of it were shipped off for gain. Nor was the land yet emp- "o^ butte;
tied of it. For now it was thought fit to restrain the car- ''^'^^'^' ^
riage of it abroad ; especially having so near an enemy of
France, that might make use of it for great guns against
ourselves. Therefore July 27. a proclamation was issued
out, forbidding the exportation of that and other provi-
sions, lest the enemy might be supplied, and our own coun-
try and army want. It ran, " To our customers, comptrol- The prod
" lers, &c. and other our officers within the port of Lon- ™^^^'*"-
" don, and in all creeks and places to the said port belong-
" ing, for certain causes and considerations, us, and our
" dearest uncle Edward Duke of Somerset, Governor of
*' our person, and of our realms and dominions and sub-
" jects Protector, and other of our Privy Council, specially
" moving ; we strictly charge and command you, that ye
*' permit, nor suffer to be carried or conveyed out of th^
r 4
72 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
BOOK " said port, or any other creeks, any manner of bell-metal,
' " butter, cheese, tallow, or candles ; unto such time as by
Anno 1547. " our letters patents sealed, ye shall especially have our
" farther commandment for the same ; the towns of Calais
" and Boloign, and the marches of the same, always ex-
*' cepted, &c. And that upon pain of ^001. to be levied of
" your lands, goods, and chattels. Dated at Westminster.""
But this proclamation would not effect the thing intended,
though it were founded upon a statute made in the thirty-
third of Henry VIII. the inconvenience of having this
metal transported being then apprehended. Which there-
fore occasioned another act of Parliament in the second
of this King, anno 1548, that no person should carry or
ship off beyond sea any brass, copper, latten, bell-metal,
pan-metal, gun-metal, &c. whether it were clear or mixed,
tin and lead only excepted, upon certain forfeitures there
set down.
45 CHAP. VIL
A royal visitation. Injunctions and articles of inquiry.
The Bishop of Winchester'^s behaviour towards it. Con-
sidtation of entering into league with the Protestants.
Pensions. The Lady Mary chargeth the Protector about
religion. A plague.
The King's J[\| QW a roval visitation was on foot throughout Ena-
visitation. , . . . \. 11. 1
land, wherem this autumn was spent, to look into and re-
gulate the affairs of the Church and of religion. Of which
the Memorials of Archbishop Cranmer and other historians
speak. I shall add some matters relating to it, omitted by
them. The actual order for this visitation was issued out
September 1, and during the time the Commissioners for the
same were employed abroad, the King caused a Parliament
to be summoned, November 4. They carried along with
them the King's Injunctions printed, which are ordinarily
to be seen. But these were also accompanied with a book
of articles, printed at the same time, called, " Articles to be
OF KING EDWARD VI. 73
" inquired of in the King'*s Majesty's visitation." These ar- CHAP,
tides were twice printed in the same year by Grafton. They
are omitted in Bishop Sparrow''s Collections. My late reve- Anno 1547.
rend friend, deceased, had one of these books of Injunctions Articles of
Inquiry.
and Articles, and which he verily believed did once belong^, j^^^ .
to Archbishop Cranmer; wherein are certain corrections, The injunc-
as he supposed, of the said Archbishop's own hand : as
High Mass changed thus. The celebration of the holy
Commu7iion : Mass and Service changed into GocFs ser-
vice. Injunction 21, expunged : the latter part of Injwic-
tion 29. Also Injunctions 35 and 36 marked to be ex-
punged. And at the end of the form of bidding the com-
mon prayers is added a prayer for the success of the Duke
of Somerset's expedition to Scotland, in order to the effect-
ing of the King's match with the young Queen of Scot-
land ; which prayer is writ by the same hand, and is as fol-
loweth : " Ye shall also make your harty and effectual a prayer
" prayer to Almighty God for the peace of all Christian ^X|.'\',- J"'
" regions, and especially, that the most joyful and per- Scotland.
" petual peace and unity of this reyalme and Scotland may
" shortly be profited and brought to pass, by the most
" godly and happy mariage of the Kings Majesty and the
" young Queen of Scotland : and that it wold please Al-
" mighty God to ayd with strength, wisdom, and power,
" and with his holy defence, all those which favour and set
" forward the same, and vanquish and confound all those
" which labour and study to the lett and interruption of
" so godly a quiet and unity, wherof these two realms
" should take such a benefy t and profitt : for these and all
" other, &c."
And besides the King's Injunctions, the Commissioners The Com-
gave forth particular ini unctions of their own to each Bishop. ""^'^'0"er»'
™, • 1 injunctions.
Those given to Thomas Bishop of Westminster, as I find
them in the first edition of the Acts and Monuments, were
to this import :
74 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
BOOK Injunctions given in the King's Majesty's visitation hy
' us, Sir Antony Cook, Knight; Sir Jhon Godsalve,
Anno 1547. Knight; Jhon Gosnolde, Esq.; Christopher Newin-
^7 sone, Dr. of Law ; and Jhon Madew, Dr. ofDivimty,
Commissioners specially appointed hy the King\s Ma-
jesty, to visit the churches of Westminster, London,
Norwich, and Ely; to the right reverend Father i?i
God, Thomas, Bishop of Westminster.
Injunctions Imprimis, In consideration that above and before all
shop of ' things, such ways and means are to be sought for, m hereby
Westmin- the people may learn to know their duties to God, their
ster Acts .
andMon. Sovereign Lord, and to one another ; you shall cause every
first edit. Sunday divine service to be done and ended in every parish
church within the city of Westminster, before nine of the
clock the same day, to the intent that the priests and the
laity of the city may resort to the sermon to be made in
their cathedral church; except they have a sermon made
and preached in their own parish churches.
Item, That whereas by the ignorance of the Clergy not
only God's glory is greatly obscured, but also the same
Clergy much disdained and evil spoken of by some of the
laity, you shall cause that every Parson, Vicar, Chantry
Priest, and other stipendiary within the city of Westmin-
ster, be present at every lecture of divinity, to be made
within the college of St. Stephen ; except they, or any of
them, have some reasonable let, to be allowed and admitted
by your Chancellor, Commissary, or other officer for that
purpose, or the reader of the said lecture.
Also you, your Chancellor, Commissary, or other exer-
cising jurisdiction ecclesiastical under you, shall proceed in
all kinds of causes, summarie et de piano, sine Jigura et
strepitu judicii : and shall give sentence in every cause
within four assignations after the term, ad audiendum seri-
tentiam Jinalem.
All which and singular injunctions you shall inviolably
observe and keep, upon pain of the King's Majesty's dis-
pleasure, and as you will answer for the contrary.
Given at Westminster the 3d day of September, in the
OF KING EDWARD VI. 75
first year of the reign of our sovereign Lord Edward the CHAP.
Sixth, by the grace of God King of England, France, and ^^^'
Ireland, Defender of the Faith, and in earth, of the Church Anno 1547.
of England, and also of Ireland, the supreme Head.
Antony Coke. Jhon Godsalve. Jhon Gosnold.
Christopher Newinson. Jhon Madew.
But the Articles of Inquiry in this visitation being gene-
rally omitted in our historians, I have thought th'em worthy
to be here inserted and preserved.
Articles to be inquired of m the Ki7ig's Majesty's visitation. 4^^
For Bishops^ Archdeacons^ and ecclesiastical Officers.
First, Whether the Bishop, Archdeacons, and others, printed by
having jurisdiction ecclesiastical, have caused only to be 1547*^"'
sung or said the English procession in their cathedral
church, and other churches of their diocese.
Item, Whether the Bishop, Chancellor, or Commissary,
Archdeacon, or Official, be propense and light in excommu-
nicating of men for a little lucre.
Item, Whether they, or any of them, for one man'^s tres-
pass, have taken away from the people, and the whole pa-
rishioners, their divine service : as for violating and suspend-
ing the churchyards, and such like.
Item, Whether they do take excessive sums of money for
consecrating again, either of the churchyards, or of any
other ornaments, for the use of altars or of bells ; where is
no need of consecration : but is superstitious and lucrative.
Item, Whether they, or any of them, take any great ex-
actions for institutions, inductions, assignations of pensions,
or for any other matter ecclesiastical.
Item, Whether they do lightly call any persons before
them, ex officio, and put them to their purgation, without
urgent suspicion, or infamy proved.
Itejn,, Whether the Bishop have not preached, without
dissimulation, against the usurped power of the Bishop of
Rome; and set forth the King's Majesty's jurisdiction to
be the only supreme power in all his realms and dominions.
76 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
BOOK Item^ Whether the Bishop have personally preached in
any of the churches, or any where within his diocese : and
Anno 1647. how often in the year.
Item, Whether he and his officers have diligently exe-
cuted, for their part, our late King''s injunctions and his
letters missives, for a due order in the religion of Christ :
and caused the same injunctions and letters to be diligently
put in execution through his diocese.
Item, Whether he had learned and discreet officers under
him ; that do, without any respect of persons, punish such
crimes as appertaineth to ecclesiastical jurisdiction.
Item, Whether he or any of his officers do take any
money, or other gifts, to hide and cloak adultery or any
other notorious vice, that ought by them to be punished.
Item, If any commutation of penance have been made, to
any pecuniary sum. To what purpose the same hath been
converted. And what good deeds have been done with the
same. And specify the same indeed.
Item, Whether the Bishop hath such chaplains about
him, as have been able to preach the word of God ; and do
the same purely and sincerely. And how oft in the year.
And how many they be. What be their names.
49 For Parsons, Vicars, and Curates.
Item, Whether Parsons, Vicars, and Curates, and every
of them, have justly and truly, without dissimulation,
preached against the usurped power and pretenced autho-
rity and jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome.
Item, Whether they have preached and declared, tliat
the King's Majesty's power and authority and preeminence
is, within this realm, and the dominions of the same, the
most supreme and highest under God.
Item, Whether any person hath by writing, ciphering,
printing, preaching or teaching, deed or act, obstinately
holden and stand with, to extol, set forth, maintain or de-
fend the authority, jurisdiction, or power of the Bishop of
Rome, or of his see ; heretofore claimed or usurped : or by
any pretence, obstinately or maliciously invented any thing
for the extolling of the same, or any part thereof.
OF KING EDWARD VI. 77
Item^ Whether they have declared to their parishioners CHAP,
the articles concerning the abrogation of certain superfluous '
holy days; and done their endeavour to persuade their said Anno 1547.
parishioners to keep and observe the same articles invio-
lably. And whether any of those abrogated days hath
sithence the said abrogation been kept as holydays, con-
trary to the said articles. And by whose occasion they were
so kept.
Item^ Whether there do remain, not taken down in their
churches, chapels, or elsewhere, any misused images, with
pilgrimages, cloths, stones, shoes, offerings, kissings, can-
dlesticks, trindals of wax, and such other like. And whether
there do remain, not delayed and destroyed, any shrines,
coverings of shrines, or any other monuments of idolatry,
superstition, and hypocrisy.
Item, Whether they have not diligently taught, upon the
Sundays and holydays, their parishioners, and especially
the youth, their Pater fioste?-, the Articles of our faith, and
the Ten Commandments in Enghsh. And whether they
have expounded and declared the understanding of the
same.
Item, Whether they have diligently, duly, and reve-
rendly ministered the sacraments in their cures.
Ite7n, Whether such beneficed men as be lawfully absent
from tlieir dioceses, do leave their cure to a rude and un-
learned person ; and not to an honest, well learned man,
and expert Curate.
Item, Whether they have provided and laid, in some con-
venient places in the church, where they have cure, a Bible
of the largest volume in English.
Item, Whether Parsons, Vicars, Curates, Chauntry
Priests, and other stipendiaries, be common haunters and re-
sorters to taverns and alehouses ; giving themselves to ex-
cessive drinking and rioting, and playing at unlawful games ;
and apply not themselves chiefly to the study of Scripture,
teaching of youth, or some other honest and godly exer-
cise.
Item, Whether they be resident upon their benefices, and
IS MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
BOOK keep hospitality, or no. And if they absent, and keep no
hospitahty, whether they do make due distribution among
Anno 1547. the poor parishioners, or no.
50 Item, Whether they that have yearly to dispend in spi-
ritual promotions an 100/. do not find competently one
scholar in either University, or at some grammar-school.
And for as many hundred pounds as every one of them
may dispend, so many scholars be found likewise. And
what be their names. And they so found.
Item, Whether they keep their chancels, rectories, vicar-
ages, and all other houses appertaining to them, in due re-
parations.
Item, Whether they have, every Lent, required their
parishioners in their confession to recite their Pater noster,
the Articles of our faith, and the Ten Commandments in
English.
Item, Whether they have counselled or moved their pa-
rishioners, rather to pray in a tongue not known, than in
English. Or to put their trust in any prescribed number of
prayers; as in saying over a number of beads, or other
hke.
Ite7n, Whether they have preached, or caused to be
preached, purely and sincerely, the word of God, and the
faith of Christ, in every of their cures, every quarter of the
, year once at the least : exhorting their parishioners to the
works commanded by Scripture ; and not to works devised
by men's fantasies.
Item, Whether in their sermons they have exhorted the
fathers and mothers, masters and governors of youth, to
bring them up in some virtuous study or occupation.
Item, Whether they have exhorted the people to obedi-
ence to the Kings's Majesty and his officers ; and to charity
and love one to another.
Item, Whether they have moved the people to read and
hear the Scripture in English ; and have not discouraged
them from reading and hearing of the same. Sudi as be
not prohibited so to do.
Item, Whether they have declared to their parishioners.
OF KING EDWARD VI. 79
that they ought to know and understand the Pater noster^ CHAP,
the Articles of our faith, and the Ten Commandments in 1_
EngUsh, before they should receive the blessed Sacrament-^"^** ^^'*7'
of the Altar.
Item^ Whether they have taught the people the true use
of images. Which is only to put them in remembrance of
the godly and virtuous lives of them that they do represent.
And that if the people use the images for any other pur-
pose, they commit idolatry ; to the great danger of their
souls.
Item, Whether they have declared, and to their wits and
powers have persuaded the people, that the manner and
kind of fasting in Lent, and other days in the year, is but
a mere positive law. And that therefore all persons, having
just cause of sickness or necessity, or being licensed by the
King's Majesty, may temperately eat all kinds of meat,
without grudge or scruple of conscience.
Item, Whether your Parsons, Vicars, and Curates have
shewed and declared unto you the true use of ceremonies ;
that is to say, that they be no workers or works of salva-
tion ; but only outward signs and tokens, to put us in re-
membrance of things of higher perfection.
Item, Whether they have permitted any man to preach
in their cures, not being lawfully licensed thereunto : or
have refused or repelled such to preach as have been so li-
censed.
Item, Whether they which have spoken and declared any
thing for the setting forth of pilgrimages, feigned relics,
images, or any such superstition, have not openly recanted
the same.
Item, Whether they have one book or register safely 51
kept ; wherein they write the day of every wedding, christ-
ening, and burying.
Item, Whether the King's Injunctions were quarterly
read, or not.
Item, Whether they have declared to their parishioners,
whether St. Mark's day, in the evens of the abrogated holy-
days, should not be fasted.
80 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
BOOK Item, Whether the knoUing at the Aves be used.
^' Item, Whether they have the Procession book in Eng-
Anno i547.hsh. And in their processions use none other htany but
that which is set forth in the same book. And whether they
omit the same Enghsh htany at any time in their proces-
sions. And whether tliey have had the same htany as oft
as they were commanded.
Item, Whether they have put out of their church books
this word papa-^ and the name and service of Thomas
Becket : and prayers having rubricies, containing pardons
or indulgences; and all other superstitious legends and
prayers.
Item, Whether they bid the beads, according to the order
prescribed by our late sovereign Lord King Henry VIII.
Item, Whether they, or any of them, have been admitted
to their benefices by simony, or by any other unlawful
means.
Item, Whether in their masses they use not the collects
made for the King ; and make not special mention of his
Majesty ""s name in the same.
Item, Whether they, or any of them, do keep mo bene-
fices, and other ecclesiastical promotions, than they ought to
do ; not having sufficient licences and dispensations there-
unto. And how many they keep. And their names.
A7'ticlesjhr the lay people.
Whether they know any person that is a letter of the
word of God to be read in English ; so that it be meekly,
humbly, and reverendly done, and without disturbance of
the people : and by them that have authority thereto.
Item, Whether you know any persons, spiritual or tem-
poral, which do let the word of God to be preached ; or
that the King's Injunctions should not be duly executed.
Item, Whether any person hath obstinately and mali-
ciously, without any just and reasonable cause, broken the
laudable customs of the Church, commanded to be ob-
served ; or superstitiously abused the same. As in casting
holy water upon their beads, or other places. And bearing
about them holy bread ; or making crosses of wood upon
OF KING EDWARD VI. 81
Palm-sunday ; or blessing with the holy candle, thinking CHAP,
thereby to put away sins, drive away devils, dreams, and ______
fantasies ; or putting trust or confidence of salvation in the Anno 1547.
same ceremonies. Whereas they be ordained only to put
us in remembrance of the benefits which we have received
by Christ.
Iterriy Whether any person, spiritual or temporal, keep
the church holyday, and the dedication day, at any time,
than is appointed by the ordinance made in that behalf by
the King's Majesty.
Item, Whether matin mass and even song be kept in
due hours in the church.
Item, Whether any be brawlers, slanderers, chiders,
scolders, and sowers of discord between one person and
another.
Item, Whether any be common swearers and blasphemers
of the name of the Lord.
Item, Whether any use lewd, unchaste, unhonest, and
filthy communication, songs, or ballads.
Item, Whether any do use to common, jangle, or talk
in the church, at the time of divine service, preaching,
reading, or declaring of the word of God.
Item, Whether any do obstinately keep and defend any
erroneous opinion, contrary to the word of God, and faith
of Christ.
Item, Whether any commit adultery, fornication, or in-
cest ; or be common bawds, or receivers of such naughty
persons.
Item, Whether you know any that use charms, sorcery,
and inchantments, witchcraft, soothsaying, or any other
wicked craft, invented by the Devil.
Item, Whether you know any to be married within the
degrees prohibited by the law of God ; or that be separated
and divorced without any just cause, approved by the law
of God. And whether any such have married again.
Item, Whether the church, pulpit, and other necessary
things, appertaining to the same, be sufficiently repaired.
VOL. IT. G
82 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
BOOK Item, Whether you know any to have made privy
' contracts of matrimony, not calhng two or more there-
^nno 1547. unto.
Item, Whether any have married solempnely without
banns asking.
Item, Whether you know any that have taken upon them
the execution of any man''s testament, or be admitted to the
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