
+ Gorbonianus, Archigallus, Elidurus, Vigenius, or Nigenius, and
+ Peredurus.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="seuenth3" id="seuenth3"></a> <i>Of Gorbonianus,
+ Archigallus, Elidurus, Vigenius, and Peredurus, the fiue sons of
+ Morindius, the building of Cambridge, the restitution of Archigallus
+ to the regiment after his depriuation, Elidurus three times admitted
+ king, his death and place of interrement.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE SEUENTH CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>Gorbonianus the first son of Morindus succéeded his father in the
+ kingdome of <span class="rightnote">GORBOMEN OR GORBONIANUS.</span>
+ Britain, in the yéere of the world 3676, after the building of Rome
+ 461, and fourth yéere of the 121. Olimpiad. This Gorbonianus in the
+ English chronicle is named Granbodian, and was a righteous prince in
+ his gouernment, and verie deuout (according to such deuotion
+ <span class="leftnote">A righteous and religious prince.</span> as he
+ had) towards the aduancing of the religion of his gods: and thervpon
+ he repaired all the old temples through his kingdome, and erected
+ some new.</p>
+
+ <p>He also builded the townes of Cambridge and Grantham (as Caxton
+ writeth) and was beloued both of the rich and poore, for he honoured
+ the rich, and relieued the poore in time of their necessities. In his
+ time was more plentie of all things necessarie for the wealthfull
+ state of man, than had béene before in anie of his predecessors
+ daies. He died without issue, after he had reigned (by the accord of
+ most writers) about the terme of ten yeares.</p>
+
+ <p>Some write that this Gorbonian built the townes of Cairgrant, now
+ called Cambridge, &amp; <span class="rightnote">Cambridge by whome it
+ was built.</span> also Grantham, but some thinke that those which
+ haue so written are deceiued, in mistaking the name; for that
+ Cambridge was at the first called Granta: and by that meanes it might
+ be that Gorbonian built onlie Grantham, and not Cambridge, namelie
+ because other write how that Cambridge (as before is said) was built
+ in the daies of Gurguntius the sonne of Beline, by one Cantaber a
+ Spaniard, brother to Partholoin, which Partholoin by the aduice of
+ the same Gurguntius, got seates for himselfe and his companie in
+ Ireland (as before ye haue heard.)</p>
+
+ <p>The said Cantaber also obteining licence of Gurguntius, builded a
+ towne vpon the side of the riuer called Canta, which he closed with
+ walles, and fortified with a strong tower or castell, and after
+ procuring philosophers to come hither from Athens (where in his youth
+ he had bene a student) he placed them there, and so euen then was
+ that place furnished (as they saie) with learned men, and such as
+ were readie to instruct others in knowledge of letters and
+ philosophicall doctrine. But by whome or in what time soeuer it was
+ built, certeine it is that there was a citie or towne walled in that
+ place before the comming of the Saxons, called by the Britaines
+ Caergrant, and by the Saxons Granchester.</p>
+
+ <p>This towne fell so to ruine by the inuasion of the Saxons, that at
+ length it was in maner left desolate, and at this day remaineth as a
+ village. But néere therevnto vnder the Saxon<span class=
+ "page">[<a name="page460" id="page460">Page 460</a>]</span> kings, an
+ other towne was built, now called Cambridge, where by the fauour of
+ king Sigebert and Felix a Burgundian, that was bishop of Dunwich, a
+ schoole was erected, as in place conuenient shall appeare.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">ARCHIGALLUS.</span> Archigallus, the
+ second sonne of Morindus, and brother vnto Gorbonianus, was admitted
+ king of Britaine, in the yeare 3686, after the building of the citie
+ of Rome 470, after the deliuerance of the Israelites out of
+ captiuitie 255, and in the first yeare of Sosthenes king of
+ Macedonia. This Archigallus (in the English chronicle called
+ Artogaill) followed not the <span class="rightnote">He is giuen to
+ nourish dissention.</span> steppes of his brother, but giuing
+ himselfe to dissention and strife, imagined causes against his
+ nobles, that he might displace them, and set such in their roomes as
+ were men of base birth and of euill conditions. Also he sought by
+ vnlawfull meanes to bereaue his wealthie subiects of their goods and
+ riches, so to inrich himselfe and impouerish his people. For the
+ which his inordinate dooings, his nobles conspired against him, and
+ finallie depriued him of all his honor and kinglie dignitie, after he
+ had reigned about the space of one yeare.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">ELIDURUS.</span> Elidurus the third sonne
+ of Morindus, and brother to Archigallus, was by one consent of the
+ Britains chosen to reigne ouer them in his brothers stead, after the
+ creation of the world 3687, and after the building of the citie of
+ Rome 471, after the deliuerance of the Israelites 256, &amp; in the
+ first yeare of Sosthenes king of Macedonia. This Elidurus in the
+ English chronicle named Hesider, or Esoder, prooued a most righteous
+ prince, and doubting least he should doo otherwise than became him,
+ if he did not take care for his brother Archigallus estate, a man
+ might woonder what diligence he shewed in trauelling with the nobles
+ of the realme to haue his brother restored to the crowne againe.</p>
+
+ <p>Now as it chanced one day (being abroad on hunting in the wood
+ called Calater) neare vnto Yorke, he found his brother Archigall
+ wandering there in the thickest of that wildernesse, <span class=
+ "rightnote">By this it should séeme that Acliud should not be in
+ Scotland, contrarie to the Scotish authors.</span> whom in most
+ louing maner he secretlie conueied home to his house, being as then
+ the citie of Aldud, otherwise called Acliud. Shortlie after he feined
+ himselfe sicke, and in all hast sent messengers about to assemble his
+ barons, who being come at the day appointed, he called them one after
+ another into his priuie chamber, and there handled them in such
+ affectuous sort with wise and discréet words, that he got their good
+ wils to further him to their powers, for the reducing of the kingdome
+ eftsoones into the hands of his brother Archigallus.</p>
+
+ <p>After this he assembled a councell at Yorke, where he so vsed the
+ matter with the commons, that in conclusion, when the said Elidurus
+ had gouerned the land well and honourablie the space of thrée yeares,
+ he resigned wholie his crowne and kinglie title vnto his brother
+ Archigallo, who was receiued of the Britaines againe as king by
+ mediation of his <span class="rightnote">An example of brotherlie
+ loue.</span> brother in manner as before is said. ¶ A rare example of
+ brotherlie loue, if a man shall reuolue in his mind what an
+ inordinate desire remaineth amongst mortall men to atteine to the
+ supreme souereintie of ruling, and to kéepe the same when they haue
+ it once in possession. He had well learned this lesson (as may
+ appeare by his contentation and resignation) namelie, that</p>
+
+ <p class="indent">Nec abnuendum si dat imperium Deus,
+ <br />
+ Nec appetendum,</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">Sen. in Thiess.</span> otherwise he would
+ not haue béene led with such an equabilitie of mind. For this great
+ good will and brotherlie loue by him shewed thus toward his brother,
+ he was surnamed the godlie and vertuous.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">ARCHIGALLUS AGAIN.</span> When Archigallus
+ was thas restored to the kingdome, and hauing learned by due
+ correction that he must turne the leafe, and take out a new lesson,
+ by changing his former trade of liuing into better, if he would
+ reigne in suertie: he became a new man, vsing himselfe vprightlie in
+ the administration of iustice, and behauing himselfe so woorthilie in
+ all his doings, both toward the nobles &amp; commons of his realme,
+ that he was both beloued and dread of all his subiects. And so
+ continuing the whole tearme of his life, finallie departed out of
+ this world, after he had reigned this second time the space of ten
+ yeares, and<span class="page">[<a name="page461" id="page461">Page
+ 461</a>]</span> was buried at Yorke.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">ELIDURUS AGAINE.
+ <br />
+ <i>Matt. West</i>.</span> Elidurus brother to this Archigallus was
+ then againe admitted king by consent of all the Britaines, 3700 of
+ the world. But his two yonger brethren, Vigenius and Peredurus,
+ enuieng
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <span class="leftnote">Brother against brother.</span> the happie
+ state of this woorthie prince, so highlie for his vertue and good
+ gouernance esteemed of the Britains, of a grounded malice conspired
+ against him, and assembling an armie, <span class="rightnote">Elidure
+ committed to prison.</span> leuied warre against him, and in a pitcht
+ field tooke him prisoner, and put him in the tower of London, there
+ to be kept close prisoner, after he had reigned now this last time
+ the space of one yeare.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">VIGENIUS AND PEREDURUS.</span> Vigenius
+ and Peredurus, the yoongest sonnes of Morindus, and brethren to
+ Elidurus, began to reigne iointlie as kings of Britaine, in the yeare
+ of the world 3701, after the building of Rome 485, after the
+ deliuerance of the Israelites 266 complet, and in the 12 yeare of
+ Antigonus Gonatas, the sonne of Demetrius king of the Macedonians.
+ These two brethren in the English chronicles are named Higanius and
+ Petitur, who (as Gal. Mon. testifieth) <span class=
+ "rightnote">Britaine divided into two realmes.</span> diuided the
+ realme betwixt them, so that all the land from Humber westward fell
+ to Vigenius, or Higanius, the other part beyond Humber northward
+ Peredure held. But other affirme, that Peredurus onelie reigned, and
+ held his brother Elidurus in prison by his owne consent, forsomuch as
+ he was not willing to gouerne.</p>
+
+ <p>But Gal. Mon. saith, that Vigenius died after he had reigned 7
+ yeares, and then Peredurus seized all the land into his owne rule,
+ and gouerned it with such sobrietie and wisedome, that he was praised
+ aboue all his brethren, so that Elidurus was quite forgotten of the
+ Britains. <span class="leftnote">Varitie in writers.</span> But
+ others write that he was a verie tyrant, and vsed himselfe verie
+ cruellie towards the lords of his land, wherevpon they rebelled and
+ slue him. But whether by violent hand, or by naturall sicknesse, he
+ finallie departed this life, after the consent of most writers,
+ <span class="rightnote"><i>Caxton.</i></span> when he had reigned
+ eight yeares, leauing no issue behind him to succéed in the
+ gouernance <span class="leftnote"><br />
+ <i>Eth. Bur.</i></span> of the kingdome. He builded the towne of
+ Pikering, where his bodie was buried.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">ELIDURUS THE THIRD TIME.</span> Elidurus
+ then, as soone as his brother Peredurus was dead, for as much as he
+ was next heire to the crowne, was deliuered out of prison, and now
+ the third time admitted king of Britaine, who vsed himselfe (as
+ before) verie orderlie in ministring to all persons right and iustice
+ all the daies of his life, and lastlie being growne to great age
+ died, when he had <span class="leftnote"><br />
+ He is buried at Caerleill</span> reigned now this third time (after
+ most concordance of writers) the tearme of foure yeares: and was
+ buried at Caerleill.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="eight3" id="eight3"></a> <i>A Chapter of digression,
+ shewing the diuersitie of writers in opinion, touching the
+ computation of yeares from the beginning of the British kings of this
+ Iland downewards; since Gurguintus time, till the death of Elidurus;
+ and likewise till King Lud reigned in his roialtie, with the names of
+ such kings as ruled betweene the last yeare of Elidurus, and the
+ first of Lud.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE EIGHT CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>Here is to be noted, that euen from the beginning of the British
+ kings, which reigned here in this land, there is great diuersitie
+ amongest writers, both touching the names, and also the times of
+ their reignes, speciallie till they come to the death of the last
+ mentioned <span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor.</i></span> king
+ Elidurus. Insomuch that Polydor Virgil in his historie of England,
+ finding a manifest error (as he taketh it) in those writers whome he
+ followeth touching the account, from the comming of Brute, vnto the
+ sacking of Rome by Brennus, whome our histories affirme to be the
+ brother of Beline, that to fill vp the number which is wanting in the
+ reckoning of the yeares of those kings which reigned after Brute,
+ till the daies of the same Brenne &amp; Beline, he thought good to
+ change the order, least one error should follow an other, and so of
+ one error making manie, he hath placed those kings which after other
+ writers should séeme to follow Brenne and Beline, betwixt Dunuallo
+ and Mulmucius, father<span class="page">[<a name="page462" id=
+ "page462">Page 462</a>]</span> to the said Beline and Brenne, and
+ those fiue kings which stroue for the gouernement after the deceasse
+ of the two brethren, Ferrex and Porrex, putting Guintoline to succéed
+ after the fiue kings or rulers, and after Guintoline his wife Martia,
+ during the minoritie of hir sonne, then hir said sonne named
+ Sicilius.</p>
+
+ <p>After him succéeded these whose names follow in order, Chimarius,
+ Danius, Morindus, Gorbonianus, Archigallo, who being deposed,
+ Elidurus was made king, and so continued till he restored the
+ gouernement (as ye haue heard) to Archigallo againe, and after his
+ death Elidurus was eftsoones admitted, and within awhile againe
+ deposed by Vigenius and Peredurus, and after their deceasses the
+ third time restored. Then after his deceasse followed successiuelie
+ Veginus, Morganus, Ennanus, Idunallo, Rimo, Geruntius, Catellus,
+ Coilus, Porrex the second of that name, Cherinus, Fulgentius,
+ Eldalus, Androgeus, Vrianus and Eliud, after whom should follow
+ Dunuallo Molmucius, as in his proper place, if the order of things
+ doone, &amp; the course of time should be obserued, as Polydor
+ gathereth by the account of yeares attributed to those kings that
+ reigned before and after Dunuallo, according to those authours whom
+ (as I said) he followeth, if they will that Brennus which led the
+ Galles to Rome be the same that was sonne to the said Dunuallo
+ Mulmucius, and brother to Beline.</p>
+
+ <p>But sith other haue in better order brought out a perfect
+ agréement in the account of yeares, and succession of those kings,
+ which reigned and gouerned in this land before the sacking of Rome;
+ and also another such as it is after the same, and before the Romans
+ had anie perfect knowledge thereof; we haue thought good to follow
+ them therein, leauing to euerie man his libertie to iudge as his
+ knowledge shall serue him in a thing so doubtfull and vncerteine, by
+ reason of variance amongst the ancient writers in that behalfe.</p>
+
+ <p>And euen as there is great difference in writers since Gurguintus,
+ till the death of Elidurus, so is there as great or rather greater
+ after his deceasse, speciallie till king Lud <span class=
+ "rightnote"><i>Fabian.</i></span> atteined the kingdóme. But as maie
+ be gathered by that which Fabian and other whome he followeth doo
+ write, there passed aboue 185 yeares betwixt the last yeare of
+ Elidurus, and the beginning of king Lud his reigne, in the which time
+ there reigned 32, or 33, kings, as some writers haue mentioned, whose
+ names (as Gal. Mon. hath recorded) are these immediatlie héere named;
+ Regnie the sonne of Gorbolian or Gorbonian, a worthie prince, who
+ iustlie and mercifullie gouerned his people; Margan the sonne of
+ Archigallo a noble prince likewise, and guiding his subiects in good
+ quiet; Emerian brother to the same Margan, but far vnlike to him in
+ maners, so that he was deposed in the sixt yeare of his reigne;
+ Ydwallo sonne to Vigenius; Rimo the sonne of Peredurus; Geruntius the
+ sonne of Elidurus; Catell that was buried at Winchester; Coill that
+ was buried at Nottingham; Porrex a vertuous and most gentle prince;
+ Cherinus a drunkard; Fulginius, Eldad, and Androgeus; these thrée
+ were sonnes to Chercinus, and reigned successiuelie one after
+ another; <span class="rightnote"><i>Vrianus</i>.</span> after them a
+ sonne of Androgeus; then Eliud, Dedaicus, Clotinius, Gurguntius,
+ Merianus, Bledius, Cop, Owen, Sicilius, Bledgabredus an excellent
+ musician: after him his brother Archemall; then Eldol, Red, Rodiecke,
+ Samuill, Penisell, Pir, Capoir; after him his sonne Gligweil an
+ vpright dealing prince, and a good iusticiarie; whom succeeded his
+ sonne Helie, which reigned 60 yeares, as the forsaid Gal. Mon.
+ writeth, where other affirme that he reigned 40 yeares, and some
+ againe say that he reigned but 7 moneths.</p>
+
+ <p>There is great diuersitie in writers touching the reignes of these
+ kings, and not onlie for the number of yéeres which they should
+ continue in their reignes but also in their names: so that to shew
+ the diuersitie of all the writers, were but to small purpose, sith
+ the dooings of the same kings were not great by report made thereof
+ by any approoued author. But this maie suffice to aduertise you, that
+ by conferring the yéeres attributed to the other kings which reigned
+ before them, since the comming of Brute, who should enter this land
+ (as by the best writers is gathered) about the yéere before the
+ building of Rome 367, which was in the yéere after the creation of
+ the world 2850 (as is said) with their time, there remaineth 182
+ yéeres to be dealt amongst these 33 kings, which reigned betwixt the
+ said<span class="page">[<a name="page463" id="page463">Page
+ 463</a>]</span> Elidure &amp; Lud, which Lud also began his reigne
+ after the building of the citie of Rome (as writers affirme) about
+ 679 yéeres, and in the yéere of the world 3895, as some that will
+ séeme the precisest calculators doo gather.</p>
+
+ <p>Polydor Virgil changing (as I haue shewed) the order of succession
+ in the British kings, in bringing diuerse of those kings, which after
+ other writers followed Beline and Brenne, to precéed them so
+ successiuelie after Beline and Brenne, reherseth those that by his
+ coniecture did by likelihood succéed, as thus. After the decesse of
+ Beline, his sonne Gurguntius, being the second of that name,
+ succeeded in gouernment of the land, and then these in order as they
+ follow: Merianus, Bladanus, Capeus, Duinus, Sicilius, Bledgabredus,
+ Archemallus, Eldorus, Rodianus, Redargius, Samulius, Penisellus,
+ Pyrrhus, Caporus, Dinellus, and Helie, who had issue, Lud,
+ Cassibellane, and Neurius.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="ninth3" id="ninth3"></a> <i>Of king Helie who gaue the
+ name to the Ile of Elie, of king Lud, and what memorable edifices he
+ made, London sometimes called Luds towne, his bountifulnes, and
+ buriall.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE NINTH CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>Here note by the waie a thing not to be forgotten, that of the
+ foresaid Helie the last of <span class="rightnote">Whereof the Ile of
+ Elie tooke name.</span> the said 33 kings, the Ile of Elie tooke the
+ name, bicause that he most commonlie did there inhabit, building in
+ the same a goodly palace, and making great reparations of the sluces,
+ ditches &amp; causies about that Ile, for conueiance awaie of the
+ water, that els would sore haue indamaged the countrie. There be that
+ haue mainteined, that this Ile should rather take name of the great
+ abundance of éeles that are found in these waters and fennes wherwith
+ this Ile is inuironed. But Humfrey Llhoyd holdeth, that it tooke name
+ of this British word Helig, which signifieth willowes, wherwith those
+ fennes abound.</p>
+
+ <p>After the decesse of the same Helie, his eldest son Lud began his
+ reigne, in the yéere <span class="rightnote">LUD.</span> after the
+ creation of the world 3895, after the building of the citie of Rome
+ 679, before the comming of Christ 72, and before the Romanes entred
+ Britaine 19 yéeres. This Lud <span class="rightnote">A worthie
+ prince.</span> proued a right worthie prince, amending the lawes of
+ the realme that were defectiue, abolishing euill customs and maners
+ vsed amongst his people, and repairing old cities and townes which
+ were decaied: but speciallie he delited most to beautifie and inlarge
+ with buildings the <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ London inclosed with a wal.
+ <br />
+ Iohn Hard.</span> citie of Troinouant, which he compassed with a
+ strong wall made of lime and stone, in the best maner fortified with
+ diuerse faire towers: and in the west part of the same wall he
+ erected a strong gate, which he commanded to be called after his
+ name, Luds gate, and so vnto this daie it is called Ludgate, (S)
+ onelie drowned in pronuntiation of the word.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><br />
+ Fabian.
+ <br />
+ Gal. Mon.
+ <br />
+ Matt. West.</span> In the same citie also he soiorned for the more
+ part, by reason whereof the inhabitants increased, and manie
+ habitations were builded to receiue them, and he himselfe caused
+ buildings to be made betwixt London stone (sic) and Ludgate, and
+ builded for himselfe not farre from <span class="leftnote">The
+ bishops palace.</span> the said gate a faire palace, which is the
+ bishop of Londons palace beside Paules at this daie, as some thinke;
+ yet Harison supposeth it to haue bin Bainards castell, where the
+ blacke friers now standeth. He also builded a fairer temple néere to
+ his said palace, which temple (as some take it) was after turned to a
+ church, and at this daie called Paules. By reason that king Lud so
+ much esteemed that citie before all other of his realme, inlarging it
+ so greatlie as he did, <span class="rightnote">The name of Troinouant
+ changed and called London.</span> and continuallie in manner remained
+ there, the name was changed, so that it was called Caerlud, that is
+ to saie, Luds towne: and after by corruption of spéech it was named
+ London.</p>
+
+ <p>Beside the princelie dooings of this Lud touching the aduancement
+ of the common wealth by studies apperteining to the time of peace, he
+ was also strong &amp;valiant in armes, in subduing his enimies,
+ bountious and liberall both in gifts and kéeping a plentifull house,
+ so that he was greatlie beloued of all the Britaines. Finallie, when
+ he had reigned with great honour for the space of 11 yéeres, he died,
+ and was buried néere Ludgate, leauing after him<span class=
+ "page">[<a name="page464" id="page464">Page 464</a>]</span> two sons,
+ Androgeus and Theomancius or Tenancius.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="tenth3" id="tenth3"></a> <i>Of Cassibellane and his noble
+ mind, Iulius Cæsar sendeth Caius Volusenus to suruey the coasts of
+ this Iland, he lieth with his fleet at Calice, purposing to inuade
+ the countrie, his attempt is bewraied and withstood by the
+ Britains.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE TENTH CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">CASSIBELLANE.</span> Cassibellane, the
+ brother of Lud was admitted king of Britaine, in the yéere of the
+ world 3908, after the building of Rome 692, and before the comming of
+ Christ 58 complet. <span class="leftnote"><br />
+ <i>Gal. Mon.
+ <br />
+ Matt. West. Fabian</i>.</span> For sith the two sonnes of Lud were
+ not of age able to gouerne, the rule of the land was committed to
+ Cassibellane: but yet (as some haue written) he was not created king,
+ but rather appointed ruler &amp; protector of the land, during the
+ nonage of his nephewes. <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Gal. Mon</i>.</span> Now after he was admitted (by whatsoeuer
+ order) to the administration of the common wealth, he became so noble
+ a prince and so bountious, that his name spred farre and néere, and
+ by his vpright dealing in seeing iustice executed he grew in such
+ estimation, that the Britaines made small account of his nephewes, in
+ comparison of the fauour which they bare towards him. But
+ Cassibellane hauing respect to his honour, least it might be thought
+ that his nephewes were expelled by him out of their rightfull
+ possessions, brought them vp verie <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Matt. West.</i></span> honourablie; assigning to Androgeus, London
+ and Kent; and to Theomantius the countrie of Cornwall. Thus farre out
+ of the British histories, whereby it maie be gathered, that the
+ yéeres assigned to these kings that reigned before Cassibellane,
+ amount to the summe of 1058.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><i>Polydor</i>.</span> But whether these
+ gouernors (whose names we haue recited) were kings, or rather rulers
+ of the common wealth, or tyrants and vsurpers of the gouernment by
+ force, it is vncerteine: for not one ancient writer of anie approued
+ authoritie maketh anie remembrance of them: and by that which Iulius
+ Cesar writeth, it maie and dooth appéere, that diuerse cities in his
+ daies were gouerned of themselues, as héereafter it shall more
+ plainlie appéere. Neither doth he make mention of those townes which
+ the British historie affirmeth to be built by the same kings. In déed
+ both he and other Latine writers speake of diuerse people that
+ inhabited diuers portions of this land, as of the Brigantes,
+ Trinobantes, Iceni, Silures, and such other like, but in what parts
+ most of the said people did certeinlie inhabit, it is hard to auouch
+ for certeine truth.</p>
+
+ <p>But what Iohn Leland thinketh héereof, being one in our time that
+ curiouslie searched out old antiquities, you shall after heare as
+ occasion serueth: and likewise the opinions of other, <span class=
+ "rightnote"><i>Hector Boetius</i> his fault.</span> as of Hector
+ Boetius, who coueting to haue all such valiant acts as were atchiued
+ by the Britains to be ascribed to his countriemen the Scots, draweth
+ both the Silures and Brigantes, with other of the Britains so farre
+ northward, that he maketh them inhabitants of the Scotish countries.
+ And what particular names soeuer they had, yet were they all Scots
+ with him, and knowne by that generall name (as he would persuade vs
+ to beléeue) saieng that they entred into Britaine out of Ireland 330
+ yéeres before the incarnation of our Sauiour.</p>
+
+ <p>Neuerthelesse, how generall soeuer the name of Scots then was,
+ sure it is, that no speciall mention of them is made by anie writer,
+ till about 300 yeares after the birth of our sauiour. And yet the
+ Romans, which ruled this land, and had so much adoo with the people
+ thereof, make mention of diuerse other people, nothing so famous as
+ Boetius would make his Scotish men euen then to be. But to leaue to
+ the Scots the antiquitie of their originall beginning, as they and
+ other must doo vnto vs our descent from Brute and the other Troians,
+ sith the <span class="rightnote">More certeintie from hence forth
+ appeareth in the historie.</span> contrarie dooth not plainelie
+ appeare, vnlesse we shall leane vnto presumptions: now are we come to
+ the time in the which what actes were atchiued, there remaineth more
+ certeine record, and therefore may we the more boldlie procéed in
+ this our historie.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><br />
+ Iulius Cesar.</span><span class="page">[<a name="page465" id=
+ "page465">465</a>]</span> In this season that Cassibellane had roiall
+ gouernment héere in Britaine, Caius Iulius Cesar being appointed by
+ the senat of Rome to conquer Gallia, was for that purpose created
+ consull, and sent with a mightie army into the countrie, where after
+ he had brought the <span class="leftnote"><br />
+ <i>Cesar de bello Gal. lib 4.</i> Britains unknowne to the
+ Romans.</span> Galles vnto some frame, he determined to assaie the
+ winning of Britaine, which as yet the Romans knew not otherwise than
+ by report. The chiefest cause that mooued him to take in hand that
+ enterprise, was for that he did vnderstand, that there dailie came
+ great succours out of that Ile to those Galles that were enimies vnto
+ the Romans. And though the season <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Cesar de bello Gall. lib. 4</i>. Causes of the warre. Cesars
+ purpose.</span> of that yéere to make warre was farre spent (for
+ summer was almost at an end) yet he thought it would be to good
+ purpose, if he might but passe ouer thither, and learne what maner of
+ people did inhabit there, and discouer the places, hauens, and
+ entries apperteining to that Ile.</p>
+
+ <p>Héerevpon calling togither such merchants as he knew to haue had
+ traffike thither with some trade of wares, he diligentlie inquired of
+ them the state of the Ile: but he could not be throughlie satisfied
+ in anie of those things that he coueted to know. Therefore thinking
+ it good to vnderstand all things by view that might apperteine to the
+ vse of that warre which he purposed to follow: before he attempted
+ the same, he sent one <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ Caius Volusenus sent ouer into Britaine.</span> Caius Volusenus with
+ a gallie or light pinesse to surueie the coasts of the Ile,
+ commanding him (after diligent search made) to returne with spéed to
+ him againe. He him selfe also drew downewards towards Bullenois, from
+ whence the shortest cut lieth to passe ouer into Britaine.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Iohn Leland. Polydor.</i></span> In that part of Gallia there was
+ in those daies an hauen called <i>Itius Portus</i> (which some take
+ to be Calice) and so the word importeth, an harbourgh as then able to
+ receiue a great number of ships. Vnto this hauen got Cesar all the
+ ships he could out of the next borders &amp; parties, and those
+ speciallie which he had prouided and put in a readinesse the last
+ yeare for the warres (against them of Vannes in Armorica, now called
+ Britaine in France) he caused to be brought thither, there to lie
+ till they should heare further. In the meane time <span class=
+ "rightnote">Vannes in Britane.</span> (his indeuour being knowne, and
+ by merchants reported in Britaine) all such as were able to beare
+ armour, were commanded and appointed to repaire to the sea side, that
+ they might be readie to defend their countrie in time of so great
+ danger of inuasion.</p>
+
+ <p>¶ Cesar in his commentaries agréeth not with our historiographers:
+ for he writeth that immediatlie vpon knowledge had that he would
+ inuade Britaine, there came to him ambassadours from diuers cities of
+ the Ile to offer themselues to be subiects to the Romans, and to
+ deliuer hostages. Whome after he had exhorted to continue in their
+ good mind, he sent <span class="rightnote">Comius.</span> home
+ againe, and with them also one Comius gouernor of Artois, commanding
+ him to repaire vnto as manie cities in Britaine as he might, and to
+ exhort them to submit themselues to the Romans. He maketh no mention
+ of Cassibellane, till the second iournie that he made into the Ile,
+ at what time the said Cassibelane was chosen (as ye shall heare) to
+ be the generall capteine of the Britains, and to haue the whole
+ administration of the warre for defense of the countrie: but he
+ nameth him not to be a king. Howbeit in the British historie
+ <span class="rightnote">Which is more likelie in this behalfe, as
+ appeared by the sequel.</span> it is contained, that Cesar required
+ tribute of Cassibelane, and that he answered how he had not learned
+ as yet to liue in seruage, but to defend the libertie of his
+ countrie, and that with weapon in hand (if néede were) as he should
+ well perceiue, if (blinded through couetousnesse) he should aduenture
+ to séeke to disquiet the Britains.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="eleuenth3" id="eleuenth3"></a> <i>Caius Volusenus
+ discouereth to Cæsar his observations in the Ile of Britaine, he
+ maketh</i><span class="page">[<a name="page466" id="page466">Page
+ 466</a>]</span> <i>haste to conquere it, the Britains defend their
+ countrie against him, Cæsar after consultation had changeth his
+ landing place, the Romans are put to hard shifts, the Britains begin
+ to giue backe, the courage of a Roman ensigne-bearer, a sharpe
+ encounter betweene both armies.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE ELEUENTH CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">Volusenus returneth.</span> Caius
+ Volusenus within fiue daies after his departure from Cesar, returned
+ vnto him with his gallie, and declared what he had séene touching the
+ view which he had taken of <span class="leftnote">Cesar with two
+ legions of souldiers passeth ouer into Britain.</span> the coasts of
+ Britan. Cesar hauing got togither so manie saile as he thought
+ sufficient for the transporting of two legions of souldiers, after he
+ had ordered his businesse as he thought expedient, and gotten a
+ conuenient wind for his purpose, did embarke himselfe and his people,
+ and departed from Calice in the night about the third watch (which is
+ about three or foure of the clocke after midnight) giuing order that
+ the horssemen should take ship at an <span class="rightnote">The
+ Britans readie to defend their countrie.</span> other place 8 miles
+ aboue Calice, and follow him. Howbeit when they somewhat slacked the
+ time, about ten of the clocke in the next day, hauing the wind at
+ will, he touched on the coast of Britaine, where he might behold all
+ the shore set and couered with men of warre. For the Britains hearing
+ that Cesar ment verie shortlie to come against them, were assembled
+ in armour to resist him: and now being aduertised of his approch to
+ the land, they prepared themselues to withstand him.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><br />
+ Cesar calleth a councell.</span> Cesar perceiuing this, determined to
+ staie till the other ships were come, and so he lay at anchor till
+ about 11 of the clocke, and then called a councell of the marshals
+ and chiefe capteines, vnto whome he declared both what he had learned
+ of Volusenus, and also further what he would haue doone, willing them
+ that all things might be ordered as the reason of warre required. And
+ because he perceiued that this place where he first cast anchor was
+ not méete for the landing of his people, sith (from the heigth of the
+ cliffes that closed on ech side the narrow créeke into the which he
+ had thrust) the Britains might annoy his people with their bowes and
+ dartes, before they could set foote on land, hauing now the wind and
+ tide with him, he disanchored from thence, and drew alongst the coast
+ vnder the downes, the <span class="rightnote">This was about
+ day.</span> space of 7 or 8 miles, and there finding the shore more
+ flat and plaine, he approched néere to the land, determining to come
+ to the shore.</p>
+
+ <p>The Britains perceiuing Cesars intent, with all spéed caused their
+ horssemen and charets or wagons, which Cesar calleth <i>Esseda,</i>
+ out of the which in those daies they vsed to fight, to march forth
+ toward the place whither they saw Cesar drew, and after followed with
+ their maine armie. Wherefore Cesar being thus preuented, inforced yet
+ to land with his people, though he saw that he should haue much a
+ doo. For as the Britains were in redinesse to resist him, so his
+ great and huge ships could not come néere the shore, but were forced
+ to <span class="rightnote">The Romans put to their shifts.</span>
+ kéepe the déepe, so that the Romane soldiers were put to verie hard
+ shift; to wit, both to leape forth of their ships, and being pestered
+ with their heauie armour and weapons, to fight in the water with
+ their enimies, who knowing the flats and shelues, stood either vpon
+ the drie ground, or else but a little waie in the shallow places of
+ the water; and being not otherwise encumbred either with armour or
+ weapon, but so as they might bestir themselues at will, they laid
+ load vpon the Romans with their arrowes and darts, and forced their
+ horsses (being thereto inured) to enter the water the more easilie,
+ so to annoy and distresse the Romans, who wanting experience in such
+ kind of fight, were not well able to helpe themselues, nor to keepe
+ order as they vsed to doo on land: wherfore they fought nothing so
+ lustilie as they were woont to doo. Cesar perceiuing this, commanded
+ the gallies to depart from the great ships, and to row hard to the
+ shore, that being placed ouer against the open sides of the Britains,
+ they might with their shot of arrows, darts, and slings, remoue the
+ Britains, and cause them to withdraw further off from the water
+ side.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><br />
+ The Britans astonied.</span><span class="page">[<a name="page467" id=
+ "page467">Page 467</a>]</span> This thing being put in execution
+ (according to his commandement) the Britains were not a little
+ astonied at the strange sight of those gallies, for that they were
+ driuen with ores, which earst they had not séene, and shrewdlie were
+ they galled also with the artillerie which the Romans discharged vpon
+ them, so that they began to shrinke and retire somewhat backe.
+ <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ The valiant courage of an ensigne bearer.</span> Herewith one that
+ bare the ensigne of the legion surnamed Decima, wherein the eagle was
+ figured, as in that which was the chiefe ensigne of the legion, when
+ he saw his fellowes nothing eager to make forward, first beséeching
+ the gods that his enterprise might turne to the weale, profit, and
+ honor of the legion, he spake with a lowd voice these words to his
+ fellowes that were about him; "Leape forth now euen you woorthie
+ souldiers (saith he) if you will not betraie your ensigne to the
+ enimies: for surelie I will acquit my selfe according to my duetie
+ both towards the common wealth, and my generall:" and therewith
+ leaping forth into the water, he marched with his ensigne streight
+ vpon the enimies. The Romans douting to lose their ensigne, which
+ should haue turned them to great reproch, leapt out of their ships so
+ fast as they might, and followed their standard, so that there ensued
+ a sore re&ndash;encounter: and that which troubled the Romans most,
+ was because they could not keepe their order, neither find anie sure
+ footing, nor yet follow euerie man his owne ensigne, but to put
+ themselues vnder that ensigne which he first met withall after their
+ first comming forth of the ship.</p>
+
+ <p>The Britains that were inured with the shelues and shallow places
+ of the water, when they saw the Romans thus disorderlie come out of
+ their ships, ran vpon them with their horsses, <span class=
+ "rightnote">The fiercenesse of the Britains.</span> and fiercelie
+ assailed them, and now and then a great multitude of the Britains
+ would compasse in and inclose some one companie of them: and other
+ also from the most open places of the shore bestowed great plentie of
+ darts vpon the whole number of the Romans, and so troubled them verie
+ sore.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="twelft3" id="twelft3"></a> <i>The Romans get to land on
+ the English coast, the Britains send to Cæsar for a treatie of peace,
+ they staie the Romane ambassadour as prisoner, Cæsar demandeth
+ hostages of the Britains, the Romane nauie is driuen diuers waies in
+ a great tempest, the British princes steale out of Cæsars campe and
+ gather a fresh power against the Romans, their two armies haue a
+ sharpe encounter.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE TWELFT CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>Caesar perceiuing the maner of this fight, caused his men of warre
+ to enter into boates and other small vessels, which he commanded to
+ go to such places where most néed appeared. <span class=
+ "rightnote"><br />
+ The Romans get to land.</span> And relieuing them that fought with
+ new supplies, at length the Romans got to land, and assembling
+ togither, they assailed the Britains a fresh, and so at last did put
+ them <span class="leftnote"><br />
+ The want of horssemen.</span> all to flight. But the Romans could not
+ follow the Britains farre, because they wanted their horssemen which
+ were yet behind, &amp; through slacking of time could not come to
+ land. And this one thing séemed onelie to disappoint the luckie
+ fortune that was accustomed to follow Cesar in all his other
+ enterprises.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><br />
+ The Britans send to Cesar.</span> The Britains after this flight were
+ no sooner got togither, but that with all speed they sent
+ ambassadours vnto Cesar to treat with him of peace, offering to
+ deliuer hostages, and further to stand vnto that order that Cesar
+ should take with them in anie reasonable sort. With <span class=
+ "leftnote">Comius of Arras.</span> these ambassadours came also
+ Comius, whome Cesar (as you haue heard) had sent before into
+ Britaine, whome notwithstanding that he was an ambassadour, and sent
+ from Cesar with commission and instructions sufficientlie furnished,
+ yet had they staied him as a prisoner. But now after the battell was
+ ended, they set him at libertie, and sent him backe with their
+ ambassadours, who excused the matter, laieng the blame on the people
+ of the countrie; which had imprisoned him through lacke of
+ vnderstanding what apperteined to the law of armes and nations in
+ that behalfe.</p>
+
+ <p>Cesar found great fault with their misdemenor, not onelie for
+ imprisoning his ambassador,<span class="page">[<a name="page468" id=
+ "page468">Page 468</a>]</span> but also for that contrarie to their
+ promise made by such as they had sent to him into Gallia to deliuer
+ hostages, in lieu thereof they had receiued him with warre: yet in
+ the end he said <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ Cesar demandeth hostages.</span> he would pardon them, and not séeke
+ anie further reuenge of their follies. And herewith required of them
+ hostages, of which, part were deliuered out of hand, and made promise
+ that the residue should likewise be sent after, crauing some respit
+ for performance of the same, bicause they were to be fetched farre
+ off within the countrie.</p>
+
+ <p>Peace being thus established after the fourth day of the Romans
+ arriuall in Britaine, the 18 ships which (as ye haue heard) were
+ appointed to conuey the horssemen ouer, loosed from the further hauen
+ with a soft wind. Which when they approched so néere the shore of
+ Britaine, that the Romans which were in Cesars campe might see them,
+ suddenlie there arose so great a tempest, that none of them was able
+ to kéepe his course, so that they were not onelie driuen in sunder
+ (some being caried againe into Gallia, and some westward) but also
+ the other ships that lay at anchor, and had brought ouer the armie,
+ were so pitifullie beaten, tossed and shaken, that a great number of
+ them did not onelie lose their tackle, but also were caried by force
+ of wind into the high sea; the rest being likewise so filled with
+ water, that they were in danger by sinking to perish and to be quite
+ lost. For the moone in the same night was at the full, &amp;
+ therefore caused a spring tide, which furthered the force of the
+ tempest, to the greater perill of those ships and gallies that lay at
+ anchor. There was no way for the Romans to helpe the matter:
+ wherefore a great number of those ships were so bruised, rent and
+ weather-beaten, that without new reparation they would serue to no
+ vse of sailing. This was a great discomfort to the Romans that had
+ brought ouer no prouision to liue by in the winter season, nor saw
+ anie hope how they should repasse againe into Gallia.</p>
+
+ <p>In the meane time the British princes that were in the Romane
+ armie, perceiuing how greatlie this mishap had discouraged the
+ Romans, and again by the small circuit of their campe, gessing that
+ they could be no great number, and that lacke of vittels sore
+ oppressed them, they stale priuilie away one after another out of the
+ campe, purposing to assemble their powers againe, and to forestall
+ the Romans from vittels, and so to driue the matter off till winter:
+ which if they might doo (vanquishing these or closing them from
+ returning) they trusted that none of the Romans from thencefoorth
+ would attempt eftsoones to come into Britaine. Cesar mistrusting
+ their dealings, because they staid to deliuer the residue of their
+ hostages, commanded vittels to be brought out of the parties
+ adioining, and not hauing other stuffe to repaire his ships, he
+ caused 12 of those that were vtterlie past recouerie by the hurts
+ receiued through violence of the tempest, to be broken, wherewith the
+ other (in which some recouerie was perceiued) might be repaired and
+ amended.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="xiij3" id="xiij3"></a> <i>The maner of the Britains
+ fighting in charets, the Romans giue a fresh sallie to the Britains
+ and put them to flight, they sue to Cæsar for peace; what kings and
+ their powers were assistants to Cassibellane in the battell against
+ Cæsar, and the maner of both peoples encounters by the report of
+ diuers Chronologers.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE XIIJ. CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>Whilest these things were a dooing, it chanced that as one of the
+ Romane legions named the seuenth, was sent to fetch in corne out of
+ the countrie adioining (as their custome was) no warre at that time
+ being suspected, or once looked for, when part of the people remained
+ abroad in the field, and part repaired to the campe: those that
+ warded before the campe, informed Cesar, that there appeared a dust
+ greater than was accustomed from that quarter, into the which the
+ legion was gone to fetch in corne. Cesar iudging therof what the
+ matter might meane, commanded those bands that warded to go with him
+ that way foorth, and appointed other two bands to come into their
+ roomes, and the residue of his people to<span class="page">[<a name=
+ "page469" id="page469">Page 469</a>]</span> get them to armor, and to
+ follow quicklie after him.</p>
+
+ <p>He was not gone anie great way from the campe, when he might sée
+ where his people were ouermatched by the enimies, and had much a doo
+ to beare out the brunt: for the legion being thronged together, the
+ Britains pelted them sore with arrowes and darts on ech side: for
+ sithens there was no forrage left in anie part of the countrie about,
+ but onelie in this place, the Britains iudged that the Romans would
+ come thither for it: therefore hauing lodged themselues within the
+ woods in ambushes the night before; on the morrowe after when they
+ saw the Romans dispersed here &amp; there, and busie to cut downe the
+ corne, they set vpon them on a sudden, and sleaing some few of them,
+ brought the residue out of order, compassing them about with their
+ horssemen and charets, so that they were in great distresse.</p>
+
+ <p>The maner of fight with these charets was such, that in the
+ beginning of a battell they would ride about the sides and skirts of
+ the enimies host, and bestow their darts as they sate in those
+ charets, so that oftentimes with the braieng of the horsses, and
+ craking noise of the charet whéeles they disordered their enimies,
+ and after that they had woond themselues in amongst the troops of
+ horssemen, they would leape out of the charets and fight on foot. In
+ the meane time those that guided the charets would withdraw them
+ selues out of the battell, placing themselues so, that if their
+ people were ouermatched with the multitude of enimies, they might
+ easilie withdraw to their charets, and mount vpon the same againe, by
+ meanes wherof they were as readie to remooue as the horssemen, and as
+ stedfast to stand in the battell as the footmen, and so to supplie
+ both duties in one. And those charetmen by exercise and custome were
+ so cunning in their feat, that although their horsses were put to run
+ and gallop, yet could they stay them and hold them backe at their
+ pleasures, and turne and wind them to and fro in a moment,
+ notwithstanding that the place were verie stéepe and dangerous: and
+ againe they would run vp and downe verie nimblie vpon the cops, and
+ stand vpon the beame, and conuey themselues quicklie againe into the
+ charet.</p>
+
+ <p>Cesar thus finding his people in great distresse and readie to be
+ destroied, came in good time, and deliuered them out of that danger:
+ for the Britains vpon his approch with new succors, gaue ouer to
+ assaile their enimies any further, &amp; the Romans were deliuered
+ out of the feare wherein they stood before his comming. Furthermore,
+ Cesar considering the time serued not to assaile his enimies, kept
+ his ground, and shortlie after brought backe his legions into the
+ campe.</p>
+
+ <p>While these things were thus a dooing, &amp; all the Romans
+ occupied, the rest that were abroad in the fields got them away.
+ After this there followed a sore season of raine and fowle weather,
+ which kept the Romans within their campe, and staid the Britains from
+ offering battell. But in the meane time they sent messengers abroad
+ into all parts of the countrie, to giue knowledge of the small number
+ of the Romans, and what hope there was both of great spoile to be
+ gotten, and occasion to deliuer themselues from further danger for
+ euer, if they might once expell the Romans out of their campe.
+ Herevpon a great multitude both of horssemen and footmen of the
+ Britains were spéedilie got togither, and approched the Romane
+ campe.</p>
+
+ <p>Cesar although he saw that the same would come to passe which had
+ chanced before, that if the enimies were put to the repulse, they
+ would easilie escape the danger with swiftnesse of foot; yet hauing
+ now with him thirtie horssemen (which Comius of Arras had brought
+ ouer with him, when he was sent from Cesar as an ambassador vnto the
+ Britains) he placed his legions in order of battell before his campe,
+ and so comming to ioine with the Britains, they were not able to
+ susteine the violent impression of the armed men, and so fled. The
+ Romans pursued them so farre as they were able to ouertake anie of
+ them, and so slaieng manie of them, &amp; burning vp all their houses
+ all about, came backe againe to their campe. Immediatlie wherevpon,
+ euen the same day, they sent ambassadors to Cesar to sue for peace,
+ who gladlie accepting their offer, commanded them to send ouer into
+ Gallia, after he should be returned thither, hostages in number duble
+ to those that were agréed vpon at the first.</p>
+
+ <p>After that these things were thus ordered, Cesar because the
+ moneth of September was<span class="page">[<a name="page470" id=
+ "page470">Page 470</a>]</span> well-neare halfe spent, and that
+ winter hasted on (a season not méet for his weake and bruised ships
+ to brooke the seas) determined not to staie anie longer, but hauing
+ wind and weather for his purpose, got himselfe aboord with his
+ people, and returned into Gallia.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><i>Cæsar de bello Gallico. lib.</i>
+ 4.</span> ¶ Thus writeth Cesar touching his first iournie made into
+ Britaine. But the British historie (which Polydor calleth the new
+ historie) declareth that Cesar in a pitcht field was vanquished at
+ the first encounter, and so withdrew backe into France. Beda also
+ writeth, that Cesar comming into the countrie of Gallia, where the
+ people then called Morini inhabited (which are at this day the same
+ that inhabit the diocesse of Terwine) from whence lieth the shortest
+ passage ouer into Britaine, now called England, got togither 80 saile
+ of great ships and row gallies, wherewith he passed ouer into
+ Britaine, &amp; there at the first being wearied with sharpe and sore
+ fight, and after taken with a grieuous tempest, he lost the greater
+ part of his nauie, with no small number of his souldiers, and almost
+ all his horssemen: and therwith being returned into Gallia, placed
+ his souldiers in stéeds to soiourne there for the winter season. Thus
+ saith Bede. The British historie moreouer maketh mention of thrée
+ vnder-kings that aided Cassibellane in this first battell fought with
+ Cesar, as Cridiorus alias Ederus, king of Albania, now called
+ Scotland: Guitethus king of Venedocia, that is Northwales: and
+ Britaell king of Demetia, at this day called Southwales.</p>
+
+ <p>The same historie also maketh mention of one Belinus that was
+ generall of Cassibellanes armie, and likewise of Nenius brother to
+ Cassibellane, who in fight happened to get Cesars swoord fastened in
+ his shield by a blow which Cesar stroke at him. Androgeus also and
+ Tenancius were at the battell in aid of Cassibellane. But Nenius died
+ within 15 daies after the battell of the hurt receiued at Cesars
+ hand, although after he was so hurt, he slue Labienus one of the
+ Romane tribunes: all which may well be true, sith Cesar either maketh
+ the best of things for his owne honour, or else coueting to write but
+ commentaries, maketh no account to declare the néedeles
+ circumstances, or anie more of the matter, than the chiefe points of
+ his dealing.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><i>Hector Boet.</i></span> Againe, the
+ Scotish historiographers write, that when it was first knowne to the
+ Britains, that Cesar would inuade them, there came from Cassibellane
+ king of Britaine an ambassador vnto Ederus king of Scots, who in the
+ name of king Cassibellane required aid against the common enimies the
+ Romains, which request was granted, and 10 thousand Scots sent to the
+ aid of Cassibellane. At their comming to London, they were most
+ ioifullie receiued of Cassibellane, who at the same time had
+ knowledge that the Romans were come on land, and had beaten such
+ Britains backe as were appointed to resist their landing. Wherevpon
+ Cassibellane with all his whole puissance mightilie augmented, not
+ onlie with the succours of the Scots, but also of the Picts (which in
+ that common cause had sent also of their people to aid the Britains)
+ set forward towards the place where he vnderstood the enimies to
+ be.</p>
+
+ <p>At their first approch togither, Cassibellane sent foorth his
+ horssemen and charets called <i>Esseda</i>, by the which he thought
+ to disorder the araie of the enimies. Twice they incountred togither
+ with doubtfull victorie. At length they ioined puissance against
+ puissance, and fought a verie sore and cruell battell, till finally
+ at the sudden comming of the Welshmen and Cornishmen, so huge a noise
+ was raised by the sound of bels hanging at their trappers and
+ charets, that the Romans astonied therewith, were more easilie put to
+ flight. The Britains, Scots, and Picts following the chase without
+ order or araie, so that by reason the Romans kept themselues close
+ togither, the Britains, Scots, &amp; Picts did scarse so much harme
+ to the enimies as they themselues receiued. But yet they followed on
+ still vpon the Romans till it was darke night.</p>
+
+ <p>Cesar after he had perceiued them once withdrawne, did what he
+ could to assemble his companies togither, minding the next morning to
+ séeke his reuenge of the former daies disaduantage. But forsomuch as
+ knowledge was giuen him that his ships (by reason of a sore tempest)
+ were so beaten and rent, that manie of them were past seruice, he
+ doubted least such newes would incourage his enimies, and bring his
+ people into despaire. Wherfore he determined not to fight till time
+ more conuenient, sending all his wounded folks vnto the<span class=
+ "page">[<a name="page471" id="page471">Page 471</a>]</span> ships,
+ which he commanded to be newlie rigged and trimmed. After this,
+ kéeping his armie for a time within the place where he was incamped
+ without issuing foorth, he shortlie drew to the sea side, where his
+ ships laie at anchor, and there within a strong place fortified for
+ the purpose he lodged his host, and finallie without hope to atchieue
+ anie other exploit auaileable for that time, he tooke the sea with
+ such ships as were apt for sailing, and so repassed into Gallia,
+ leauing behind him all the spoile and baggage for want of vessels and
+ leisure to conueie it ouer. ¶ Thus haue the Scots in their chronicles
+ framed the matter, more to the conformitie of the Romane histories,
+ than according to the report of our British and English writers: and
+ therefore we haue thought good to shew it héere, that the diuersitie
+ of writers and their affections may the better appéere.</p>
+
+ <p>Of this sudden departing also, or rather fléeing of Iulius Cesar
+ out of Britaine, Lucanus the poet maketh mention, reciting the saieng
+ of Pompeius in an oration made by him vnto his souldiers, wherin he
+ reprochfullie and disdainfullie reprooued the dooings of Cesar in
+ Britaine, saieng:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ Territa quæsitis ostendit terga Britannis.
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="xiiij3" id="xiiij3"></a> <i>Cæsar taketh a new occasion
+ to make warre against the Britains, he arriueth on the coast without
+ resistance, the number of his ships, both armies incounter, why Cæsar
+ forbad the Romans to pursue the discomfited Britains, he repaireth
+ his nauie, the Britains choose Cassibellane their cheefe gouernour,
+ and skirmish afresh with their enimies, but haue the repulse in the
+ end.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE XIIIJ. CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>Now will we returne to the sequele of the matter, as Cesar
+ himselfe reporteth. After his comming into Gallia, there were but two
+ cities of all Britaine that sent ouer their <span class=
+ "rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Dion Cassius</i>.</span> hostages according to their couenant,
+ which gaue occasion to Cesar to picke a new quarrell against them,
+ which if it had wanted, he would yet (I doubt not) haue found some
+ other: for his full meaning was to make a more full conquest of that
+ Ile. Therefore purposing to passe againe thither, as he that had a
+ great desire to bring the Britains vnder the obedience of the Romane
+ estate, he caused a great number of ships to be prouided in the
+ winter season and put in a readinesse, so that against the next
+ spring there were found to be readie rigged six hundred ships, beside
+ 28 gallies. Héerevpon hauing taken order for the gouernance
+ <span class="rightnote"><i>Cæsar de bello Gal. lib. 5.</i></span> of
+ Gallia in his absence, about the beginning of the spring he came to
+ the hauen of Calice, whither (according to order by him prescribed)
+ all his ships were come, except 40 which by tempest were driuen
+ backe, and could not as yet come to him.</p>
+
+ <p>After he had staied at Calice (as well for a conuenient wind, as
+ for other incidents) certeine daies, at length when the weather so
+ changed that it serued his purpose, he tooke the sea, &amp; hauing
+ with him fiue legions of souldiers, and about two thousand horssemen,
+ he departed out of Calice hauen about sun setting with a soft
+ southwest wind, directing his course forward: about midnight the wind
+ fell, &amp; so by a calme he was carried alongst with the tide, so
+ that in the morning when the day appéered, he might behold Britaine
+ vpon his left hand. Then following the streame as the course of the
+ tide changed, he forced with oares to fetch the shore vpon that part
+ of the coast, which he had discouered, and tried the last yeere to be
+ the best landing place for the armie. The diligence of the souldiers
+ was shewed héere to be great, who with continuall toile droue foorth
+ the heauie ships, to kéepe course with the gallies, &amp; so at
+ length they landed in Britaine about noone on the next day, finding
+ not one to resist his comming ashore: for as he learned by certeine
+ prisoners which were taken after his comming to land, the Britains
+ being assembled in purpose to haue resisted him, through feare
+ striken into their harts, at the discouering of such an huge number
+ of ships, they forsooke the shore and got them vnto the
+ mountaines.<span class="page">[<a name="page472" id="page472">Page
+ 472</a>]</span> There were in deed of vessels one and other, what
+ with vittellers, &amp; those which priuat men had prouided and
+ furnished foorth for their owne vse, being ioined to the ordinarie
+ number, at the least eight hundred saile, which appeering in sight
+ all at one time, made a wonderfull muster, and right terrible in the
+ eies of the Britains.</p>
+
+ <p>But to procéed: Cesar being got to land, incamped his armie in a
+ place conuenient: and after learning by the prisoners, into what part
+ the enimies were withdrawne, he appointed one Quintus Atrius to
+ remaine vpon the safegard of the nauie, with ten companies or cohorts
+ of footmen, and thrée hundred horssemen: and anon after midnight
+ marched foorth himselfe with the residue of his people toward the
+ Britains, and hauing made 12 miles of way, he got sight of his
+ enimies host, who sending downe their horssemen and charets vnto the
+ riuer side, skirmished with the Romans, meaning to beate them backe
+ from the higher ground: but being assailed of the Romane horssemen,
+ they were repelled, &amp; tooke the woods for their refuge, wherein
+ they had got a place verie strong, both by nature and helpe of hand,
+ which (as was to be thought) had béene fortified before, in time of
+ some ciuill warre amongst them: for all the entries were closed with
+ trées which had béene cut downe for that purpose. Howbeit the
+ souldiers of the 7 legion casting a trench before them, found meanes
+ to put backe the Britains from their defenses, and so entring vpon
+ them, droue them out of the woods. But Cesar would not suffer the
+ Romans to follow the Britains, bicause the nature of the countrie was
+ not knowne vnto them: and againe the day was farre spent, so that he
+ would haue the residue thereof bestowed in fortifieng his campe.</p>
+
+ <p>The next day, as he had sent foorth such as should haue pursued
+ the Britains, word came to him from Quintus Atrius, that his nauie by
+ rigour of a sore and hideous tempest was gréeuouslie molested, and
+ throwne vpon the shore, so that the cabels and tackle being broken
+ and destroied with force of the vnmercifull rage of wind, the
+ maisters and mariners were not able to helpe the matter. Cesar
+ calling backe those which he had sent foorth, returned to his ships,
+ and finding them in such state as he had heard, tooke order for the
+ repairing of those that were not vtterlie destroied, and caused them
+ so to be drawne vp to the land, that with a trench he might so
+ compasse in a plot of ground, that might serue both for defense of
+ his ships, and also for the incamping of those men of warre, which he
+ should leaue to attend vpon the safegard of the same. And bicause
+ there were at the least a fortie ships lost by violence of this
+ tempest, so as there was no hope of recouerie in them, he saw yet how
+ the rest with great labour and cost might be repaired: wherefore he
+ chose out wrights among the legions, sent for other into Gallia, and
+ wrote ouer to such as he had left there in charge with the gouernment
+ of the countrie, to prouide so manie ships as they could, and to send
+ them ouer vnto him. He spent a ten daies about the repairing of his
+ nauie, and in fortifieng the campe for defense thereof, which done,
+ he left those within it that were appointed there before, and then
+ returned towards his enimies.</p>
+
+ <p>At his comming backe to the place where he had before incamped, he
+ found them there readie to resist him, hauing their numbers hugelie
+ increased: for the Britains hearing that he was returned with such a
+ mightie number of ships assembled out of all parts of the land, and
+ had by general consent appointed the whole rule and order of all
+ things touching the warre vnto Cassiuellane or Cassibelane, whose
+ dominion was diuided from the cities situat néere to the sea coast,
+ by the riuer of Thames, 80 miles distant from the sea coast.
+ <span class="rightnote">Cassibellane as should séeme, ruled in the
+ parties of Oxfordshire, Barkshire, Buckinghamshire, and
+ Bedfordshire.</span> This Cassibellane before time had bin at
+ continuall warre with other rulers, and cities of the land: but now
+ the Britains moued with the comming of the Romans, chose him to be
+ chiefe gouernour of all their armie, permitting the order and rule of
+ all things touching the defense of their countrie against the Romans
+ onelie to him. Their horssemen and charets skirmished by the waie
+ with the Romans, but so as they were put backe oftentimes into the
+ woods and hills adioining: yet the Britains slue diuers of the Romans
+ as they followed anie thing egerlie in the pursute.</p>
+
+ <p>Also within a while after, as the Romans were busie in fortifieng
+ their campe, the Britains<span class="page">[<a name="page473" id=
+ "page473">Page 473</a>]</span> suddenlie issued out of the woods, and
+ fierselie assailed these that warded before the campe, vnto whose aid
+ Cesar sent two of the chiefest cohorts of two legions, the which
+ being placed but a little distance one from another, when the Romans
+ began to be discouraged with this kind of fight, the Britains
+ therewith burst through their enimies, and came backe from thence in
+ safetie. That daie Quintus Laberius Durus a tribune was slaine. At
+ length Cesar sending sundrie other cohorts to the succour of his
+ people that were in fight, and shrewdlie handled as it appéered, the
+ Britains in the end were put backe. Neuerthelesse, that repulse was
+ but at the pleasure of fortune; for they quited themselues afterwards
+ like men, defending their territories with such munition as they had,
+ vntill such time as either by policie or inequalitie of power they
+ were vanquished; as you shall sée after in the course of the
+ historie. Howbeit in fine they were ouer-run and vtterlie subdued,
+ but not without much bloudshed and slaughter.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="xv3" id="xv3"></a> <i>The Romans heauie armor their great
+ hinderance, the maner of the Britains fighting in warre, their
+ incounter with their enimies, their discomfiture, the worthie
+ stratagems or martiall exploits of Cassibellane, the Troinouants
+ submission to Cæsar, and their sute touching Mandubratius, manie of
+ the Britains are taken and slaine of the Romans</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE XV. CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>In all this maner of skirmishing and fight which chanced before
+ the campe, euen in the sight and view of all men, it was perceiued
+ that the Romans, by reason of their heauie <span class=
+ "rightnote"><br />
+ The Romans heauie armor.</span> armour (being not able either to
+ follow the Britains as they retired, or so bold as to depart from
+ their ensignes, except they would runne into danger of casting
+ themselues awaie) were nothing méete to match with such kind of
+ enimies: and as for their horssemen, they fought likewise in great
+ hazard, bicause the Britains would oftentimes of purpose retire, and
+ when they had trained the Romane horssemen a litle from their legions
+ of footmen, they would leape out of their charrets and incounter with
+ them on foot. And so the battell of horssemen was dangerous, and like
+ in all points whether they pursued or retired.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><br />
+ The manner of Britains in the warres.</span> This also was the maner
+ of the Britains: they fought not close togither, but in sunder, and
+ diuided into companies one separated from another by a good distance,
+ and had their the troopes standing in places conuenient, to the which
+ they might retire, and so reléeue one another with sending new fresh
+ men to supplie the roomes of them that were hurt or wearie. The next
+ day after they had thus fought before the campe of the Romans, they
+ shewed themselues aloft on the hills, and began to skirmish with the
+ Romane horssemen, but not so hotlie as they had doone the day before.
+ But about noone, when Cesar had sent foorth thrée legions of footemen
+ and all his horssemen vnder the leading of his lieutenant
+ <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ Caius Trebonius.</span> Caius Trebonius to fetch in forrage, they
+ suddenlie brake out on euerie side, and vpon the forragers. The
+ Romans so far foorth as they might, not breaking their arraie,
+ <span class="leftnote"><br />
+ <i>Dion Cassius</i> saith, that the Britains vanquished the Roman
+ footmen at this time, but were put to the worst by the
+ horssemen.</span> nor going from their ensignes or guidons, gaue the
+ charge on them, and fiercelie repelled them, so that the horssemen
+ hauing the legions of footemen at their backs, followed the Britains
+ so long as they might haue the said legions in sight readie to
+ succour them of néed were: by reason whereof, they slue a great
+ number of the Britains, not giuing them leasure to recouer
+ themselues, nor to staie that they might haue time to get out of
+ their charrets. After this chase and discomfiture, all such as were
+ come from other parties to the aid of their fellowes departed home,
+ &amp; after that day the Britains aduentured to fight against Cesar
+ with their maine power; and withdrawing beyond the riuer of *Thames,
+ determined <span class="rightnote">*(which is to be supposed was at
+ Kingston) or not far from thence.</span> to stop the enimies from
+ passing the same, if by anie meanes they might: and whereas there was
+ but one foord by the which they might come ouer, Cassibellane caused
+ <span class="page">[<a name="page474" id="page474">Page
+ 474</a>]</span> the same to be set full of sharpe stakes, not onlie
+ in the middest of the water, but also at the comming foorth on that
+ side where he was lodged with his armie in good order, readie to
+ defend the passage. Cesar learning by relation of prisoners which he
+ tooke, what the Britains intended to doo, marched foorth to the riuer
+ side, where the foord was, by the which his armie might passe the
+ same on foot though verie hardlie. At his comming thither, he might
+ perceiue how the Britains were readie on the further side to impeach
+ his passage, and how that the banke at the comming foorth of the
+ water was pight full of sharpe stakes, and so likewise was the
+ chanell of the riuer set with piles which were couered with the
+ water.</p>
+
+ <p>These things yet staied not Cesar, who appointing his horssemen to
+ passe on before, commanded the footemen to follow. The souldiers
+ entring the water, waded through with such spéed and violence
+ (nothing appéering of them aboue water but their heads) that the
+ Britains were constreined to giue place, being not able to susteine
+ the brunt of the Romane horssemen, and the legions of their footemen,
+ and so abandoning the place betooke them to flight. Cassibellane not
+ minding to trie the matter anie more by battell, sent awaie the most
+ part of his people, but yet kept with him about a foure thousand
+ charretmen or wagoners, and still watched what waie the Romans tooke,
+ coasting them euer as they marched, and kept somewhat aside within
+ the couert of woods, and other combersome places. And out of those
+ quarters through which he vnderstood the Romans wold passe, he
+ gathered both men and cattell into the woods &amp; thicke forrests,
+ leauing nothing of value abroad in the champion countrie. And when
+ the Roman horssemen did come abroad into the countrie to séeke
+ booties, he sent out his charrets vnto the knowne waies and passages
+ to skirmish with the same horssemen, so much to the disaduantage of
+ the Romans, that they durst not straie farre from their maine armie.
+ Neither would Cesar permit them (least they might haue béene vtterlie
+ distressed by the Britains) to depart further than the maine battels
+ of the footemen kept pace with them, by reason whereof the countrie
+ was not indamaged by fire and spoile, but onlie where the armie
+ marched.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="leftnote">Troinouants where they inhabited.</span> In
+ the meane time, the Troinouants which some take to be Middlesex &amp;
+ Essex men, whose citie was the best fensed of all those parties, and
+ thought to be the same that now is called London, sent ambassadours
+ vnto Cesar, offering to submit themselues vnto him, and to obeie his
+ ordinances, and further besought him to defend Mandubratius from the
+ iniuries of K. Cassibellane, which Mandubratius had fled vnto Cesar
+ into France, after <span class="rightnote">Imanuentius.</span> that
+ Cassibellane had slaine his father named Imanuentius, that was chiefe
+ lord and king of the Troinouants, and so now by their ambassadors the
+ same Troinouants requested Cesar, not onelie to receiue Mandubratius
+ into his protection, but also to send him vnto them, that he might
+ take the gouernment and rule of their citie into his hands. Cesar
+ commanded them to deliuer vnto him 40 hostages, and graine for his
+ armie, and therewith <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ Some take the Troinouants to be Londoners.</span> sent Mandubratius
+ vnto them. The Troinouants accomplished his commandements with all
+ spéed, sending both the appointed number of hostages, and also graine
+ for the armie. And being thus defended and preserued from iniurie of
+ the souldiers, the people called Cenimagni, Segontiaci, Ancalites,
+ Bibroci, and Cassi, submitted themselues vnto Cesar, by whom he
+ vnderstood that the towne of Cassibellane was not far from the place
+ where he was then incamped fensed with wooddes and marishes, into the
+ which a great number of people with their cattell and other substance
+ was withdrawne. The Britains in those daies (as Cesar writeth) called
+ that a towne or hold, which they had fortified with anie thicke
+ combersome wood, with trench and rampire, into the which they vsed to
+ get themselues for the auoiding of inuasion.</p>
+
+ <p>Cesar with his legions of souldiers therfore marched thither, and
+ finding the place verie strong both by nature and helpe of hand,
+ assaulted it on two partes. The Britains defending their strength a
+ while, at length not able longer to endure the impression of the
+ Romans, fled out on the contrarie side of the towne where the enimies
+ were not. Within this place a great number of cattell was found, and
+ manie of the Romans taken by the Britains that<span class=
+ "page">[<a name="page475" id="page475">Page 475</a>]</span> followed
+ them in chase, and manie also slaine.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="xvj3" id="xvj3"></a> <i>Cassibellane dooth send vnto the
+ foure kings of Kent for aid against Cæsars host, he offereth
+ submission to Cæsar, the Britains become his tributaries, he
+ returneth into Gallia with the remnant of his armie: the differing
+ report of Cæsars commentaries and our historiographers touching these
+ warlike affaires; of a sore fray with bloudshed and manslaughter vpon
+ a light occasion; Cæsar taketh opportunitie to get the conquest of
+ the land by the division betweene Cassibellane and Androgeus, the
+ time of the Britains subiection to the Romans.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE XVJ. CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>Now whilest these thinges passed on this sort in those parts,
+ Cassibellane sent messengers <span class="rightnote">Foure kings in
+ Kent</span> into Kent vnto foure kings (which ruled that side of the
+ land in those daies) Cingetorix, Caruilius, Taximagulus, and Segonax,
+ commanding them, that assembling togither their whole puissance, they
+ should assaile the campe of the Romans by the sea side where certeine
+ bands lay (as ye haue heard) for safegard of the nauie. They
+ according to his appointment came suddenlie thither, and by the
+ Romans that sailed forth vpon them were sharplie fought with, and
+ lost diuers of their men that were slaine and taken, and amongst the
+ prisoners that the Romans tooke, Cingetorix was one. When
+ Cassibellane heard these newes, being sore troubled for these losses
+ thus chancing one in the necke of an other, but namelie most
+ discouraged, for that diuers cities had yéelded vnto the Romans: he
+ sent ambassadours by means of Romius of Arras vnto Cesar, offering to
+ submit himselfe.</p>
+
+ <p>Cesar meaning to winter in Gallia, and therefore because summer
+ drew towards an end, willing to dispatch in Britaine, commanded that
+ hostages should be deliuered, and appointed what tribute the Britains
+ should yéerelie send vnto the Romans. He also forbad and commanded
+ Cassibellane, that he should not in anie wise trouble or indamage
+ Madubratius or the Londoners. After this, when he had receiued the
+ hostages, he brought his armie to the sea, and there found his ships
+ well repaired, decked, and in good point: therefore he commanded that
+ they should be had downe to the sea. And because he had a great
+ number of prisoners, and diuers of his ships were lost in the
+ tempest, he appointed to transport his armie ouer into Gallia at two
+ conueies, which was doone with good successe about the middest of
+ September, though the ships returning for the residue of the armie,
+ after the first conueie, were driuen so with force of weather, that a
+ great number of them could not come to land at the place appointed:
+ so that Cesar was constreined to fraught those that he could get with
+ a greater burden, and so departed from the coast of Britaine, and
+ safelie landed with the remnant of his people in Gallia with as good
+ spéed as he could haue desired. <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Dion Cassius</i>.</span> He thought not good to leaue anie of his
+ people behind him, knowing that if he should so doo, they were in
+ danger to be cast awaie. And so because he could not well remaine
+ there all the winter season for doubt of rebellion in Gallia, he was
+ contented to take vp, and returne thither, sith he had doone
+ sufficientlie for the time, least in coueting the more, he might haue
+ come in perill to lose that which he had alreadie obteined.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus according to that which Cesar himselfe and other autentike
+ authors haue written, was Britaine made tributarie to the Romans by
+ the conduct of the same Cesar. ¶ But <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Gal. Mon.
+ <br />
+ Matt. West.</i></span> our histores farre differ from this, affirming
+ that Cesar comming the second time, was by the Britains with
+ valiancie and martiall prowesse beaten and repelled, as he was at the
+ first, and speciallie by meanes that Cassibellane had pight in the
+ Thames great piles of trées piked with yron, through which his ships
+ being entred the riuer, were perished and lost.<span class=
+ "page">[<a name="page476" id="page476">Page 476</a>]</span> And after
+ his comming a land, he was vanquished in battell, and constrained to
+ flee into Gallia with those ships that remained. For ioy of this
+ second victorie (saith Galfrid) Cassibellane made a great feast at
+ London, and there did sacrifice to the gods.</p>
+
+ <p>At this feast there fell variance betwixt two yoong gentlemen, the
+ one named Hirilda, nephew to Cassibellane, and the other Euelie or
+ Eweline, being of aliance to Androgeus earle of London. They fell at
+ discord about wrestling, and after multiplieng of words, they came to
+ dealing of blowes, by meanes whereof parts were taken, so that there
+ ensued a sore fraie, in the which diuerse were wounded and hurt, and
+ amongst other Hirilda the kings nephew was slaine by the hands of
+ Eweline. The king sore displeased herewith, meant to punish Eweline
+ according to the order of his lawes, so that he was summoned to
+ appeare in due forme to make answer to the murder: but Eweline by the
+ comfort of Androgeus disobeied the summons, &amp; departed the court
+ with Androgeus, in contempt of the king and his lawes. The king to be
+ reuenged vpon Androgeus, gathered a power, and began to make warre
+ vpon him.</p>
+
+ <p>Androgeus perceiuing himselfe not able to withstand the kings
+ puissance, sent letters to Iulius Cesar, exhorting him to returne
+ into Britaine, and declaring the whole matter concerning the variance
+ betwixt him and the king, promising to aid the Romans in all that he
+ might. Iulius Cesar ioifull of this message, prepared his nauie, and
+ with all spéed with a mightie host imbarked in the same, came toward
+ Britaine: but yer he would land, doubting some treason in Androgeus,
+ he receiued from him in hostage his sonne named Scena, and thirtie
+ other of the best and most noble personages of all his dominion.
+ After this he landed, and ioining with Androgeus, came into a vallie
+ néere to Canturburie, and there incamped. Shortlie after came
+ Cassibellane with all his power of Britains, and gaue battell to the
+ Romans. But after the Britains had long fought and knightlie borne
+ themselues in that battell, Androgeus came with his people on a wing,
+ and so sharplie assailed them, that the Britains were constrained to
+ forsake the field, and tooke themselues to flight. The which flight
+ so discomforted them, that finallie they all fled, and gaue place to
+ the Romans, the which pursued and slue them without mercie, so that
+ Cassibellane with the residue of his people withdrew to a place of
+ suertie, but being enuironed about with the puissance of the Romans,
+ and of Androgeus, who had with him seuen thousand men there in the
+ aid of the Romans, <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ So saith <i>Campion</i>, but <i>Galfrid Monu</i>. saith fiue
+ thousand.</span> Cassibellane in the end was forced to fall to a
+ composition, in couenanting to paie a yearelie tribute of thrée
+ thousand pounds. When Cesar had ordered his businesse as he thought
+ conuenient, he returned and with him went Androgeus, fearing the
+ displeasure of Cassibellane.</p>
+
+ <p>The reuerend father Bede writing of this matter, saith thus: After
+ that Cesar being returned into Gallia, had placed his souldiors
+ abroad in the countrie to soiorne for the winter season, he caused
+ ships to be made readie, to the number of 600, with the which
+ repassing into Britaine, whilest he marched foorth with a mightie
+ armie against the enimies, his ships that lay at anchor being taken
+ with a sore tempest, were either beaten one against another, or else
+ cast vpon the flats and sands, and so broken; so that fortie of them
+ were vtterlie perished, and the residue with great difficultie were
+ repaired. The horssemen of the Romans at the first encounter were put
+ to the worsse, and Labienus the tribune slaine. In the second
+ conflict he vanquished the Britains, not without great danger of his
+ people. After this, he marched to the riuer of Thames, which as then
+ was passable by foord onelie in one place and not else, as the report
+ goeth. On the further banke of that riuer, Cassibellane was incamped
+ with an huge multitude of enimies, and had pitcht and set the banke,
+ <span class="rightnote">The stakes remained to be séene in Bedes
+ daies.</span> and almost all the foord vnder the water full of sharpe
+ stakes, the tokens of which vnto this day are to be séene, and it
+ séemeth to the beholders that euerie of these stakes are as big as a
+ mans thigh, sticking fast in the bottome of the riuer closed with
+ lead. This being perceiued of the Romans, and auoided, the Britains
+ not able to susteine the violent impression of the Roman legions, hid
+ themselues in the woods, out of the which by often issues, they
+ gréeuouslie and manie times assailed the Romans, and did them great
+ damage. In the meane time the strong citie of Troinouant with hir
+ duke Androgeus deliuering fortie<span class="page">[<a name="page477"
+ id="page477">Page 477</a>]</span> hostages, yéelded vnto Cesar, whose
+ example manie other cities following, allied themselues with the
+ Romans, by whose information Cesar with sore fight tooke at length
+ the towne of Cassibellane, situat betwixt two marches, fensed also
+ with the couert of woods, &amp; hauing within it great plentie of all
+ things. After this Cesar returned into France, and bestowed his armie
+ in places to soiorne there for the winter season.</p>
+
+ <p>The Scotish writers report, that the Britains, after the Romans
+ were the first time repelled (as before ye haue heard) refused to
+ receiue the aid of the Scotish men the second time, and so were
+ vanquished, as in the Scotish historie ye may sée more at length
+ expressed. Thus much touching the war which Iulius Cesar made against
+ the Britains, in bringing them vnder tribute to the Romans. But this
+ tributarie subiection was hardlie mainteined for a season.</p>
+
+ <p>¶ Now here is to be noted, that Cesar did not vanquish all the
+ Britains: for he came not amongst the northerne men, onlie
+ discouering and subduing that part which lieth towards the French
+ seas: so that sith other of the Roman emperors did most earnestlie
+ trauell <span class="rightnote"><i>Cornelius Tacitus.
+ <br />
+ In uit. Agr. Dion Cassius.</i></span> to bring the Britains vnder
+ their subiection (which were euer redie to rebell so manie sundrie
+ times) Cesar might séeme rather to haue shewed Britaine to the
+ Romans, than to haue deliuered the possession of the same. This
+ subiection, to the which he brought this Ile (what maner of one
+ soeuer it was) chanced about the yeare of the world 3913, after the
+ building of Rome 698, before the birth of our sauior 53, the first
+ and second yeare of the 181 Olympiad, after the comming of Brute
+ 1060, before the conquest made by William duke of Normandie 1120, and
+ 1638 yeres before this present yere of our Lord 1585, after Harisons
+ account.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="xvij3" id="xvij3"></a> <i>The state of Britaine when
+ Cæsar offered to conquer it, and the maner of their gouernement, as
+ diuerse authors report the same in their bookes: where the
+ contrarietie of their opinions is to be obserued.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE XVIJ. CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>After that Iulius Cesar had thus made the Britains tributaries to
+ the Romans, and was returned into Gallia, Cassibellane reigned 7
+ yeares, and was vanquished in the ninth or tenth yeare after he began
+ first to reigne so that he reigned in the whole about 15 or as some
+ haue 17 yeares, and then died, leauing no issue behind him. There
+ hath bin an old chronicle <span class=
+ "rightnote"><i>Fabian</i>.</span> (as Fabian recordeth) which he saw
+ and followeth much in his booke, wherein is conteined, that this
+ Cassibellane was not brother to Lud, but eldest sonne to him: for
+ otherwise as may be thought (saith he) Cesar hauing the vpper hand,
+ would haue displaced him from the gouernement, and set vp Androgeus
+ the right heire to the crowne, as sonne to the said Lud. But
+ whatsoeuer our chronicles or the British histories report of this
+ matter, it should appere by that which Cesar writeth (as partlie ye
+ haue heard) that Britaine in those daies was <span class=
+ "leftnote"><i>Cæsar</i>.</span> not gouerned by one sole prince, but
+ by diuers, and that diuers cities were estates of themselues, so that
+ the land was diuided into sundrie gouernements, much after the forme
+ and maner as Germanie and Italie are in our time, where some cities
+ are gouerned by one onelie prince, some by the nobilitie, and some by
+ the people. And whereas diuers of the rulers in those daies here in
+ this land were called kings, those had more large seigniories than
+ the <span class="rightnote">Cassibellane a King.</span> other, as
+ Cassibellane, who was therefore called a king.</p>
+
+ <p>And though we doo admit this to be true, yet may it be, that in
+ the beginning, after Brute entered the land, there was ordeined by
+ him a monarchie, as before is mentioned, which might continue in his
+ posteritie manie yeares after, and yet at length before the comming
+ of Cesar, through ciuil dissention, might happilie be broken, and
+ diuided into parts,<span class="page">[<a name="page478" id=
+ "page478">Page 478</a>]</span> and so remained not onelie in the time
+ of this Cassibellane, but also long after, whilest they liued as
+ tributaries to the Romans, till finallie they were subdued by the
+ Saxons. In which meane time, through the discord, negligence, or
+ rather vnaduised rashnes of writers, hard it is to iudge what may be
+ affirmed and receiued in their writings for a truth; namelie,
+ concerning the succession of the kings that are said to haue reigned
+ betwixt the daies of Cassibellane, <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Cor. Tacit.
+ <br />
+ in uita. lib. Agr.</i></span> and the comming of the Saxons. The
+ Roman writers (and namelie Tacitus) report, that the Britains in
+ times past were vnder the rule of kings, and after being made
+ tributaries, were drawne so by princes into sundrie factions, that to
+ defend and kéepe off a common ieopardie, scarselie would two or thrée
+ cities agrée togither, and take weapon in hand with one accord, so
+ that while they fought by parts, the whole was ouercome. And after
+ this sort they say that Britaine was brought into the forme of a
+ prouince by the Romans, from whom gouernors vnder the name of legats
+ and procurators were sent that had the rule of it.</p>
+
+ <p>But yet the same authors make mention of certeine kings (as
+ hereafter shall appeare) who while the Romane emperors had the most
+ part of the earth in subiection, reigned in Britaine. <span class=
+ "leftnote"><i>Gildas in epist.</i></span> The same witnesseth Gildas,
+ saieng: Britaine hath kings, but they are tyrants: iudges it hath,
+ but the same are wicked, oftentimes spoiling and tormenting the
+ innocent people. And Cesar (as ye haue heard) speaketh of foure kings
+ that ruled in Kent, and thereabouts. <span class="rightnote">Some
+ take Prasutagus and Aruiragus to be one man.</span> Cornelius Tacitus
+ maketh mention of Prasutagus, and Cogidunus, that were kings in
+ Britaine: and Iuuenal speaketh of Aruiragus: and all the late
+ writers, of Lucius. Hereby it appeareth, that whether one or mo, yet
+ kings there were in Britain, bearing rule vnder the Romane
+ emperors.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="leftnote"><br />
+ <i>Gal. Mon.</i></span> On the other part, the common opinion of our
+ chronicle-writers is, that the chiefe gouernment remained euer with
+ the Britains, &amp; that the Romane senat receiuing a yearelie
+ tribute, sent at certeine times (<i>Ex officio</i>) their emperors
+ and lieutenants into this Ile, to represse the rebellious tumults
+ therein begun, or to beat backe the inuasion of the enimies that went
+ about to inuade it. And thus would these writers inferre, that the
+ Britains euer obeied their king, till at length they were put beside
+ the gouernement by the Saxons. But whereas in the common historie of
+ England, the succession of kings ought to be kept, so oft as it
+ chanceth in the same that there is not anie to fill the place, then
+ one while the Romane emperors are placed in their steads, and another
+ while their lieutenants, and are said to be created kings of the
+ Britains, as though the emperors were inferiors vnto the kings of
+ Britaine, and that the Romane lieutenants at their appointments, and
+ not by prescript of the senat or emperours, administred the
+ prouince.</p>
+
+ <p>This may suffice here to aduertise you of the contrarietie in
+ writers. Now we will go foorth in following our historie, as we haue
+ doone heretofore, sauing that where the Romane histories write of
+ things done here by emperors, or their lieutenants, it shall be
+ shewed as reason requireth, sith there is a great appearance of truth
+ oftentimes in the same, as those that be authorised and allowed in
+ the opinion of the learned.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="xviij3" id="xviij3"></a> <i>Of Theomantius, the tearme of
+ yeares that he reigned, and where he was interred; of Kymbeline,
+ within the time of whose gouernment Christ Iesus our sauiour was
+ borne, all nations content to obeie the Romane emperors and
+ consequentlie Britaine, the customes that the Britaines paie the
+ Romans as Strabo reporteth.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE XVIIJ. CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">THEOM&#256;DEUS</span> AFTER the death of
+ Cassibellane, Theomantius or Tenantius the yoongest sonne of Lud was
+ made king of Britaine in the yéere of the world 3921, after the
+ building of Rome <span class="leftnote"><br />
+ <i>Fabian</i></span><span class="page">[<a name="page479" id=
+ "page479">Page 479</a>]</span> 706, &amp; before the comming of
+ Christ 45. He is named also in one of the English chronicles Tormace:
+ in the same chronicle it is conteined, that not he, but his brother
+ Androgeus <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Gal. Mon.</i></span> was king, where Geffrey of Monmouth &amp;
+ others testifie, that Androgeus abandoned the land clerelie, &amp;
+ continued still at Rome, because he knew the Britains hated him for
+ treason he had committed in aiding Iulius Cesar against Cassibellane.
+ Theomantius ruled the land in good quiet, and paid the tribute to the
+ Romans which Cassibellane had granted, and finallie departed this
+ life after he had reigned 22 yeares, and was buried at London.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="leftnote">KYMBELINE</span> Kymbeline or Cimbeline the
+ sonne of Theomantius was of the Britains made king after the deceasse
+ of his father, in the yeare of the world 3944, after the building of
+ Rome 728, <span class="rightnote"><i>Fabian</i> out of <i>Guido de
+ Columna.</i></span> and before the birth of our Sauiour 33. This man
+ (as some write) was brought vp at Rome, and there made knight by
+ Augustus Cesar, vnder whome he serued in the warres, and was in such
+ fauour with him, that he was at libertie to pay his tribute or not.
+ Little other mention is made of his dooings, except that during his
+ reigne, the Sauiour of the <span class="leftnote">Christ our saviour
+ borne.</span> world our Lord Iesus Christ the onelie sonne of God was
+ borne of a virgine, about the 23 yeare of the reigne of this
+ Kymbeline, &amp; in the 42 yeare of the emperour Octauius Augustus,
+ <span class="rightnote">3966.</span> that is to wit, in the yeare of
+ the world 3966, in the second yeare of the 194 Olympiad, after the
+ building of the citie of Rome 750 nigh at an end, after the
+ vniuersall floud 2311, from the birth of Abraham 2019, after the
+ departure of the Israelits out of Egypt 1513, after the captiuitie of
+ Babylon 535, from the building of the temple by Salomon 1034, &amp;
+ from the arriuall of Brute 1116, complet. Touching the continuance of
+ the yeares of Kymbelines reigne, some writers doo varie, but the best
+ approoued affirme, that he reigned 35 years and then died, &amp; was
+ buried at London, leauing behind him two sonnes, Guiderius and
+ Aruiragus.</p>
+
+ <p>¶ But here is to be noted, that although our histories doo
+ affirme, that as well this Kymbeline, as also his father Theomantius
+ liued in quiet with the Romans, and continuallie to them paied the
+ tributes which the Britains had couenanted with Iulius Cesar to pay,
+ yet we find in the Romane writers, that after Iulius Cesars death,
+ when Augustus had taken vpon <span class="leftnote"><br />
+ <i>Cor. Tacitus.
+ <br />
+ in uita lu. Agr.
+ <br />
+ Dion Cassius</i>.</span> him the rule of the empire, the Britains
+ refused to paie that tribute: whereat as Cornelius Tacitus reporteth,
+ Augustus (being otherwise occupied) was contented to winke; howbeit,
+ through earnest calling vpon to recouer his right by such as were
+ desirous to sée the vttermost of the British kingdome; at length, to
+ wit, in the tenth yeare after the death of Iulius Cesar, which was
+ about the thirtéenth yeare of the said Theomantius, Augustus made
+ prouision to <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Dion Cassius.</i></span> passe with an armie ouer into Britaine,
+ &amp; was come forward vpon his iournie into Gallia Celtica: or as we
+ maie saie, into these hither parts of France.</p>
+
+ <p>But here receiuing aduertisements that the Pannonians, which
+ inhabited the countrie now called Hungarie, and the Dalmatians whome
+ now we call Slauons had rebelled, he thought it best first to subdue
+ those rebells neere home, rather than to séeke new countries, and
+ leaue such in hazard whereof he had present possession, and so
+ turning his power against the Pannonians and Dalmatians, he left off
+ for a time the warres of Britaine, whereby the land remained without
+ feare of anie inuasion to be made by the Romans, till the yeare after
+ the building of the citie of Rome 725, and about the 19 yeare of king
+ Theomantius reigne, that Augustus with an armie departed once againe
+ from Rome to passe ouer into Britaine, there to make warre. But after
+ his comming into Gallia, when the Britains sent to him certeine
+ ambassadours to treat with him of peace, he staied there to settle
+ the state of things among the Galles, for that they were not in verie
+ good order. And hauing finished there, he went into Spaine, and so
+ his iournie into Britaine was put off till the next yeare, that is,
+ the 726 after the building of Rome, which fell before the birth of
+ our sauiour 25, about which time Augustus eftsoons meant the third
+ time to haue made a voiage into Britaine, because they could not
+ agrée vpon couenants. But as the Pannonians and Dalmatians had
+ aforetime staied <span class="rightnote">He kept not promise with the
+ Romans. Those of Calice and Biskaie.</span> him, when (as before is
+ said) he meant to haue gone against the Britans: so euen now the
+ Salassians (a people inhabiting about Italie and Switserland) the
+ Cantabrians and Asturians by such rebellious sturrs as they raised,
+ withdrew him from his purposed iournie. But<span class=
+ "page">[<a name="page480" id="page480">Page 480</a>]</span> whether
+ this controuersie which appeareth to fall forth betwixt the Britains
+ and Augustus, was occasioned by Kymbeline, or some other prince of
+ the Britains, I haue not to auouch: for that by our writers it is
+ reported, that Kymbeline being brought vp in Rome, &amp; knighted in
+ the court of Augustus, euer shewed himselfe a friend to the Romans,
+ &amp; chieflie was loth to breake with them, because the youth of the
+ Britaine nation should not be depriued of the benefit to be trained
+ and brought vp among the Romans, whereby they might learne both to
+ behaue themselues like ciuill men, and to atteine to the knowledge of
+ feats of warre.</p>
+
+ <p>But whether for this respect, or for that it pleased the almightie
+ God so to dispose the minds of men at that present, not onlie the
+ Britains, but in manner all other nations were contented to be
+ obedient to the Romane empire. That this was true in the Britains, it
+ is <span class="leftnote"><i>Strab. Geog.</i></span> euident enough
+ by Strabos words, which are in effect as followeth. "At this present
+ (saith he) certeine princes of Britaine, procuring by ambassadors and
+ dutifull demeanors the amitie of the emperour Augustus, haue offered
+ in the capitoll vnto the gods presents or gifts, and haue ordeined
+ the whole Ile in a manner to be appertinent, proper, and familiar to
+ the Romans. They are burdened with sore customs which they paie for
+ wares, either to be sent foorth into Gallia, or brought from thence,
+ which are commonlie yuorie vessels, shéeres, ouches, or earerings,
+ and other conceits made of amber &amp; glasses, and such like manner
+ of merchandize: so that now there is no néed of anie armie or
+ garrison of men of warre to kéepe the Ile, for there néedeth not past
+ one legion of footmen, or some wing of horssemen, to gather vp and
+ receiue the tribute: for the charges are rated according to the
+ quantitie of the tributes: for otherwise it should be néedfull to
+ abate the customs, if the tributes were also raised: and if anie
+ violence should be vsed, it were dangerous least they might be
+ prouoked to rebellion." Thus farre Strabo.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p><a name="xix3" id="xix3"></a> <i>Of Guiderius, who denied to paie
+ tribute to the Romans, preparation for war on both sides, of the
+ ridiculous voiage of the Emperour Caligula against the Britains, his
+ vanitie and delight in mischiefe: Aulus Plautius a Romane senator
+ accompanied with souldiers arrive on the British coasts without
+ resistance, the Britains take flight and hide themselues.</i></p>
+
+ <h3>THE XIX. CHAPTER.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote">GUIDERIUS.</span> Guiderius the first
+ sonne of Kymbeline (of whom Harison saieth nothing) began his reigne
+ in the seuententh yeere after th' incarnation of Christ. This
+ Guiderius being a man of stout courage, gaue occasion of breach of
+ peace betwixt the Britains and Romans, denieng to paie them tribute,
+ and procuring the people to new insurrections, which by one
+ <span class="leftnote">Caligula.</span> meane or other made open
+ rebellion, as Gyldas saith. Wherevpon the emperour Caligula (as some
+ thinke) tooke occasion to leauie a power, and as one vtterlie
+ misliking the negligence (as he called it) of Augustus and Tiberius
+ his predecessors, he ment not onlie to reduce the Iland vnto the
+ former subiection, but also to search out the vttermost bounds
+ thereof, to the behoofe of himselfe, and of the Romane monarchie.</p>
+
+ <p>Great prouision therefore was made by the said Caligula to
+ performe that noble enterprise, and this was in the fourth yeere of
+ his reigne. The like preparation was made on the other side by
+ Guiderius, to resist the forren enimies, so that hauing all things in
+ a readinesse, he ceassed not dailie to looke for the comming of the
+ emperour, whome he ment to receiue <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ <i>Dion Cassius. lib.</i> 59.</span> with hard enterteinment if he
+ durst aduenture to set toward Britaine. But see the sequele: the
+ maine armie being thus in a readinesse, departed from Rome in the 79
+ yeere after the building of the citie, and marching foorth, at length
+ came vnto the Belgike shore, from whence they might looke ouer, and
+ behold the cliffes and coast of Britaine, which Caligula and
+ his<span class="page">[<a name="page481" id="page481">Page
+ 481</a>]</span> men stood gazing vpon with great admiration and
+ woonder.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore he caused them to stand in battell arraie vpon the
+ coast, where he heard how the Britains were in a redinesse to
+ withstand his entrance. But entring into his gallie, as nothing
+ discouraged with these newes, he rowed a flight shot or two from the
+ shore, and forthwith returned, and then going vp into an high place
+ like a pulpit, framed and set vp there for the nonce, he gaue the
+ token to fight vnto his souldiers by sound of trumpet, and therewith
+ was ech man charged to gather cockle shells vpon the shore, which he
+ called the <span class="rightnote"><br />
+ The spoile of the Ocean.</span> spoile of the Ocean, and caused them
+ to be laid vp vntill a time conuenient. With the atchiuing of this
+ exploit (as hauing none other wherewith to beautifie his triumph) he
+ séemed greatlie exalted, thinking that now he had subdued the whole
+ Ocean, and therefore highlie rewarded his souldiers for their paines
+ susteined in that collection of cockle shells, as if they had doone
+ him some notable péece of seruice. He also caried of the same shells
+ with him to Rome, to the end he might there boast of his voyage, and
+ brag how well he had sped: and required therefore verie earnestlie
+ haue of * a triumph decreed vnto him for the accomplishment
+ <span class="rightnote">* <i>sic.</i></span> of this enterprise.</p>
+
+ <p>But when he saw the senat grudge at the free &amp; liberall
+ granting of a grace in that behalfe, and perceiued how they refused
+ to attribute diuine honors vnto him, in recompense of so foolish an
+ enterprise, it wanted little that he had not slaine them euerie one.
+ From thence therefore he went vp into a throne or royall seate, and
+ calling therewith the common people about him, he told them a long
+ tale what aduentures had chanced to him in his conquest of the Ocean.
+ And when he had perceiued them to shout and crie, as if they had
+ consented that he should haue béene a god for this his great trauell
+ and valiant prowesse, he to increase their clamour, caused great
+ quantities of gold &amp; siluer to be scattered amongst them, in the
+ gathering whereof, manie were pressed to death, and diuers also
+ slaine with the inuenomed caltrops of iron, which he did cast out
+ with the same monie, of purpose to doo mischiefe, the same caltrops
+ being in forme small &amp; sharp, so that by reason of the prease of
+ people, much hurt was doone by them yer they were perceiued. And this
+ was the end of the ridiculous voiage of Caligula attempted against
+ the Britains.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><i>Suetonius.</i></span> But after the
+ death of this Caligula, the emperour Claudius (as Suetonius saith)
+ moued warre against the Britains, because of a sturre and rebellion
+ raised in that land, for that such fugitiues as were fled from
+ thence, were not againe restored when request was made for the
+ same.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="rightnote"><br />
+ Dion Cassius.</span> Dion Cassius writeth, that one Bericus, being
+ expelled out of Britaine, persuaded the emperour Claudius to take the
+ warre in hand at this time against the Britains, so that one Aulus
+ Plautius a senatour, and as then pretor, was appointed to take the
+ armie that soiourned in France then called Gallia, and to passe ouer
+ with the same into Britaine. The souldiers hearing of this voiage,
+ were loth to go with him, as men not willing to make warre in another
+ world: and therefore delaied time, till at length one Narcissus was
+ sent from Claudius, as it were to appease the souldiers, &amp;
+ procure them to set forward. But when this Narcissus went vp into the
+ tribunall throne of Plautius, to declare the cause of his comming,
+ the souldiers taking great indignation therewith cried, <i>O
+ Saturnalia,</i> as if they should haue celebrated their feast daie so
+ called.</p>
+
+ <p>When the seruants apparelled in their maisters robes, represented
+ the roome of their maisters, and were serued by them, as if they had
+ béene their seruants, and thus at length constreined, through verie
+ shame, they agréed to follow Plautius. Herevpon being embarked, he
+ diuided his nauie into thrée parts, to the end that if they were kept
+ off from arriuing in one place, yet they might take land in another.
+ The ships suffered some impeachment in their passage by a contrarie
+ wind that droue them backe againe: but yet the marriners and men of
+ warre taking good courage vnto them, the rather because there was
+ séene a fierie leame to shoot out of the east towards the west, which
+ way their course lay, made forwards againe with their ships, and
+ landed without finding anie resistance. For the Britains looked not
+ for their comming: wherefore, when they heard how their enimies
+ were<span class="page">[<a name="page482" id="page482">Page
+ 482</a>]</span> on land, they got them into the woods and marishes,
+ trusting that by lingering of time the Romans would be constreined to
+ depart, as it had chanced in time past to Iulius Cesar aforesaid.</p>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <h3>THE END OF THE THIRD BOOKE.</h3>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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