The pope translated out of the old Dutch coppye, in print all most 50 yeares since, and novv reprinted, 1621. John, of Capistrano, Saint, 1386-1456. 1621 Approx. 8 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 2 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2003-01 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A04525 STC 14650.5 ESTC S4104 34387218 ocm 34387218 29163 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A04525) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 29163) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1475-1640 ; 1899:3) The pope translated out of the old Dutch coppye, in print all most 50 yeares since, and novv reprinted, 1621. John, of Capistrano, Saint, 1386-1456. 2 leaves : ill. s.n.], [London : 1621. Attributed to St. John of Capistrano by STC (2nd ed.). Reproduction of original in: Trinity College (University of Cambridge). Library. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. 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Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Prophecies. Anti-Catholicism -- Early works to 1800. Europe -- History -- 1492-1648 -- Prophecies. Broadsides -- London (England) -- 17th century. 2002-10 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2002-10 SPi Global Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2002-11 Chris Scherer Sampled and proofread 2002-11 Chris Scherer Text and markup reviewed and edited 2002-12 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion THE POPE . De Paus. The French King shal be driven out of his land by his owne Subjects / for he shall excercise tyrannie against the Professours of the Gospell of Christ / therto styrred up / & sporred forwards by the Priests and Bishopps . Who being with money bought treacherouslie to betray him / shall mislead and deliver him / yet he shall seeme to doe the same in respect of his Freinds / and being thrust out and deceived / he shal be left and forsaken of those whom he most trusted to / this shall happen in the end of the second course of tyme / then the Armes hang on a drie or witherdstock . Now this is understood as passed , in the time of H. de valoys . The Lion prepares for his yong a strong and everlasting neast / but none of the same shall possesse it / though they were set in it / but when the Lion shall fal into the third course of tyme / then shall there foorthwith be elected in his place a zealous resolute person / by name Frederick on the Rhyn / by Aken / whose ofspring shall stretch it selfe to the end of World / for the end is at hand . The King of Fraunce after being a wearie of banishment / and Crosses turning / about shal joyn himselfe to the assemblie of the Christians / striving against the enemies of the Word / and be received again of his own / for in those tymes shall the Christian Church there have no other Antistes nor head . The Pope sheweth the declining and help-seeking Emperour the Ballaunce / saying : ponder with your self and consider wheither I have any place at Rome or not / for I am quite of all except your helpe / otherwise I should hold my oath / but the R. C. shal be remooved to Ments . Their Bishoppricks shall get others / who shall with more fruite of Godlines and lesse pride raygne then the other have done . In the yeares 67. and 68. shall these things come to passe / and he that shall then live shall much admire the peace / unitie / rest / and ease among men . For there shall be so great Slaughters and Bloodshed that those very few / which remayn over / shal see and have God and the old Peace to dwel with them / and that for a certayne space of tyme. At the same time shall the Pope Cardinalls Archbishops / and all Spiritual states by divers punishments and suffering be driv'ne unto the former life of the Apostles I Capis : Serv : of Ies ; Chr : after this have seen in a vision 4. streames / from the 4. corners of the World / in strife with the great Seo / who when they could not get the victorie came Oceanus / but Oceanus & the 4. streames overmaysterd the great Sea. By Oceanus compared vvith the great Sea , the interpreters understand the Iland of Brittayne . O Pope , o Duke of Millyane , how faeminine is thy warre , how woman like are they that depend on thee , wheras al warre bends itselfe against thee , to the end that thou mayst fal . The Hellish Dragon his Counsel giver . All the Empires of the world shal be cast vnder our feete . This Lion is Borgondie . The Christiā Church . The Scrues that doe guide the Shippe . These are onlie the trustie ●●rs of the Ship. The cockboat The Antichr : Beast , sprong up anno : 313 : vvho shauld have power for 42 vveeks , vvhich make 1260. dayes , or yeares , from vvhich abstract 18. vvherby it agrees vvith the Propheticall time , the remaynder joynd to the former make 1555. the time that C : V. must give libertie of conscience , adding therto 67 or 68. according to Capistranus so have vve 1622. 1623. This strange Figure hath beene thus drawne / and paynted out two hundred Yeares afore the byrth of Carolus M : and found in a stone Wall / but then alltogeither without any interpretation therby / onelie that by the one person was written the name of Carolus / by the other the Pope ; neither did any man presume to foretell or prognosticate any thing therout / save onelie Mr. Iohn Carion , who fortold the death of some / although not wholly so well as this figure / for he fayled 10 yeares in his accoumpt . But there hath lived in our tymes a Moonk in a Cloyster in Slesia / named Capistranus , who was highlie esteemed / and of great accoumpt among the Mathematicians / and in many things ( as it is sayd ) a Prognosticatour and a Prophet . Who as he chaunced to get this Figure / which was of it selfe without any explication therof therby / he laboured very diligentlie / to discover the misteries therof / and by al means to make knowne the secrets of the same / but when he saw his labour lost and all in vayne / he committed therfore the revelation therof wholly unto God / not long after which tyme appeared a very fearfull Commeet in the Firmament / by meanes wherof began the revolution of the same / and by Calculating uppon that Celestiall Figure / with examining and curious looking therinto / he found that it threatned all Germanie / and the Romayne Empire / with great destruction and ruine / then caused he this Figure to be drawen uppon a Francine or Parchement / and carefully shutting the same into a clefte of a wall / leaving ther a marckable signe / wherby it might after his death be found out dispersed and divulged / it was in Anno 1548. when I gotte the same of hem that found it . I Capistranus a Servant of God have seen by the revelation of the most High / the signification of this Figure / even through Calculating uppon the fearfull Commeet / the variation of tymes and Empires . Namely that in the yeare 1547. shall arise a very bitter enemie of the word of God / while he shall give himselfe out for a defender of the same / then by falshood and deceit pretending to joyn with the Duitch Princes / he shall seeme to set before them the disobedience of some particular men / as also a pretense for the reformation of the Church / this shall from North and south bring great destruction with it / al these things notwithstādinge he shal chastise the foolish bewitched Germaynes with their owne weapons / and oppresse the heads of the Empire / in the first course of tyme he shall without bloodshed have all to his owne will / he shall enlarge the corners of / or between his Columns or Pillars / in those 3. yeares shall he deprive them of their might and Priviledge . In the second course shal he priviledge and make free al those of his beliefe labour to breake downe and destroy Gods building / & to curbe those that withstand him : than shal the desolate Dukes and Princes see that they are deceived / and shal be possessed with terrour and feare on every side . In these 3. yeares shall he attempt to doe many things / but in respect of the manyfold troubles that shal come / he shall be hindered from his deseignes / yet he shall give no credit unto the traytours / and he shall in all quarters shed much Christian blood . In the thyrd cours he shall in a kind of a Phrensie bring a number lesse multitude of all sorts of people / for to roote out and displant both the word of God and the Christian Princes / and so shall there be every where madnes and bloodshed / then shall there be elected a King / who notwithstanding his being a King / he shall not be honourd with Kinglie honour / yet many shall depend uppon him . In these 3. yeares shall they bring Carolus his ofspring and posteritie / with all his Confederates and adherentes under subjection and obedience . Translated out of the old Dutch coppye , in Print all most 50. Yeares since . And novv reprinted , 1621.