|  R.Avon Charford Natanleod Ringwood Regnum R.Stour Christchurch Twinamburne Alaun mouth | Hard by the Westerne bounds the river Aven carrieth a still streame and no sooner runneth into this shire, but it meeteth with the Fourd of Cerdicus, in old time Cerdicks-ford, afterward Cerdeford, and now by contraction of the word, Chardford, so named of Cerdic that Warlicke English-Saxon. For, heere the said Cerdic in a set battaile soe daunted the Britains, that not onely he enlarged the bounds of his Empire, but also delivered an easie warre unto his posterity: having before time in the yeere of our Salvation 508, after great conflicts in this tract, vanquished the most mighty King of the Britains, Natanleod, called also Nazaleod by others, with many of his people. Of whose name likewise, a small region reaching unto this place was termed | 
| [p.258] | |
| Natanleod, as we read in the Annals of the English Saxons:  which  
I sought very curiously for, but hitherto could not find so much  
as any small sign or sample of that name:  neither can I guesse  
who that Natanleod shoald be.  But most certaine it is, that  
Aurelius Ambrose, at the very same time skirmished otherwhiles  
with the Saxons in this tract with alternative fortune:  and yet  
those Chronicles of the English Saxons no where made mention of  
him; as who, (a thing that I have observed) being over much  
affectionate to themselves, reported only their owne fortunate  
battailes, and victories but never made words of their foiles &  
overthrowes.  From thence the said river runneth on by Regnewood  
or Ringwood, called in the Domesday booke of England Rincewood.   
Which, that it was the same REGNUM, the chiefe towne of the Regni  
whereof Antoninus maketh mention, the accompt of the distance  
from other places, the remaines of the name and the very  
signification thereof doe plainly prove.  For, Ring-wed by that  
Saxon addition seemeth to signify the Wood of the Regni.  A towne  
in ancient time of great fame, as maybe gathered by the Hundred  
adjoining, which is named thereof:  but now it is a well  
frequented mercate towne and no better:  Aven being departed from  
hence, entertaineth the river Stoure coming down out of  
Dorsetshire, where betweene the meeting of these two streames,  
there standeth a prety towne of trade and well peopled.  At this  
day of a Church there dedicated unto Christ, named Christ-church:   
but in old time Twinamburne, because it is situate betweene the  
two rivers, right in the same sense that Interamna in Italie hath  
his name.  It was fortified in times past with a Castle, and  
beautified with an ancient Church of Prebendaries, which being  
built in the Saxons time and after repaired by Rau'ph Flammard  
Bishop of Durrham (who was Deane there) in the reigne of William Rufus,  
and by Richard de Riparijs Earle of Devonshire (whom King Henrie  
the first enfeoffed in this place) endowed also with great rents  
and revenewes, continued in very great name untill the daies of  
King Henrie the Eighth, and that fatall and finall houre of the  
Monasteries of England, Under this towne Stoure and Aven joining  
together doe emptie themselves into the sea at one mouth, which  
Ptolomee called the mouth of the River Alaun; and rightly too:   
For I cannot resolve with my selfe to thinke, that the river  
properly was named Aven, considering this is a common name, and  
the Britans by that terme, called all rivers.  But I would take  
it, that some time it was called Alaun, because there remain yet  
some reliques (as it were) of that name in the villages upon it,  
to wit, in Allington, Allingham, &c. | 
|  William I New Forest William Rufus | Along the east banke of this river in this Shire, King William of Normandie pulled downe all the townes, villages, houses, and Churches far and neere, cast out the poore inhabitants, and when he had so done brought all within thirty miles compasse or thereabout into a forrest and harbour for wild beasts, which the English men in those daies termed Ytene, and we now call New forrest. Of which Act of his, Gwalter Maps who lived immediately after, wrote thus. 'The Conqueror tooke away land both from God and men, to dedicate the same unto wild beasts and Dogs-game: in which space he threw downe six and thirty Mother-churches, and drave all the people thereto belonging quite away.' And this did he, either that the Normans might have safer and more secure arrivall into England, (For it lieth over against Normandie) in case after that all his wars thought ended any new dangerous tempest should arise in this Iland against him: or for the pleasure which he tooke in hunting: or else to scrape and rape money to himselfe by what meanes soever he could: For, being better affected and more favorable to beasts than to men, he imposed very heavy fines and penalties, yea and other more grievous punishments, upon those that should medle with his game. but Gods just judgement not long after followed this so unreasonable and cruell act of the King. For, Richard his second sonne, and William Rufus King of England, another sonne of his, perished both in this Forrest: William by chance shot through with an arrow by Walter Tirell; the other blasted with a pestilent aire. Henrie likewise his grand child by Robert his eldest sonne, whiles hee hotely persued his game in this Chase was hanged amongst the bowghes and so died: that we may | 
| [p.259] | |
| learne thereby.  How even childrens children beare the punishment  
of their Fathers sinnes.  There goe commonly abroad certaine verses,  
that John White Bishop of Winchester made of this forrest:  Which  
although they falsely make William Rufus to have ordained the  
same, yet because they are well liked of many, I am likewise well  
content heere to set them downe. Templa adimit Divis, fora civibus, arva colonis Rufus, & instituit Beaulensi in rure forestam: Rex cervum in sequitur, Regem vindicta, Tirellus Non bene provisum tranfixit acumine ferri. | 
|  Beaulieu tract sanctuary | He calleth it Beauley tract, for that King John built hard by,  
a prety Monasteri, for the pleasant situation called Beaulieu,  
which continued even unto our Fathers memorie, of great fame as  
being an unviolated sanctuarie & a safe refuge for all that fled  
to it:  in so much that in times past, our people heere thought  
it unlawfull and an hainous offence by force to take from thence  
any persons whatsoever, were they thought never so wicked  
murderers or traitours:  so that our Ancestors when they erected  
such Sanctuaries, or Temples (as they terme them) of Mercie,  
everywhere throughout England, seemed rather to have proposed  
unto themselves Romulus to imitate than Moses:  who commaunded  
that wilfull murderers should be plucked from the altar and put  
to death:  and for them onely appointed Sanctuarie, who by meere  
chance had killed any man. | 
|  sea coast Henry VIII Hurst Castle Calshot Castle Southampton - Haven S. Andrew's Castle Netley Castle Anton Bay R.Test | But least the sea coast, for so long a tract as that forrest is  
heere, should lie without defence all open and exposed to the  
enimie, King Henrie the Eighth began to strengthen it with forts,  
for, in that foreland or promontorie shooting far into the sea:   
From whence we have the shortest cut into the Isle of Wight, hee  
built Hurst Castle, which commandeth sea ward every way.  And  
more towards the East he set up also another fortresse or  
blockhouse, they name it Calshot Castle for Caldshore, to defend  
the entrie of Southampton Haven, as more inwardly on the other  
[shore] are the two Castles of S. Andrew, and Netly.  For, heere  
the shores retiring as it were themselves a great way backe into  
the land, and the Isle of Wight also; butting full upon it doe  
make a very good harbour, which Ptolomee calleth The mouth of the  
river Trisanton, (as I take it) for Traith Anton:  that is, Anton  
Bay.  For, Ninnius and old writer giveth it almost the same name  
when he termeth it Trahannon mouth.  As for the river running  
into it, at this day is called Test, it was in the foregoing age  
(as wee read in the Saints lives) named Terstan, and in old time  
Ant, or Anton:  as the townes standing upon it, namely Antport,  
Andover and Hanton in some sort doe testifie. | 
|  Hamon Southampton Clausentum Canute | So far am I of (pardon me) from thinking that it tooke the name  
of one Hamon a Romane, (a name not used among Romanes) who should  
be there slaine.  And yet Geffrey of Monmouth telleth such a  
tale, and a Poet likewise his follower who pretily maketh these  
verses of Hamon. ... Ruit huc, illucqueruentem Occupat Arviragus, eiusque in margine ripae Amputat ense caput nomen tenet inde perempti Hammonis Portus, longumque tenebit in auum. But upon this Haven standeth South-hanton, a little Citie, neere unto which on | 
| [p.260] | |
| the North-east, there flourished in old time  
another of that name:  which may seeme to be Antonine his  
CLAVSENTVM, by the distance of it, as well on the one side from  
Ringwood, as from Venta on the other.  And as Trisanton in the  
British language signifieth the Bay of Anton, so Clausentum in  
the same tongue, is as much as the Haven of Entum.  For, I have  
heard, that Claudh among the Britans, is that which the Graecians  
call [ ], that is, a forced Haven made by digging and casting up  
the earth.  Now, that this place was called Hanton and Henton,  
no man needs to doubt, seeing in that booke wherin King William  
the first made a survey of all England, this whole shire is  
expressely named Hantscyre and in some places Hentscyre, and the  
very towne it self for the South situation of it, South-hanton.   
What maner of towne that Clausentum was, it is hard to say:  but  
seated it was in that place, where the field is which now they  
call S. Maries; and reached even to the Haven:  and may seeme  
also to have taken up the other banke or strand of the river:   
For, a little above at Bittern over against it, Francis Mills a  
right honest gentleman there dwelling, showed unto to me the  
rubbish, old broken wals, and trenches of an antient castle,  
which carried halfe a mile in compasse, & at every tide is  
compassed for three parts of it with water a great breadth.  The  
Romane Emperors ancient coines now and then there digged up, doe  
so evidently prove the antiquitie thereof, that if it were not  
the Castle of old Clausentum, you would judge it to be one of  
those forts or fences which the romans planted upon the South  
coast of the Ocean, to represse, as Gildas writeth, the piracies  
and depredations of the Saxons.  When all became wasted, by the  
Danish warres, old Hanton also was left as a pray in the yeere  
of our Lord 980. to be sacked and rifled by them:  and King William  
the Conqueror in his time had in it but fourescore men  
and no more in his demaine.  But above 200. yeeres since when  
Edward the Third King of England and Philip Valois bustled for  
the very Kingdom of France, it was fired the French and burnt to  
the ground.  Out of the ashes whereof, presently sprung the towne  
which now is to be seene, but situate in a more commodious place  
betweene two rivers:  for number of houses and those faire built  
much renowned, for rich inhabitants and concurse of merchants  
wealthy:  fenced round about with a double ditch, strong wals,  
and turrets standing thicke betweene:  and for defence of the  
Haven a strong Castle it hath of square stone, upon a Mount cast  
up to a great height, built by King Richard the Second.  And  
afterward King Henrie the Sixt granted to the Maior, Balliues and  
Burgesses that it should be a Countie by it selfe, with other  
liberties.  Memorable is that of the most puissant Canutus King  
of England and of Denmarke, by which he in this place repressed  
a flatterer who bare the King in hand that all things in the  
Realme were at his wil & command.  He commanded (saith Henrie of  
Huntingdon) that his chaire should be set on the shore, when the  
sea began to flow.  And then in the presence of many, said he to  
the sea as it flowed.  Thou art part of my Dominion, and the  
ground on which I sit is mine, neither was there ever any that  
durst disobey my commandement and went away free and unpunished.   
Wherefore, I charge thee, that come not upon my land, neither  
that thou wet the clothes or body of thy Lord.  
But the sea according to his usuall course flowing still without  
any reverence of his person wet his feet.  Then he ritiring backe  
said.  Let all the inhabitants of the world know, that vaine and  
frivolous is the power of Kings, and that none is worthy then me  
of King, but hee, to whose command the heaven earth and sea by  
bond of an everlasting law are subject and obedient, and never  
after that time set hee the crowne upon his head, &c. | 
|  R.Test Andover Aetheldred Danes Wherwell Wallop Brook Brage Rumsey Redbridge R.Alre Alresford | Of those two rivers, betweene which this South-anton standeth, that in the West now called Test, and in times past Anton, (as I suppose) springeth out of the forrest of Chat goeth first to Andover, which in the Saxon language is [Andeasaran], that is, The Passage or Ferry over And: where in the yeere of our Salvation 893, Aetheldred King of England, when the Danes harried and spoiled his Kingdome on every side, to the end that hee might at length refresh and cherish his weakened and wearied countries with sure and quiet peace, inserted into his owne familie by way of adoption Aulaf the Dane: which notwithstanding soone after tooke small or none effect: | 
| [p.261] | |
| For, this great honor done to the  
barbarous Dane, could not reclaime and stay his minde, from  
rapine and spoiling still.  From thence it runneth downe and  
receaveth from the East a brooke passing by Bullingdon, in whose  
parish is a place called Tibury hill, and containeth a square  
field by estimation of ten acres ditched about, in some places  
deeper than other, wherin hath beene found tokens of Wells, and  
about which the ploughmen have found squared stones, & Romane  
coines, as they report for the place I have not seene.  This  
brooke entreth into Test neere Worwhell, where Queene Aelfrith  
built a Monasterie to expiate and make satisfaction for that most  
foule and hainous fact, wherwith so wickedly she had charged her  
soule by making away King Edward her husbands sonne:  as also to  
wash out the murdering of her former husband Athelwold a most  
noble Earle, whom King Edgar trained forth hither a hunting and  
then strake him throw with a dart, because hee had deluded him  
in his love secrets, and by deceitfull and naughty meanes  
prevented him and gotten for himself this same Aelfrith the most  
beautifull Ladie that was in those daies.  After this Test having  
taken into it a little river from Wallop, or more truly Well-hop,  
that is, by interpretation out of our forefathers ancient  
language, A prety well in the side of of an hill, wherof that  
right worshipfull familie the Wallops of Knights degree dwelling  
hard by tooke name:  seeketh for BRIGE or BRAGE an ancient towne  
likewise placed by Antonine nine miles from Sorbiodunum:  at  
which distance betweene Salisburie and Winchester he findeth not  
farre from his banke, Broughton a small countrie towne:  which  
if it were not that BRAGE, I verily beleeve that it was then  
utterly destroied when William of Normandie laid all even with  
the ground heere abouts to make that forrest, beforementioned.   
Then goeth this river to see Rumsey, in Saxon speech [Rumseg].   
A nunnery founded by King Edgar, the large Church whereof yet  
standeth; out of the which Marie daughter of King Stephen being  
there Abbesse, & his only heire surviving, was conveied secretly  
by Mathew of Alsace sonne to the Earle of Flaunders, and to him  
married.  But after she had borne to him two daughters, was  
enforced by sentence of the Church to returne hither again  
according to her vow.  Thence glideeth this water streight into  
Anton Haven, at Arundinis Vadum, as Bede called it and  
interpreteth it himselfe Reedeford:  but now of the bridge where  
the foord was named, for Redeford, Redbridge:  where, at the  
first springing up of the English Saxon Church, there flourished  
a Monasterie, the Abbat whereof Cymbreth as Beda writeth,  
baptised the two brethren being very little ones of Arvandus the  
pety King of Wight, even as they were ready to be put to death.   
For, when Cedwalla the Saxon set upon the Isle of Wight, these  
small children to save their lives fled to a little towne called  
Adlapidem, and hid themselves there, untill at length being  
betraied, they were at Cedwallaes commandement killed.  If you  
aske me, what this litle towne, Adlapidem, should be, I would say  
it were Stoneham, a small village next to Redebridge, which the  
very signification of the name may evidently prove for me.  The  
other river that runneth forth at the East-side of Southamton,  
may seeme to have been called Alre:  For, the mercate towne  
standing upon the banke thereof, not farre from ponds out of  
which it issueth, is called Alres-ford, that is, The ford of  
Alre.  This towne, (to use the words of an old Record of  
Winchester): Kinewalce the religious King instructed in the  
Sacraments of faith by the Bishop Birinus at the very beginning  
of Christian religion (in this tract,) with great devotion of  
heart gave unto the Church of God at Wenta.  In the yeere of  
grace 1220. Godfrey Lucy Bishop of Winchester made a new market  
place heere and called it Novum forum that is, New mercate, in  
regard haply of old Alres-ford adjoining thereto.  But this new  
name continued not long with the people, who in the matter of  
speech carrie the greatest strok.  Neere heereunto is Tichborn,  
which I must not omit, for that it hath given name to a  
worshipfull and ancient familie. | 
|  Venta Belgarum Belgarum Caer Gwent Winchester mastiffs | Upon the West banke of this river is situate the most famous Citie of the British Belgians, called by Ptolomee and Antoninus Venta Belgarum, by the Britans of Wales even at this day, Caer Gwent: by the Saxons in old time Wintanceaster, in Latine commonely Wintonia, and by us in these daies of Winchester. Yet there be | 
| [p.262] | |
| some which affirme this to be Venta Simenorum, & doe  
grace Bristow, with the name of Venta Belgarum.  But that there  
were never any Simeni at all in this Iland, I will prove when I  
come to the Iceni.  In the meane season, though they should seeke  
all the townes that Antoninus placeth on every side in the way  
to or from VENTA, BELGARUM, as narrowly as Emmots paths, yet  
shall they find nothing for their purpose to make good this their  
assertion. The Etymologie of this name Venta, some fetch from Ventus, that is, Wind, others from Vinum, that is, Wine, and some againe from Wina a bishop: who all of them be farre wide, and should doe well to pray for better judgement. Yet like I rather the opinion of Leland: who hath derived it from the British word Guin or Guen, that is, White, so that Caer Guin should signifie as much, as the White Citie. And why not? seeing the old Latines named these their Cities, Alba longa, and Alba regia, of whitenesse: yea and the Grecians alos had their Luca, Lucas, and other nations also many places taking name of whitenesse. For, this Venta, like as the other two of the same name, to wit, VENTA SILURUM, and VENTA ICENORUM, are seated all three in a soile that standeth upon chalke and a whitish clay. A Citie it was no doubt flourishing even in the Romans times, as in which the Emperours of Rome seeme to have had their sacred house of weaving and enbroidering peculiar to their own persons, and uses: seeing among all the VENTAS in Britaine, it was both the chiefe and also neerest unto Italie. For, in the booke of Notitia, mantion is made of the Procurator [Master or Governour] Cyneij VENTENSIS or BENTENSIS, in Britaine: where the onely flower of Lawyers, James Cuiacius readeth Cynegii and in his Paratitles upon the Code interpreteth it, Sacrum textrinum, that is, The sacred workhouse or shop of embroidering and weaving. And right if his minde is Guidus Pancirolus, who writeth that those Gynaecia were instituted for the weaving of the Princes and souldiers garments of Ship-sailes, of linnen sheets, or coverings and such like cloths, necessarie for the furniture of mansions. But Wolfgangus Lazius was of opinion, that the Procurator aforesaid, had the charge heere of the Emperors dogs. And to say truth, of all the dogs in Europe, ours beare the name; in so much, as Strabo witnesseth, our dogges serve as souldiers, and the ancient Galles made especiall use of them even in their wars. And of all others, they were in most request both for those baitings in the Amphitheaters and also in all other publicke huntings among the Romanes. For, as the same Strabo writeth, they were [ ], that is, of a generous kind and framed naturally for hunting. Whereupon Nemesianus wrote thus: ... divisa Britannia mittit Veloces, nostrique orbis venatibus aptos. Gratius also, of their price and excellencie, saith thus: Quod freta si Morinum dubio refluentia ponto Veneris, atque ipsos libeat penetrare Britannos, O quanta est merces, & quantum impendia supra? Yea and that very dog with us, which of the old name Agaesus, we calla yet at this day a Gasehound those ancient Greekes both knew and also had in great price. And this will Oppian in his firsts booke of his Cynegeticks tell you, in these Greek verses. [ ] | |
| [p.263] | |
| Which, Bodine turned into Lat Est etiam catuli species indagine clara, Corpus huic breve, magnifico sed corpore digna, Picta Britannorum gensillos effera bello Nutrit, Agasaeos[ ] vocat, vilissima forma Corporis, ut credas parasitos esse latrantes. And may be Englished in this wise, Stout hounds there [are] and those of Finders kind, Of bodie small but doughtie for their deed: The painted folke, fierce Britans as we find Them Gasehounds call, for they with them doe bred. In making, like house dogs, or at a word, To lickerous curs that craven at our bord. Claudian also, touching our Mastives writeth in this sort: Magna[ ] taurorum fracturicolla Britanni. I have to[o] far digressed about dogges, yet hope a favorable pardon. | 
|  Constans the monk Stephen Maud | In this Citie, as our owne Historiagraphers doe report, in the  
time Romans, was that Constans the Monke, who by his father  
Constantine was first elected Caesar, and afterwards Augustus:   
that Constantine I say who upon hope of this name had assumed the  
Imperiall purple robe that is, usurped the Empire against  
Honorius.  For, long since, (as Zosinus recordeth speaking of  
those times) as well in villages as in Cities, there were great  
colledges peopled (as it were) with Monks, who before time flying  
the light lived scattering heere and there among mountaines,  
woods and forrests all solitary by themselves whereof also they  
were so called.  Now, of this Colledge wherein the said Constans  
was, those old broken wals which are seene of that thicknesse and  
strength, at the West-gate of the Cathedrall church, may seeme  
to be the ruins and reliques.  But this imperiall monke taken out  
from hence suffered soone after condigne punishment, both for his  
fathers ambition and also for the contempt of his confessed  
religion.  During the Heptarchie of the Saxons this Citie albeit  
once or twice it suffered much calamity & miserie, yet it revived  
and recovered againe:  yea and became the seat roiall of the  
West-Saxons Kings, adorned with magnificent Churches and a  
Bishops Sea:  furnished likewise with six mint houses by King  
Athelstane.  In the Normans time also it flourished very much,  
and in it was erected an office for keeping of all publicke  
records and evidences of the realme.  In which prosperous estate  
it.continued a long time:  but that once or twice it was defaced  
by misfortune of suddaine fires, and in the civill war betweene  
Stephen and Maud about the Kingdome of England, sacked by the  
unruly and insolent souldiers.  Whereupon Necham our countriman  
who lived in that age, writeth thus: Guintoniam titulis claram, gazisque repletam Noverunt beterum tempora prisca patr[u]m. Sed tam sacra fames auri, iam caecus habendi, Urbibus egregijs parcere nescit amor. | 
|  wool and cloth | But of these losses it recovered itself by the helpe of Edward  
the third who heere appointed the [mart] for woole and cloth,  
which we commonly call Staple; What was the [face] and outward  
[shew] of this Citie in these foregoing times, a man can hardly  
tell, considering that, as the said Necham writeth: Flammis totres gens aliena dedit. Hinc facies urbis toties mutata, dolorem Praetendit, cas[ii]s nutia verasui. | 
| [p.264] | |
| So many times a nation strange Hath fir'd this towne, and made such change; That now her face and outward view Her griefe bewray's, and tels full true. | 
|  Maud Stephen round table King Arthur cathedral | In these daies of Ours it is indifferently well peopled and  
frequented, having water plentie, by reason of the River turned  
and conveighed divers waies into it, lying somewhat in length  
from East to West, and containeth about a mile and a halfe in  
circuit within the wals:  which open at six gates, and have every  
one of them their suburbs reaching forth without, a good way.   
On the Southside of the West gate there mounteth up an old  
castle, which often times hath been besieged, but most sore and  
streightly, above the rest what time as Mawd the Empresse held  
it against King Stephen, and at length by a rumour given out that  
she was dead, and causing her selfe to be caried out in a coffin  
like a coarse deceived the enemy.  As concerning that round table  
there, hanging up against the wall which the common sort useth  
to gaze upon with great admiration, as if it had been King  
Arthurs table, I have nothing to say about this, That, as any man  
which vieweth it well may easily perceive, it is nothing so  
antient as King Arthur.  For, in latter times when for the  
exercise of armes and feats of warlike prowesse, those runnings  
at tilt, and martiall justlings or torneaments, were much  
practised:  they used such tables least any contention or offence  
for prioritie of place should through ambition arise among Nobles  
and Knights assembled together.  And this was a custome of great  
antiquitie, as it may seeme.  For, the antient Gaules, as  
Athenaeus writeth, were wont to sit about round tables, and their  
Esquiers stood at their backs, holding their shields.  About the  
mids of the citie, but more inclining to the South, Kenelwalch  
King of the West-Saxons after the subversion of that Colledge of  
Monkes which flourished in the Romans time, (as William of  
Malmesburie saith) First founded to the glorie of God, the  
faire[st] Church that was in those daies, in which verie place,  
the posteritie afterwards in building of a Cathedral seat for the  
Bishop, although it were more stately than the first, yet  
followed just in the verie same steppes.  In this Sea, there have  
sitten since Wina, whom the said Kenelwalch ordained the first  
Bishop there, Many Bishops some renowned for their wealth and  
honourable port, and some for holinesse of life.  But among  
other, Saint Swithin continueth yet of greatest fame, not so much  
for his sanctitie, as for the raine which usually falleth about  
the Feast of his translation in July, by reason the Sunne  
[riseth] then Cosmically with Praesepe and Aselli, noted by  
antient writers to be rainie constellations, as not for his  
weeping, or other weeping Saints Margaret the Virgine, and Marie  
Magdalen, whose feasts are shortly after, as some superstitiously  
credulous have beleeved. | 
|  Bishops of Winchester Wickham | This by the way, pardon mee I praie you, for I digresse licentiously. Th[ese] Bishops of Winchester have beene aunciently by a certaine peculiar prerogative that they have, Chancellours to the Archbishop of Canterbury, and for long time now Prelats to the order of the Garter: and they have from time to time to their great cost reedified this church, and by name, Edington and Walkelin, but Wickham especially: who built all the West part there of downe from the quire, after a new kind of worke, I assure you, most sumptuously. In the mids of which building is to bee seene his owne tombe of decent modestie betweene two pillers. And these Bishops have ever and anon consecrated it to new Patrons and Saints, as to Saint Amphibalus, Saint Peter, Saint Swithin, and last of all to the holy Trinitie: by which name it is knowne at this day. The English Saxons also, had this Church in great honour for the sepulture of certaine Saints and Kings there, (whose bones are Richard Fox the Bishop gathered, and shrining them in certaine little gilded coffers placed them orderly with their severall Inscriptions in the top of that wall which encloseth the upper part of the quire) and they called it in times past Ealden Mynsder, that is The old Minster, for difference from another more lately built which was named Net[th]an Mynsder, that is, The new Minster; which Aelfred founded; and for the building of houses of office belonging to the same purchased of the Bishop a plot | 
| [p.265] | |
| of ground; and for every foote of it paid him downe a marke after  
the publick weight. | 
|  monks Henrie de Blois Wolvesley Winchester - College William Wickham | This monasterie as also that other the older, was built for  
married priests, who afterwards, upon I know not what miracle  
of a Crosse that spoke, an disliked their mariage, were thrust out  
by Dunstane Archbishop of Canterbury, and Monkes put in their  
place.  The walls of these two monasteries stood so neere and  
close together, that the voices of those that sung in the one  
troubled the chanting of the other:  whereupon there arose grudge  
and heart-burnings betweene these Monks, which afterwards brake  
out into open enmities:  By occasion whereof, and because at this  
new monasterie there gathered and stood much water which from the  
Westerne gate came downe thither along the currant of the  
streets, and cast forth from it an [un]wholesome aire, the  
Minster Church two hundered yeares after[,] by the crafty  
practise of Henrie de Blois Bishoppe of Winchester (as the  
private historie of this place witnesseth) was pitiously burnt.   
In which fire, that Crosse also was consumed, which Canutus the  
Dane gave, and upon which, as old writings beare record, he  
bestowed as much as his owne yeares revenewes of all England came  
unto.  The monasterie neverthelesse was raised up againe and grew  
by little and little to a wonderfull greatnesse, as the very  
ruines thereof even at this day doe shew, untill that generall  
subversion and finall period of <over>[our] monasteries.  For  
then, was this monasterie demolished:  and into that other of the  
holy Trinity, which is the Cathedrall church, when the monkes  
were thrust out, were brought in their stead, a Deane, twelve  
Prenbendaries, and there placed.  
At the East side of this Cathedrall church, standeth the Bishops  
palace, called Wolvesley:  a right goodly thing and sumptuous;  
which being towred and compassed almosts round with the streame  
of a prety river, reacheth even to the cittie walls:  and in the  
South-suburbes, just over against it be holdeth a faire Colledge:   
which William Wickham Bishop of this See, the greatest father and  
Patron (of all Englishmen) of good literature, and whose praise  
for ever to the worlds end will continue, built for a schoole,  
and thereto dedicated it:  out of which, both for Church and  
common welth there riseth a most plentifull encrease of right  
learned men.  For, in this Colledge, one warden, ten fellowes,  
two schoolemaisters and threescore and ten schoolers, with divers  
others are plentifully maintained.  There have beene also in this  
cittie, other faire and goodly buildings, (for very many were  
heere consecrated to religion) which I list not now to recount,  
since time and avarice hath made an end of them.  Onely, that  
Nunnery, or monasterie of vailed Virgins, which Aelfwid, the wife  
of King Aelfred founded, I will not overpasse:  seeing it was a  
most famous thing as the remainder of it now doth shew: and for  
that, out of it King Henrie the first tooke to wife Mawde the  
daughter of Malcolne King of Scots, by whom the royall bloud of  
the auncient Kings of England became united to the Normans, and  
hee thereby wonne much love of the English nation.  For, nephew  
[neice] she was in the second degree of descent, unto King Edmond  
Ironside, by his sonne Edward the Banished.  A woman, as adorned  
with all other vertues meet for a Queene, so especially inflamed  
with an incredible love of true piety and godlinesse.  Whereupon  
was this Tetrastitch made in her commendation, Prospera non laetam fecere, nec aspera tristem: | 
| [p.266] | |
| Shee onely high, herself debas't, | 
|  Hospital of - St Cross Henry de Blois Cardinal Beaufort | Concerning Sir Guy of Warwick, of whom there goe so many prety  
tales, who in single fight overcame here that Danish giant and  
Golias, Colbrand:  and of Waltheof Earle of Huntingdon, that was  
here beheaded, where afterwards stood Saint Giles chapell:  as  
also of that excellent Hospital of Saint Crosse there adjoyning,  
founded by Henrie of Blois brother to King Stephen and Bishop of  
this City, and augmented by Henrie Beaufort Cardinall, I neede  
not to speake:  seeing every man may read of them in the common  
Chronicles. | 
|  Earl of Winchester Quincy | As touching the Earles of Winchester, to say nothing of Clyto the  
Saxon whom the Normans deprived of his auncient honour King John  
created Saier Quincy, Earle of Winchester, who used for his armes  
a militare belt, they call it a Fesse, with a labell of seaven  
as I have seene upon his seales.  After him succeeded Roger his  
sonne, who bare, Gueules seaven Mascles voided, Or:  but with him  
that honour vanished and went away, seeing hee died without issew  
male.  For, hee married the eldest daughter and one of the  
coheires of Alan Lord of Galloway in Scotland by a former wife,  
in right of whom hee was Constable of Scotland.  Hee had by her  
three onely daughters, the first married to William de Ferrarijs  
Earle of Derbie, the second to Alan de la Zouch, the third to  
Comine Earle of Bucqhanan in Scotland.  A long time after Hugh  
le Dispencer, having that title bestowed upon him for terme of  
his life, by King Edward the second whose minion he was and onely  
beloved, fel[t], together with his sonne, what is the consequence  
of Princes extraordinary favours:  For both of them envied by  
most were by the furious rage of the people put cruelly to  
shamefull death.  And long it was after this, that through the  
bounty of King Edward the fourth, Lewis of Bruges a Netherlander  
Lord of Gruthuse, Prince of Steinhuse &c.  Who had given him  
comfort and succour in the Netherlands, when hee was fled his  
native country, received his honour with Armes resembling those  
of Roger Quincy in these words Azur a dix Mascles D'or en orme  
d'un Canton de nostre propre Armes d'Engleterre, cest savour, de  
Goul un Leopard passant d'or, armee d'azur. | 
|  Paulet St John Marquess of Winchester latitude longitude | All which, after King Edwards death, hee yeelded up into the  
hands of Henrie the seaventh.  But lately within our memorie King  
Edward the sixth, honoured Sir William Powlet Lord Treasurer of  
England, Earle of Wilshire, and Lord Saint John of Basing, with  
a new title of Marquesse of Winchester.  A man prudently pliable  
to [the] times, raised not sodainly but by degrees in Court,  
excessive in vast informous buildings; temperat in all other  
things, full of yeares for he lived ninetie seaven years and  
fruitfull in his generation, for hee saw one hundred and three  
issued from him by Elizabeth his wife, daughter of Sir William  
Capell Knight.  And now his grand-child William enjoieth the said  
honours:  For the Geographicall position of Winchester, it hath  
beene observed by former ages to bee in longitude two and twenty  
degrees and latitude fiftie one. | 
|  Hamble R The Solent tides Waltham Forest Forest of Beere Tichfield Wriotheosley Earl of Southampton | From Winchester more Eastward the river Hamble at a great mouth emptieth it selfe into the Ocean. Beda calleth it Homelea, which, as he writeth, by the lands of the Intae entreth into Solente: for so termeth he that frith our narrow sea, that runneth between the Isle of Wight & the maine land of Britaine: in which the tides at set houres rushing in with great violence out of the Ocean at both ends, and so meeting one another in the mids, seemed so strange a matter to our men in old time, that they reckoned it among the wonders of Britaine. Whereof, read heere the very words of Beda. The two tides of the Ocean which about Britaine breake out of the vast Northen Ocean daily encounter and fight one against another, beyond the mouth of the river Homelea: and when they have ended their conflict, returne back, from whence they came and run into the Oceane. Into this Frith that little river also sheadeth it selfe, which having his head neere Warnford, passeth betweene the Forrests of Waltham (where the Bishop of Winchester hath a goodly house), and of Beere, wherby is Wickham a mansion of that auncient familie of Vuedal and then by Tichfield, sometime a little monastrie founded by Petre de Rupibus Bishop of Winchester where the mar- | 
| [p.268] | |
| riage was solemnized betweene King Henrie the sixth, and Margaret  
of Anjou; and now the principall seat of the Lord Writheosleies  
Earle of South-hamton. | 
|  Portsea Island Portchester Portus Magnus Portsmouth Gods House Henry VII Elizabeth fortifications Ports bridge Havant salt | From [t]hence forthwith, the shore with curving crookes draweth  
itselfe in, and the Island named Portesey maketh a great creeke,  
within the more inward nooke or corner whereof sometimes  
flourished Port-peris; (where, by report Vespasian landed) An  
haven towne which our auncestours by  a new name called  
Port-chester, not of Porto the Saxon, but of the port or haven.   
For, Ptolomee tearmeth it [ ], that is THE GREAT HAVEN, for the  
widenesse of it, like as that Portus Magnus also in Africk, as  
Plinie witnesseth.  And verily there remaineth yet a great  
Castell which hath a faire and spatious prospect into the haven  
underneath.  But when as the Ocean by with-drawing it selfe,  
tooke away, by little and little the commodity of the haven, the  
inhabitants flitted from thence into the Island Portsey  
adjoining, which taketh in circuit much about foureteene miles,  
beeing at every full sea floated round about with salt waters,  
out of which they boile salt, and by a bridge that hath a  
fortresse adjoining unto it, is united to the Continent.  This  
Island Athelflede King Eadgars wife had given to the New  
monasterie of Winchester.  And in it at the very gullet, or mouth  
where the sea entreth in, our fore-fathers built a towne and  
thereupon named it Portsmouth, that is, the mouth of the haven.   
A place alwaies in time of warre well frequented, otherwise  
little resort there is to it:  as beeing more favourable and  
better effected to Mars and Neptune, than to Mercurie, that is  
to warre rather than to Traffique.  A Church it hath of the old  
building, and an Hospitall (Gods house they call it) founded by  
Peter de Rupibus, Bishop of Winchester.  Fortified it is with a  
wall made of timber and the same well covered over with thicke  
bankes of earth:  fenced with a platforme also or mount of earth  
in times past on the North-east, nere to the gate:  and two  
block-houses at the entry of the haven made of new heawen stone:   
Which being by King Edward the fourth begunne, King Henrie the  
seaventh as the Inhabitants report did finish, and strengthened  
the towne with a garrison.  But in our rememberance, Queene  
ELIZABETH at her great cost and charges so armed it (as one would  
say) with new fortifications, as that now there is nothing  
wanting, that a man would require in a most strong and fenced  
place.  And of the garrison-soldiors some keepe watch and ward  
both night and day at the gates:  others upon the towre of the  
church, who by the ringing or sound of a bell give warning how  
many horse or foote are comming, and by  putting forth a banner  
shewe from what quarter they come.  From hence as the shoare  
fetcheth a compasse and windeth from Portes-bridge, wee had the  
sight of Havant a little mercate towne, and hard by it, of  
Warblington, a goodly faire house belonging some-times to the  
Earles of Salisbury, but now to the family of the Cottons  
Knights.  Before which, there lie two Islands, the one greater  
named Haling, the other lesse, called Thorney, of thornes there  
growing:  and both of them have their severall parish church.   
In many places along this shore, of the sea waters flowing up  
thither, is made salt of a palish or greene collour:  the which  
by a certaine artificious devise, they boile untill it bee  
exceeding white.  And of this sea or Bay-salt, and not of ours  
made out of salt springs, is Saint Ambrose to bee understood,  
when hee writeth thus; Consider wee those things which are usuall  
with many very grace-full:  namely, how water is turned into  
salt, of such hardnesse and solidity, that often-times it is  
hewed with axes.  This in the salts of Britaine is no wonder, as  
which carrying a shewe of strong marble, doe shine and glitter  
againe with the whitenesse of the same mettall, like unto snow,  
and bee holesome to the bodie &c. | 
|  Meanuari Mansborough Eastmeon Westmeon Old Winchester - Hill Segontiaci Holdshott Alton Basingstoke Basing Holy Ghost chapel Lord Sands Poyning Paulet St John | Farther within the land, the MEANUARI dwelt, whose country togither with the Isle of Wight Edilwalch King of the South Saxons received in token of Adoption from Wlpher King of Mercians, godfather unto him at the Font, when hee was baptised. The habitations of these Meanuari, scarse changing the name, at this day is divided into three hundereds; to wit, Means-borow, East-mean, and Weastmean: and amongst them there mounteth up a high Hill, invironed in the top with a large | 
| [p.269] | |
| rampier, and they call it old Winchester:  at which, by report,  
there stood in old time a cittie, but now neither top nor toe,  
as they say remaineth of it:  so as a man would quickly judge  
it to have beene a summer standing campe and nothing els.   
Under this is Warnford seated where Adam de Portu a mighty  
man, in this tract and of great wealth in the reigne of  
William the first, reedified the church a new, as a couple  
of rude verses set fast upon the wall doe plainly shew.   
Upon these, more high into the land, those SEGONTIACI, who  
yeelded themselves unto Julius Caesar, had there[their] seat  
toward the North limite of this shire, in and about the  
hundred of Holeshot:  wherein are to bee seene Mercate  
Aultun, which King Aelfred bequeathed by his will unto the keeper  
of Leodre:  also Basingstoke a mercate towne well frequented:   
upon the descent of an hil, on the North side wherof standeth  
solitarie a very faire chapell consecrated unto the holy Ghost  
by William, the first Lord Sandes, who was buried there.  In the  
arched and embowed rooffe whereof is to bee seene the holy  
historie of the Bible painted most artificially, with lively  
portraicts and images representing the Prophets, the Apostles,  
and the Disciples of Christ.  Beneath this, Eastward lieth  
Basing, a towne very well knowne, by reason of the Lords bearing  
the name of it, to wit, Saint John, the Poinings and the Powlets.   
For, when Adam de Portu, Lord of Basing matched in marriage with  
the daughter and heire of Roger de Aurevall, whose wife was  
likewise daughter and heire to the right noble house of Saint  
John, William his sonne, to doe honour unto that familie assumed  
to him the surname of Saint John, and they who lineally descended  
from him have still reteined the same.  But when Edmond Saint  
John departed out of this world without issue in King Edward the  
third his time, his sister Margaret bettered the state of her  
husband John, Saint Philibert, with the possessions of the Lord  
Saint John:  And when shee was dead without children Isabell the  
other sister wife unto Sir Luke Poynings, bare unto him Thomas,  
Lord of Basing, whose Neice Constance by his sonne Hugh, (unto  
whom this fell for her childs part of inheritance) was wedded  
into the familie of the Powlets, from her descended that Sir  
William Powlet who being made Baron. Saint John of Basing by King  
Henrie the Eighth, and created by King Edward the Sixth first  
Earle of Wilshire, and afterward Marquesse of Winchester, and  
withall was Lord Treasurer of England, having in a troublesome  
time runne through the highest honours, fulfilled the course of  
nature with the satietie of this life, and that in great  
prosperity, (a rare blessing among Courteours) after he had built  
a most sumptuous house heere, for the spacious largenesse thereof  
admirable to the beholders, untill for the great and chargeable  
reparations his successors pulled downe a good part of it.  But  
of him I have spoken before. | 
|  The Vine vines Odiam | Neere unto this house, the Vine sheweth it selfe, a verie faire  
place, and Mansion House of the Baron Sands, so named of the  
vines there, which wee have had in Britaine, since Probus the  
Emperours time, rather for shade than fruit.  For, hee permitted  
the Britains and others to have vines.  The first of these Barons  
was Sir William Sands, whom King Henrie Eight advanced to that  
dignitie, being Lord Chamberlaine unto him, & having much amended  
his estate by marrying Margerie Braie, daughter and heire of  
John Bray, and cousin to Sir Reinold Bray, a most worthy Knight  
of the Order of the Garter, and a right noble Baneret:  whose  
Sonne Thomas Lord Sands, was Grandfather to William L. Sands that  
now liveth.  Neighbouring hereunto is Odiam glorious in these  
daies for the Kings house there:  and famous for that David the  
Second King of Scots, was there imprisoned:  a burrough  
corporate, belonging in times past to the Bishop of Winchester:   
the fortresse whereof in the name of King John thirteene  
Englishmen for fifteene daies defended most valiantly, and made  
good against Lewis of France, who with his whole armie besieged  
and assaulted it verie hotely. | 
|  Segontiaci Vindonum Silchester roman road | A little above, among these Segontiaci, towards the North side of the country, somtimes stood VINDONUM, the chiefe citie of the Segontiaci, which casting off his own name, hath taken the name of the Nation, like as Lutetia hath assumed unto it the | 
| [p.270] | |
| name of the Parisians there inhabiting:  for, called it was by  
the Britans Caer Segonte, that is to say, the Citie of the  
Segontiaci.  And so Ninnius in his catalogue of cities named it:   
wee at this day called Silcester:  and Higden seemeth to clepe  
it of the Britans Britenden:  but this was the antient Vindonum,  
I am induced to thinke by reason of the distance of Vindonum in  
Antoninus, from Gallena or Guallenford, and Venta or Winchester:   
and the rather because between this Vindonum and Venta, there is  
still to bee seene a causey, or street-way.  Ninnius recordeth,  
that it was built by Constantius the sonne of Constantine the  
Great, and called sometime Murimintum, happly, for Muri-vindum,  
that is the wals of Vindon.  For, this word Mur borrowed from the  
provinciall language, the Britans retained still, and V. the  
consonant, they change oftentimes in their speech and writing in  
M.  And to use the veri words [o]f Afinnius, though they seeme  
ridiculous, the said Constantius, sowed upon the soile of this  
citie three seedes, that none should be poore that dwelt therein  
at any time.  Like as Dinocrates, when Alexandria in AEgypt was  
a building, strewed it with meale or flower (as Marcellinus  
writeth) al the circular lines of the dr[a]ught, which being done  
by chance, was taken for a fore-token, that the citie should  
abound with al maner of victuails.  He reporteth also, that  
Constantius died here, and that his Sepulcher was to bee seene  
at one of the gates, as the inscription sheweth.  But in these  
matters let Ninnius cleere his owne credit; for,  stuffed hee  
hath that little booke with many a pretty lie.  Yet this I may  
be bold to affirme, that it flourished in great honour about that  
time; and I my selfe have lighted here upon verie many peeces,  
of the coine of Constantine, the younger sonne to Constantine the  
Great:  which in their reverse have the portraict of an house  
with this inscription PROVIDENTIA CAES.  Now that this  
Constantius whom he maketh the builder of this citie, died at  
Mopsuestia in Cilicia, and was interred in Constantinople in the  
Sepulcher of his Ancestours, it is knowen for certaine and  
confessed.  Yet I will not denie, but that he might have in this  
citie a monumnent erected in honour and remembrance of him.  For,  
many there were that had such monuments built, about which the  
souldiers, werre wont yeerely to just, and keepe solemne  
turneaments in honour of the dead. | 
|  Roman Empire | When the declining Romane Empire hastened to an end, and barbarous nations began everie where to waste and spoile the Provinces: their armies heere in Britaine, fearing least the flame of this fire, wherewith their next neighbours in France, were consumed, would catch hold of them, set up and created Emperours to themselves: first Marcus, then Gratian, whom they soone slew: and last of all in the yeare after Christs birth 407, our Constantine for his names sake, they forced wild he, nild he, to usurpe the Empire, & to put on the imperiall purple robe in citie Caer Segont, as both Ninnius and Gervais of Canterburie, doe witnesse. This Constantine putting to sea out of Britaine, landed at Bologne in France and drew all the Romane armies, even as farre as the Alpes to side and joine with him in his warres. Hee stoutly defended the Valentia in France, against the power of Honorius the Emperour: the River Rhene which long before had beene neglected, he fortified with a garrison. Upon the Alpes, where any passage was, hee built fortresses. In Spaine, under the conduct of his sonne Constans, whom of a Monke he had declared Emperour, he warred fortunately: and afterwards having sent his letters unto Honorius, and craved pardon for suffering the souldiours: to put upon him the purple perforce, whether hee would or no; he accepted at his hands the imperiall investure, which he freely gave him. Whereupon being puffed up with pride, after hee had passed the Alpes, his mind was wholy set upon a journey Rome. but hearing that Alarichus the Gothe who had favoured his part was dead, hee returned to Arles, where hee settled his imperiall seat, casued the citie to bee called Constantina, and commanded the courts and assemblies of seven Provinces, there to be holden. In the meane time Gerontius excited the soldiers against their Lord, and when he had treacherously slaine his sonne Constans at Vienna in France, besieged Constantine also himselfe within Arles. But after that one Constantius sent by Honorius with a great armie, made head against him, Gerontius killed himselfe. And Constantine being now streit- | 
| [p.271] | |
| ly besieged, and by reason of the unhappie successe of  
his men past all hope, laid aside the purple and his great  
estate entred into the Church, became a Priest:  and  
streight-waies when Arles was yeelded up, and he carried into  
Italie, was himselfe, together with his Sonne Julian (unto whom  
he had given the title of Nobilissimus) and his brother  
Sebastian, beheaded.  Thus much briefly of these occurrents,  
(which before are discoursed more at large) out of Zosimus,  
Zosomenus, Nicephorus, Orosius, and Olympiodorus, to the end that  
Veritie may triumph over their vanitie, who have besprinkled this  
storie with most ridiculous and foolish lies of their owne  
devising. | 
|  King Arthur Danes Silchester Onions pennies crop marks | Moreover in this citie (our Historiographers write) that our  
warlike Arthur was invested and crowned King.  But not long after  
it was rased quite, either in the Saxons warres, or when  
Adelwolph being offended with his brother King Edward, upon a  
malicious mind, together with the helpe of the Danish rovers,  
wasted this countrey even to Basing-stoke.  And now remaineth  
nothing save the wals, which although they want their  
battlements, curtain, and coppe, yet they seeme to have been of  
a verie great height.  For, the earth is so growne up with the  
rubble, that I could scarse with stouping low passe through an  
old posterne, which they call Onions Hole.  These walles in some  
sort continue whole, but that they bee broken through in those  
places where the gates were:  and out of the verie walles I saw  
grow oakes of that bignesse, and those seeming (as it were)  
bredde with the verie stones, with such huge roots clasping one  
another a great way, and spreading forth so mightie armes and  
boughes all abroad, that it would make the beholders to wonder  
thereat.  These walles take in compasse about two Italian miles.   
Whereupon haply the Saxons called this citie Selcester, as one  
would say, The great citie:  for Sel may seeme to sound with them  
as much as Great, seeing Asserius hath interpreted the Saxon  
word, Selwood, The Great wood.  And before the wals westward,  
where is a plaine, there lieth a banke of great length, raised  
and cast up for a defence and fortification.  The sight of this  
old citie, containeth about fourscore acres of ground within,  
which being a soile ploughed up and tilled, are divided into  
corne-fields; with a little grove in the West-side:  but on the  
East, neere unto the gappe in the wall, there standeth a  
Farme-house, and a pretty Church more lately built, in which,  
while I searched for ancient inscriptions, I found nothing, but  
onely in the windowes certaine armes, to wit, In a field sable,  
seven Fusils argent in Bend, likewise in a shield sables, a  
Fesse between two Cheverns, and in an Escutcheon, or[,] an Eagle  
displaied with two heads, gules.  This last, I have heard say,  
was the coat of the Blewets, unto whom this land came, about the  
Conquerours time.  The second belonged unto the ancient house of  
the Bainards of Leckham:  but the first to the Cusanz, by whom  
from the Blewets it descended hereditarily, to the said Bainards.   
But in the raigne of William the Conquerour, it was the  
possession of William de Ow, a Norman, who being accused of high  
treason, and desirous to prove his inocencie by combat was  
overcome in fight, and by commandement of King William Rufus, had  
his two eies pluckt out of his head, and lost both his genetours.   
This is found by continuall observation (as I have learned of the  
inhabitants of this place) that although the ground bee fertile  
and fruitfull inough, yet in certaine places crossing one  
another, the corne doth not thrive so well, but commeth up much  
thinner then else where, by which they suppose the streets of the  
citie went in old time.  There are heere daily digged up, bricks  
such as we call Britaine-bricks, and great store of Romane coine  
which they terme Onions pennies.  For, they dreame that this  
Onion was a Giant, and dwelt in this citie.  There are digged up  
also many times inscriptions, of which the unskilfull rurall  
people envie us the having.  Onely one was brought from hence to  
London, which was to bee seene in the gardens of the right  
honourable Sir William Cecill, Lord Burghley, and high Treasurer  
of England, to wit. | 
| [p.272] | |
| MEMORIAE FL. VICTORI- N AE. T. TAM: VICTOR CONIUX POSUIT. | 
|  | That this Tombe was erected for that Victorina which was called  
Mater Castrorum, that is, The mother of the campe, and who  
against Gallienus Emperour, excited in Gaule and Britaine, the  
two Victorini, her sonne, and sonnes sonne, Posthumus likewise,  
Lollianus, Marius, and Tetricus Caesars, I would not with  
others affirme.  Yet I have read, that two of the VICTORS, were in  
some place here in Britaine, and those at one and the selfe-same time,  
the one Maximus the Emperour his sonne, the other Praefectus  
Protorio to the same Emperour, of whom Saint Ambrose maketh  
mention in his Epistles, but I dare avouch, that neither of these  
twaine reared this monument for his wife. | 
|  roman roads Pamber Forest Chute Forest | As one highway or street of the Romans went straight from hence  
southward to Winchester, so there was another ran west-ward  
through Pamber forrest, very full of trees, and other by-places  
now standing out of the way, hard by Litchfield, that is, the  
field of dead bodies, to the Forrest of Chute pleasant for coole  
shade of trees, & plentifull game:  in which the Hunters and  
Forresters themselves do wonder at the bank or ridge thereof, so  
evident to be seene, paved with stone, but broken here and  
there. | 
|  Kingsclere Freemantle Park Sidmonton Burghclere hillfort beacons | More toward the North, in the verie edge and frontier of this  
Shire, we saw Kings-Cleare, a market towne in these daies well  
frequented, the residence in times past of the Saxon Kings, by  
it Fremantle in a parke where King John much haunted, also  
Sidmanton, the habitation of the Kingsmils, Knights:  and  
Burgh-Cleare situate under an high hill, in the top whereof a  
warlike rampire (such as our countreymen call a Burgh) hath a  
trench taking a great compasse about it:  from whence, there  
being a faire and open prospect every way over the country lying  
underneath, there standeth a Beacon, that by light burning fire  
the enemies comming, may bee shewed to all the  
neighbour-inhabitants round about.  And verily such watches or  
signals as this, we terme in common speech Beacons, of the old  
word Beacnian, that is, to shew by a signe, and for these many  
hundred yeeres, they have been in right great request, and much  
used among us:  in some places, by heaping up a deale of wood,  
in others by barrels full of pitch fastened to the top of a mast  
or pole in the highest places of the countrey, at which, by night  
some doe ever more watch:  and in old time, there were set  
horsemen as posts in many places, whom our Ancestors called  
Hobelers, who in the day time should give notice of the enemies  
approch. | 
|  | This shire, like as the rest which hitherto we have run over,  
belonged to the west-Saxon Kings:  and when they had deposed  
Sigebert from his Kingdome, for his tyrannie, evill intreating  
and lewd managing of his province, this countrey, as Marianus  
writeth, was assigned unto him least hee should seeme altogether  
a private person.  Whom notwithstanding afterward, for his wicked  
deeds, they likewise expelled from hence:  and so far was it off,  
that this afflicted state of a King moved any man to take pitie  
of him, that a Swineheard in the end, slew him in the wood  
Anderida, where he had lurked and hidden himselfe. | 
|  Bogo Wriotheosley | This Shire can reckon but verie few Earles, besides those of Winchester which I have alreadie named. In the first time of the Normans, Bogo or Beavose the English man, who fought against the Normans in the battell at Cardiff in Wales, is reputed to have been Earle of South-hampton, a man for warlike prowesse much renowned, whom whiles the Monks laboured to set out with their fained fables, they have obscured his doughtie deeds in greater darknes. From which time unto the daies of K. Henrie the Eight, there was no Earle of South-hampton that I read of: but he created | 
| [p.273] | |
| William Fitzwilliams descended from the daughter of  
Marquesse Montacute, both Earle of Southhamton, and also Admiral  
of England, when he was now well stricken in yeeres.  Who dying  
streight after without issue; King Edward the Sixth, in the first  
yeere of his reigne conferred the said honor upon Thomas  
Wriotheosley Lord Chanceller, whose grand-child Henrie by his  
sonne Henrie, enjoieth the same at this day:  and in the prime  
and flowre of his age hath by good literature and militarie  
experience strengthend his honorable parentage, that in riper  
yeeres he might be more serviceable to his Prince and  
country. There be found in this shire Parishes 253. and mercate townes 18. | 
|    | Camden's Britannia 1607 | |
|   | Old Hampshire Mapped | |