London, King Charles his Augusta, or, city royal. Of the founders, the names, and oldest honours of that city. An historicall and antiquarian work. Written at first in heroicall Latin verse, according to Greek, Roman, British, English, and other antiquities and authorities, and now translated into English couplets, with annotations. Imprimatur, Na. Brent.
This material was created by the Text Creation Partnership in partnership with ProQuest's Early English Books Online, Gale Cengage's Eighteenth Century Collections Online, and Readex's Evans Early American Imprints.
Of the Founders, the Names, and oldest Honours of that
CITY.
An Historicall and Antiquarian Work.
Written at first in Heroicall Latin Verse, according to Greek, Roman, British, English, and other Antiquities and Authorities, and now translated into English Couplets, with Annotations.
THou art here presented with an
Historicall Poem of the antiquity of this (yet) famous
City; where thou shall finde the
Ancient Honours with the severall
Names, and
Founders neatly cast into this elegant composure as well be fits so excellent a
Subject.
For the
Author, it seems, he was not ambitious that his
Name should grace his
Worke, but rather that his
Worke should grace his
Name: for let me tell thee, it came from the
Studie of that accomplished
Poet of our
Time, Sir
Will. Davenant, whose
Ingenious Fancy hath spun him such a woofe, of immortall praise, that shall never be eaten through, with the all-else devouring teeth of
Time, or blasted by the poysonous breath of envy.
And now I shall cleare the
Title from some aspersions which malice might be ready to cavill at, because, happily, it may be thought not
Calculated for the
Present
[Page] Times; yet who knows not that
LONDON hath always had the honour to be, (as well as to be call'd)
The City Royall; and I hope, Learning is not so much forgot, but by that easie figure it may still be tearmed, the
City Loyall; and then why not
King Charles his
Augusta? although, for more then the last Lustre of yeares it hath been
Divorc'd from it's greatest lustre, namely, the presence of
Him, who only made it
Famous.
To conclude, May it be the prayer of all
Loyall Subjects, and true
Citizens, that it would please the
All-Mighty,Isa. 1.26. to turne that
Prophesie, into an
History amongst us,
viz. that
He would restore our
Judges as at the
First, and our
Counsellors as at the
Beginning; that afterwards, it may be called the
City of Righteousnesse; the faithfull City.
Caeterùm, tantùm abfuit, ut
Londinenses Cives, qui fidelissimi erant, armis & viris muniti, adventu hostium territi sint, ut apertis partis adversùm eos
[DACOS] confestim irruperint, ita ut illi minimè sustinentes subitò cesserint.
The valour of the Citizens at the siege of
LONDON by the
DANES, under King
CANUTUS. Anno Dom.
MXVII.
BUt so far was it off from the Citizens of
London, who were most faithfull, and furnished with arms and men, from being frighted at the enemies approach, that forthwith setting their City Gates wide open, they sallyed out against them in such a manner, that they being utterly unable to endure the shock, sodainly fell off and went away.
The English of the Latine Verses to the KING, To make the TRANSLATION compleat.
FAmes old reserves my verses subject be,
Who
London built, most sprosp'rous King for thee,
(Thine Empires glory, splendor, and defence,
Now braver in our there born
Alluding to the Star which appeared at noon-day. The Latin word, in the originall, is
Astriferi, which signifies, or insinuates, far more aptly then the English, a Prince who brought a Star with him at his birth, though happing a day over.
starry Prince)
Wall'd like an Harp in form (an omen sure,
That peace, and happy rule should there endure)
Whence the name grew; and what the changes were:
I sing in brief. Things found, not fain'd are here.
Th' Isles Mother-town, where
Cynthia had her seat,
NENNIUS (who wrote about eight hundred years since) in Mr.
Seldens Manuscript, diligently cō pared by himselfe with Sir
H. Saviles, Sir
Robert Cottons, & M.
Cambdens copies. Sir
Iohn Prise, Humfrey Lhuyd, & all the Welsh, with innumerable other of our Nation, their followers.
The Poole is a place so called in the River of
Thames neer to the Tower of
London where ships ride thickest at anchor, & lies before the marshy medows & standing waters in the runn
[...] lands of
Redderiffe, which seem to have al thereof been under water or a Pool.
near part doth still retain,
The title of The pool.
Lhyn-Tain is then,
A town there fixt, where to
Diana, men,
Had hallowed a lake. To strengthen this,
Lin, and not
Lon, in Stephans
Stephanus (who wrote above a thousand yeares since in Greeke) in his Book of Cities. And
Marcianus in his circum-navigation of
Britain, saith that the Citizens were of
Lindoninon called
Lindonines, [...].
Lindonion is,
By which that antient
Greek did
London signe,
Among the Cities which then most did shine.
But not alone this City took her name,
From
Dian', but the iland took the same.
For lofty
Britain is of
Bro combinde,
With
Tain, and as
Dianas land designde.
Which the fit wedlock of those words begets;
For
Bro is land. And that rough shire which sets,
Out far into the sea the huge head so,
Is
Penbroke call'd, of
Pen an head, and
Bro.
Dianas oracles such credit wun,
(As those from which
Brutes empire first begun)
That so his
Brittans did her name adore,
As
Ephesus it selfe did never more.
Muse, what those were assist thou me to sing.
From
Troyes last fires whose fame through heaven should ring
Geffrey, born at
Monmouth in South-
Wales, Bishop of St.
Asaph, about 400 years since.
who so clerkly could,
Turn Verses, fain in prose (if fain he would)
Such foolish things as some there found are thought.
He therefore only
This seemes to bee most true. For first
Nennius (that disciple of
Elnodugus) compendiously memorizeth
Brutes fatal birth, his casuall killing of his Father, his sailing into
Greece, and
Gall, and that this Island took the name of
Brittain from him. Then again, an old book found in the library of the Abbey
Beck in
Normandy, by
H. of
Huntingdon, (who was born about five hundred yeares since) in his travail to
Rome, and the old Welsh copy of
Walter Archdeacon of
Oxford which
Geffrey of
Monmouth translated into Latin, contain the same things thoughout (witnesse Mr.
Lambert, in his Preambulation of
Kent) which
Nennius briefly touch, and they deliver at large. Therefore
Geffrey of
Monmouth cannot be so much as fained, to have fained them. But of these things elswhere, both more exactly, and more copiously.
Seat us where we thine endlesse praise will sound,
And temples reare with queers of virgins crown'd.
Sweet sleep then seiseth on him, and sweet dreams
Present to his tirde soul their pleasing theames.
For shee appear'd, and this fair answer gave,
Which from the true, translatour here we have.
DIANAS Oracle, and Grant
BRute,
beyond Gall,
where Phoebus
stoops to rest,
A land is lodg'd within the Oceans
brest,
Which once wilde gyants held, now vacant lyes,
Most fit for Thee Thine There
t'encolonize.
Reach This.
For Thou
shalt ever This
enjoy;
This
shall to Thine
be made a second Troy.
Here,
from Thy
loines shall royal of-springs growe,
To whom
A Prophesie nothing lesse then a lie. For the whole World of the Britian Islands which very lately were under King
James, is now obedient to his son King CHARLES. The whole World moreover was subject of old to
Constantine a Brittain who was Emperour, or
Caesar Augustus. The Oracle therefore is fulfilled in both those respects▪ and in a more high, (of which the spirit of the Oracle thought nothing, but as one of the Sibills or
Balaam might) that is to say, the Empire of the faith of Christ, by means of that blessed Emperour, being through all Nations most freely spred and setled.
"Who would'st be sōthing, set thine heart to know
"Things lōg since past: who doth not, old may show
"But is an infant. That which makes men wise,
"Is the records of ages to revise,
"The sacred shrines, and cabanets abstruse,
"Of hoary date, worn out of Vulgar use.
Thus divine
Plato was in
Aegypt told,
And hath in his
Timaeus it enrold.
To herth' whole Island dedicated was.
For where St.
Pauls
Sulcardus, an ancient English writer.
most stately church haht place,
Her temple stood, under
Geofrey of
Monmouth, of the Originall and acts of the Brittains,
lib. 2.
cap. 1. The seats of the three Arch-flamins were at
London, York, and
Caer Leon. Sedes Arcbistaminum in tribus nobilloribus civitatibus fuerant Londoniis,
Eboraco, & in Urbe Legionum.
th' Archflamins charge.
The gyants Dance (so call'd) that structure large,
On Plaines of
Sal'sbery, the same doth showe,
Where made stōes ar more hard thē stōes that grow
The circling Seas chief darling, pearl more clear,
Then is the Moon when she doth full appear:
Although the
British pearls look pale,
Plinie in his Naurall History.
and wan,
For grief they took, since so far
Caesar ran,
As to break through the secrets of her Seas,
Nor have they yet recover'd their disease;
Unlike those pearls, which that triumphant Prince,
Did gather here, and brought away from hence,
To deck the brest-plate, he to
Venus vow'd,
In
Venus
Suetonius
in his Julius Caesar.
Temple,
Rome thereby made proud.
But ever under Virgins was our Ile.
The blessed Virgin had it in her style,
After
Diana had the title lost:
The maiden mother
Delias glory crost,
"Light drives out darknesse, milde the fierce out-weares,
Protectrix here above one thousand yeares.
This mov'd King
Arthur to advance in
William of
Malmesburie, in his Latin Histories, published by Sr.
H. Saevile, and dedicated, with the works of some other our oldest Historians, (by that rare gentleman) to Q.
Elizabeth, printed in one great Volume, at
London, first, and since beyond the seas. Mr.
Camden makes it clear, that this most victorious
Britian Prince, King
Arthur, was enterred at
Glastenburie.
sheild,
The Virgins semblant, who from every field,
Returning victor vanquished in fight,
The
Saxons powr's (in vain, through fates despight,
The
Britans bravery withering in his death)
And crown'd her forhead w
th a
Nennius (who also writteth of the picture in his sheild) nameth the twelve severall places where King
Arthur obtained those twelve severall victories, in the like number of set battels.
The Art of English poesie, a book dedicated to her self. Sir
Walter Raleighs English Poem entituled
Cynthia, and dedicated to that Goddesse Queen, as Mr.
Camden every where calls her. The most famous, and most learned Poet of our Nation, Mr.
Spenser, in his
Colin Clowt's come home again, mentions
Raleighs Cynthia, with much honour.
Cynthia; nor amisse the same.
In the mean time, they will have
London be,
Lhan-Tain of her, that the names pedigree.
Let various fancies, under face of truth,
Take whom they will. My Muse things sure ensu'th,
Our Worlds chief City loves not names blind born,
And what's not like her royall self doth scorn.
The brother german of that paramount Prince,
Great
Cassibeline, (who drave
Julius Caesar himself, (though not so clearly) in his Commentaries, and all other who have written of his war in
Britain, though some of them more magnificently, for
Cassibelines glory, as
Lucan, then some others have done.
Caesar hence,
And made
Romes Eagles back to take their flight,
His
Troian wheels swift thūdring through the fight)
His brother, royall
Lud, when once he had,
The aged Citie with new buildings clad,
Made all things new, the marble gates, and walls,
Then
Dinas-Lud, or
Gildas, the Historian, whom
Monmowth cites, and
Polydore Virgil confesseth to have read.
Lud-Dine he it calls,
(The old name chang'd, which was at first new
Troy,
A Greek coyn of the Emperour
Claudius, in
Octavius Strada, and in the English
Nero Caesar, where it is explained.
Etiminius, or
Svetonius.
Adminius (he,
Who, King
Cun' ob
[...]lines son was, one of three)
His court kept here, when
Dion Cassius.
Beric sold our land,
To
Claudius Caesar, who did
Rome command,
And by his right of conquest gain'd therein,
Made
Romes walls
Pomeria protulit. Old Inscriptions extant in
Gruterus, and
Rolinus, and the best ancient authors.
wider then they carst had bin.
London was, long before
Cor. Pacitus, Annal. lib.
14.
Cornelius wrote,
A place for trade, and concourse most of note,
And known to
Rome for such; and long before,
To the bold
Julius Caesar writes, that the
Britains sent aid to the
Galls: and
Strabo, that the
Veneti, in
Gallia, had sea helps from hence, in their war against
Caesar, for preserving their Mart here, which was no where more likely to have been then at
London, which, in
Neros time, was above all other Towns of ours most famous.
Hereof I have long since written a small book, unpublished.
and
London, for a signe of this,
One crosse display,
gules in argent is.
A glorious standard (God) and good indeed,
When the brave
English, here
Matthew of
Westminster, and other old ones.
made
Pagans bleed,
And
Saracens there (that
Antichristian sect)
In
Henry
of Huntingdon, Matthew Ranis,
[...]o
[...]eden,
and others.
Cordelions dayes, with blest effect.
Great are these glories, and enow: but more,
Doe here ensue. That Monarch, who first wore,
And first did spred in
Roman arms the crosse,
And therewith his own standard did embosse,
Call'd
Labarum,
The coines of
Constantine the Great, and of other Emperours, after him, doe show the figure of that heavenly signe, with which he adorned the Imperiall
[figure]Banner, or
Standard, most richly wrought and set with stones of greatest price, and beautie.
Eusebius in
Constantines life. The figure in those coines is
who crown'd
Christs fold w
th rest
The empire carrying with him from the VVest,
He whom new
Rome did worthily adore,
Constantinoples name unknown before)
VVas born
Fitz-Stephan, an old Topographer of
London, first published in print by that memorable Citizen, Mr.
Iohn Stow. With these few small drops, drawn hither out of my fuller annotations upon the Latin verses, of which these are the translation, I have sprinkled their margents, as with a kinde of dewle salt. For, the noble matter may relish so the more kindly, and be the more fi
[...]tly understood, by the learned, and ingenuous reader. Both which aymes of mine will hold good, I hope; who professing my selfe to be herein an Historicall Antiquarie, have truly declared my self to be such, as the duty of mine office did oblige. The contrary whereof, what it were else, then, under the colour of being an Antiquarie, to destroy antiquitie, I must confesse, I know not. The most able Censor among the Greeks,
Dionysius Halicarnassaeus, (familiar with
Pompey, the Great) in his judgement upon the best Greek Historian,
Thucydides, is so far from condmning the inserting of Nationall traditions into Histories (such as those of
Brute, and some other of ours here are) as he plainly confesseth it to be a duty. His one words are;
‘
[...], &c.’ That among all men, aswell in generall, concerning places, as in particulars, concerning cities, such memorials were preserved, as came by hearsay; which sons receiving from their fathers, they again endeavoured to commend by their sons to posterity. They therefore who would write of such, ought to write so, as they finde them received of old. Thus, and much more to that purpose, upon which the justification of
Herodotus (whom
Cicero styles the Father of Histories) depends, hath that
Dionysius written there, and written truly. That the things in that British book, which
Geofrey of
Monmouth translated, were of such a traditional kinde, his dedicatory Epistle to that valiant, and learned Prince,
Robert, Earle of
Glocester, natural son to King
Henry the first, King of
England, clearly declareth. This was the reason which moved
Herodotus (without fearing, or caring, to be reputed fabul
[...], by the rash, or ignorant, for his so doing) to recite what he commonly found in traditions among Nations, Common-weals, or Cities, touching their own originals, as knowing it to be his duty, as an Historian. Therefore, he tells us, that one
Targitau
[...], the son of
Jupiter, by the daughter of
Boristh
[...]nes, had three sons,
Lipo-xais, Apo-xais, and
Colae-xais, among whom he divided all
Scyt
[...]a, which so became first to be empeopled. The same cause also moved
Cornel. Tacitus to remember unto us, that the old Germans derived their beginning from God
Tuisto, whose three nephews by his son
Mannus, shared
Germanie among them, and were of that Nation the first reputed parents. The like (but with much more likelyhood) our oldest British traditions report, of the tripartite division of this great I stand, between
Lycrinus, Camber, and
Albanact, the three sons of
Brute, Julius Silvius Brutu
[...] father of the
Britains, and founder of
London.