De laudibus legum Angliæ writen by Sir Iohn Fortescue L. Ch. Iustice, and after L. Chancellor to K. Henry VI. Hereto are ioind the two Summes of Sir Ralph de Hengham L. Ch. Iustice to K. Edward I. commonly calld Hengham magna, and Hengham parua. Neuer before publisht. Notes both on Fortescue and Hengham are added

About this Item

Title
De laudibus legum Angliæ writen by Sir Iohn Fortescue L. Ch. Iustice, and after L. Chancellor to K. Henry VI. Hereto are ioind the two Summes of Sir Ralph de Hengham L. Ch. Iustice to K. Edward I. commonly calld Hengham magna, and Hengham parua. Neuer before publisht. Notes both on Fortescue and Hengham are added
Author
Fortescue, John, Sir, 1394?-1476?
Publication
London :: [Printed by Adam Islip?] for the Companie of Stationers,
M.DC.XVI [1616]
Rights/Permissions

To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.

Subject terms
Law -- England -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A01083.0001.001
Cite this Item
"De laudibus legum Angliæ writen by Sir Iohn Fortescue L. Ch. Iustice, and after L. Chancellor to K. Henry VI. Hereto are ioind the two Summes of Sir Ralph de Hengham L. Ch. Iustice to K. Edward I. commonly calld Hengham magna, and Hengham parua. Neuer before publisht. Notes both on Fortescue and Hengham are added." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A01083.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 14, 2024.

Pages

SEcundum vero, Princeps, quod tu formidas, con∣simili nec maiori o∣pera elidetur. Du∣bitas nēpe, an An∣glorum

Page [unnumbered]

legum, vel ciuilium studio te conferas, dum Ciui∣les supra humanas cunctas leges alias, fama per orbem ex∣tollat gloriosa. Non te conturbet, fili Re∣gis, haec mentis eua∣gatio: Nam non po∣test rex Angliae, ad libitum suum, leges mutare regni sui. Prineipatu nam{que}, nedum regali, sed & politico, ipse suo populo dominatur. Si regali tantum ip∣se praeesset eis, Le∣ges regni sui muta∣re ille posset, Talla∣gia quoque & cae∣tera onera eis im∣ponere ipsis incon∣sultis, quale domi∣niū denotant leges

Page 26

ciuiles, cum dicant qd principi placuit, legis habet vigorem. Sed longe aliter potest Rex, politice imperās genti suae, quia nec leges ipse sine subditorum as∣sensu mutare pote∣rit, nec subiectum populum renitentē onerare impositio∣nibus peregrinis, quare populus eius libere fruetur bonis suis, legibus, quas cupit regulatus, nec per Regem suum, aut quemuis alium depilatur, consimī∣liter tamen plaudit populus, sub Re∣ge regalit tantum principante, dum∣modo ipse in tyran∣nidem non labatur.

Page [unnumbered]

De quali rege dicit philosophus iij. po∣liticorū, quod me∣lius est Ciuitatem re∣gi viro optimo, quam lege optima. Sed quia non semper contin∣git praesidentē po∣pulo, huiusmodi es∣se virum, sanctus Thomas in libro, quem Regi Cipri scripsi, de tegmine principum, optare censetur, regnū sic institui, vt rex non libere valeat popu∣lum tyrannide gu∣bernare, quod so∣lum fit, dum pote∣stas Regia lege po∣litica cohibetur: Gaude igitur, prin∣ceps optime, talem esse legem regni, in quo tu successurus

Page 27

es, quia, & tibi, & populo, ipsa securi∣tatem praestabit non minimā & solamen. Tli lege, ut dicit i∣dem sanctus, regu∣latū fuisse totū ge∣nus humanum, si in paradio Dei man∣datū non praeterijs∣set tali etiā lege re∣gebatur Sinagoga, dum sub solo Deo, Rege, qui, eam in regnum peculiare adoptabat, illa mi∣litaba, sed demum eius petitione, rege homine sibi consti∣tuto, sub lege tan∣tum regali ipsa de∣inceps humiliata est. Sub qua tamen, dum optimi Reges sibi praesuerunt, ipsa plausit, & dum

Page [unnumbered]

discoli ei praeesse∣bant, ipsa incōsola∣biliter lugebat, vt regum liber haec di∣stinctus manifesta∣uit. Tamen quia de materia ista in opus culo, quod tui con∣templatione de na∣tura legis naturae ex∣araui, sufficienter puto me desceptas∣se, plus inde loqui iam desisto.

Do you have questions about this content? Need to report a problem? Please contact us.