HENRY BRADS HAW SOCIETY S^ounbeb in t^e ^ear of Our &orb 1890 for t^c ebtfin^ of (Hare Ettur^icaf Cejtc. Vol. XIX. ISSUED TO MEMBERS EOR THE YEAR 1900, PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY ILVRRISON AND SONS, ST. MARTIN'S LANE, PKINTIiKS IN OKUINARY TO IlKK MAJIiSTY. THREE CORONATION ORDERS EDITED BY J. WICKHAM LEGG, w Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians ami of the Society of Antiqttaries of London. Sion^on. 1900. L4- TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGE Preface ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... vii Comparative Table of some later English Coronation Orders ... xii-xiii I. Introduction to the Coronation Order of King William and Queen Mary ... ... ... ... ... .. xv II. Introduction to the Anglo-French Version of the English Corona- tion Order ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... xxxi III. Introduction to the Consecration of the Anglo-Saxon King xx.wiii Coronation OF King William and Queen Mary 3 Anglo-French Version of the English Coronation Order... 39 Consecration of the Anglo-Saxon King 53 APPENDICES. I. Coronation Oath of James II 65 II. Extracts from William III.'s Council Register ... ... ... 67 III. Sancroft's commission to consecrate bishops ... ... ... "j}) IV. Extract from Parliament Rolls of William and Mary 75 V. Lord Chamberlain's Warrants for the Coronation of William and Mary ... ... 76 VI. E.xtract from Lord Chamberlain's Accounts, William and Mary 78 VI I. Extracts from Declared Accounts from Queen Anne to George III. 88 VIII. Ceremonial of the Coronation of King William and Queen Mary gi IX. Procession before the Coronation of King William and Queen Mary 113 X. Coronation of the Queen Consort ... ... ... ... ... 117 XI. Anglo-French document on the Coronation ... ... ... 121 NOTES. Notes on the Coronation Order of King William and Queen Mary ... 129 Notes on the Anglo-French Version of the English Coronation Order ... 160 Notes on the Consecration of the Anglo-Saxon King 163 INDEX 177 614049 LIST OF PLATES. I. The English Coronation ; from MS. 20. at Corpus Christi College Cambridge. Slightly reduced in size. II. Facsimile of the writing of MS. 20. Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. III. Facsimile of one page of MS. 44. Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Reduced to about two-thirds of the original in size. PREFACE. When the Henry Bradshaw Society was founded in 1S90, it was thought that the coronation and consecration of our English sovereigns, an act so important, as Abbe Duchesne points out, ^ from the civil, as well as from the religious, point of view, might well be illustrated by the new Society ; and a series of the English Coronation Orders was spoken of. Beyond a haphazard assignation of services to individual sovereigns, very little seemed to have been done in the way of classification, or of investigation into the liturgical principles on which these services are constructed." An elementary division of these orders may be made something in the following manner. First the English Coronation Orders may be divided into two classes, those in English and those in Latin, and these correspond with prae-Reformation and post-Reformation times. Then the Latin or prae-Reformation orders may be divided into four groups or recensions ; the former or post-Reformation into three groups or recensions. Of the four'' Latin recensions, the first is that in Egbert's Pontifical,^ which is already easily accessible : not only in the modern edition of the Pontifical itself, but in Martcne, who has edited the order in his great collection."' Further it is to be ' L. Duchesne, Orh^incs du Ciil/e chn'fieii, Paris, 18S9. preface, p. vi. - Many of the editions of the later coronation services have been brought out by .heralds; and by them, as indeed is only natural, more attention was paid to the ceremonial, than to the ritual, parts of the coronation. ^ I have given a comparative table of the four recensions on p. 1437. of the third fasciculus of the Westminster Missal, distributed to members of this Society in 1897. ■• Poutifical of Egbert Archbishop of York A.D. 732-766. Surtces Society, 1853. p. 100. '' Edm. Martene, Dc antiqiiis ccclesiac ritibus, Lib. ii. Cap. x. Ordo i. (Antv. 1736, t. ii. col. 596.) viii PREFACE. found in Mr. Maskell's work ;' and a part of it has also appeared in Mr. Warren's edition of the Lcofrlc Missalr Thus a new- edition of this order was plainly unnecessary. The second Latin recension is that called without much authority the coronation order of /Ethelred II. It is easily accessible in the editions of Seldcn,'' and Mr. Arthur Taylor/ somewhat imperfect, and of Dr. Henderson."' A variety of this recension contained in MS. 44 at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, with notes of the variations from other manuscripts, is now printed in this volume. The very considerable differences in the text of the prayers, and the additions to the order, made it worth while to edit this variet}^ which, to my knowledge, had hitherto not been brought out. The third Latin recension is that attributed to Henry I. on grounds as slight as those on which the second recension has been attributed to .Ethelred II. It has been edited by Dr. Henderson in the York pontifical brought out by him,'' and is thus easily accessible. It is closely allied to the fourth recension, of which it may be considered a forerunner. Another edition thus seemed unnecessary. The fourth Latin recension is contained in the book known as Liber Rcgalis, of which there are several coi:>ies in manuscript, but the most important is that in the custody of the Dean of Westminster. The copies of Liber regalis differ in the rubrics ; there are three recensions of the rubrics. A short recension, possibly earlier than the others, is printed in the notes to the edition of Liber regalis, distributed to members in 1893 as part of the second fasciculus of the Westminster Missal, the text of ' \V. Maskell, Moiiiiiiuiita Ritiialia EaUsiae .h/^'/nantJir, Oxford, 1SS2. \ol. ii. p. 77- ■-' I"". K. Warren, I. cofric Missal, Oxford, i88j. \x 230. •' John Stldcn, 'J'itles of Honor, I'art I. ch. viii. in the third volume of Worist London, 1726. •• Arthur Taylor, iilory of Rct^ality, London, 1820. Aj>p. to Hook iv. No. 2. p. 395. ' l.ihcr fontificalis Chi: Rainbridi^i- Anhiep. Ehor. edited by Dr. W. CJ. Henderson, Surlees Society, 1S75. p. 270. See p. 267 for n classification of the orders. " \V. (J. Henderson, op. (.it. p. 21.1. PREFACE. ix which contains the rubrics in their longer recension. Both the longer and shorter recension of rubrics were thus placed before members ; but a third recension of the rubrics, which I have hitherto found only in one manuscript, that in the Cambridge University Library (Mm. 3. 21. fo. 196.) which Mr. Henry Bradshaw considered to be a Lincoln Pontifical, had been edited by Mr. \V. ]\Iaskell in his Mominicnt.i Ritualia, and was thus probably already known to many of our members, so that further printing of it might be considered superfluous. The present volume contains an edition of an Anglo-French version of Liber Regalis in its shorter recension. Of this text a fragment, discovered at Westminster, was printed a few years ago, and I do not know of any other edition or manuscript. With the last Latin recension we pass into the first of the English, Liber regalis having been translated into English for the coronation of James L This, the first of the English or post-Reformation recensions, was used at the coronation of James L, Charles L, and Charles II. It was almost unknown to students until the order of Charles I.' was edited from unpublished manuscripts by I\Ir. Christopher Wordsworth, and distributed to members of the Society for the year 1892. The second English recension is represented by a single order, that of James II., sumptuously edited by Sandford, and thus easily accessible.- A blemish in this edition is that only the ^ There is the order of James I. printed by Prynne in a confused manner. (Signal Loyal/y, Sec, London, 1660. Part ii. p. 263.) - P'rancis Sandford, History of the Coronation of . . . King James II. in the Savoy, 1687. It is almost a matter for regret that Sandford should have edited the coronation of James II. with such magnificence. It has caused the coronation of James II. to be taken as the type of F.nglish coronations, whereas it really stands by itself, unlike what went before it and unlike what came after it. Mr. Arthur Taylor's book on Coronations {Glory of Regality, Pondon, 1820. ) is still the best that we have, and still looked upon by some of our first historical scholars as authoritative ; but it is doubtless owing to the influence of Sandford that on p. 189. Taylor tells us that Tc invocamits still follows Vevi Creator, and that the oil is still blessed by a preface beginning Surstitn corda. At Hanover at the time of the coronation of George II. a tract, which is a version into German almost word for word of Sandford, appeared with this title : Vollstiindige Beschreibung der Cereinonien, ivelche soivohl bey den Englischen Croniingen iiberhaitpt vorgehen, besonders aber bey aem Hochst-begliickten X PREFACE. first words of the liturgical forms arc given, a defect which I have tried to remedy in this volume by giving the liturgical forms of James II. in full in the notes to the coronation order of William and Mary. The third I'2ngiish recension is that now in use, and it was jjrepared for the coronation of William and Mar\'. With some few verbal alterations which have not, however, affected the structure of the service, it has been used at the coronation of all English sovereigns from William and Mary to Victoria inclusive. An edition of the order of William and Mary, which docs not seem to have been printed before, is contained in this volume. Thus with Mr. Christopher Wordsworth's edition of the Order for the Coronation of King Charles I. and with the edition of Liber Regalis in the Westminster Missal, together with the appearance of the present volume, there have been filled up a good many of the gaps that existed at the time of the foundation of the Society in our knowledge of the coronation orders. If any pledge were then given to complete the series of coronation orders, it may be hoped that that pledge has now been very nearly fulfilled. In the following pages an obelus has been placed after words to which it is desired to call attention as reproducing the exact spelling or expression of the manuscript. Vox facilities in the work of editing the Three Coronation Orders which form this volume, I have to thank Mr. Kverard Green, Rouged ragon. Vice- President of the Society of Anti- quaries ; and Mr. C. W. Moule, Fellow and Librarian of Corpus Christ! College, Cambridge. Holh of these gentlemen have Crii nun !,'<:■ fust lino h\l)cr r6. 1685 : " Aeii stiiker ])rins is Absohilic i:;esondcn, van dat hij sig door cen Onrooms r>iscli(i|> hccfl hittn salvtii." AV.Vt; WILLIAM AND QUEEN MARY. xvii directed to abridge the coronation order, keeping to essentials.' A great deal more than tliis was done." The order was positivel)' rewritten ; but from Sandford's book it is not easy at once to detect this process ; for in a number of cases only the first words of the prayers are given ; and these first words are in many instances so like the beginnings of the prayers in King Charles I.'s and King James I.'s orders that many may have thought that the whole of the prayer following was substantially the same. For an example, we may compare below the prayer for the blessing of the sword in the order for Charles I. with that for James II. Chari.es I. James II. Hear our prayers, we beseech Hear our prayers we beseech thee O Lord, and vouchsafe by thee O Lord, and by the right the right hand of thy Majesty to hand of thy Majesty vouchsafe to bless and sanctify this sword, bless and sanctify this thy servant wherewith this thy servant Charles James our King who is now to be desireth to be girt that it may be girt with this sword : that he may a defence and protection of not bear it in vain but use it as Churches, widows, orphans, and the minister of God, for the all the servants of God against punishment of evil doers and for the savage cruelty of pagans and the protection and encouragement infidels ; and that it may be a fear of all that do well. Through and terror to all those who lie in Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.* wait to do mischief. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.'' At the beginning of the prayer it may be noticed that the words of the order of Charles I. " bless and sanctify this sword " are changed in the order of James II. into " bless and sanctify this thy servant," an important change, it is true, but the only change found in the first words as given by Sandford,^ so that it might be thought that the remainder of the prayer is the same. But on looking at the manu- scripts it is found that the whole of the prayer after the ending of the first words has been remade, and that nothing but the beginning remains of the original, which was a word for word translation of Exaiidi qiiaesiimus of Liber regalis. And this new prayer passes on, with the ^ F. Sandford, History of the Coronation of . . . James II. in the Savoy 16S7. p. 4. The service mi^ht have been considerably abridged by the postponement of the fealty and homage of the lords to the following day : for which there is the precedent of the coronation of Richard I. [Gcsla I\ei;/s Ilenrici Secuiidi Benedict i Abbatis, Rolls series, 1S67. ed. W. Stubbs, vol. ii. p. 84.) '•^ Besides the liturgical and ceremonial changes of this coronation, it maybe noticed that the ancient riding from the Tower to Westminster, done before Charles I I.'s coronation, was not carried out at this ; and it appears to have been discontinues! ever since. ^ British Museum, Ilarl. 5222. fo. 31. See also Chr. Wordsworth, Manner of the Coi-onation of King Chailes the first, II.B.S. 1892. pp. 36. and 130. •* St. John's College Cambridge, MS. L. 14. p. 37. See also below, notes, p. 147. '^ Sandford, op. cit. p. 93. COR. ORDERS. b xviii INTRODUCTION. change of two or three words, into the order of William and Mary,' and so becomes part of the accepted English coronation order of the last two centuries. 'I'his is only one instance amongst others of Dr. San- croft's manipulation of the liturgical forms, and of his influence still abiding in the arrangement of the modern coronation order. So amongst the other changes introduced by Dr. Sancroft into the forms, his dislike to asking for a blessing upon the royal ornaments is evident. The omission of a direct blessing of the oil is not so remarkable, because there is none in Liber recall's or the earlier Stewart orders ; though in the private benediction of the oil he used the words " Bless O Lord this oil."* But the entire omission of the prayer for the l)lessing of the ring is not without signification ; for where he has been unable altogether to avoid retaining some of the old prayers for the blessing of the colobiiim sindoiiis, of the sword or of the crown, he has also altered them so as to turn the prayer for a blessing of the ornament into a prayer for a blessing of the wearer of the ornament. That of the sword has been given above. Those of the royal ornaments and of the crown will be spoken of below. There is precedent for this kind of change in the alteration made in the marriage service of Edward VI. 's first book. The blessing of the ring in the Sarum Manual is changed into a blessing of " these thy servants, this man and this woman." My son has pointed out to me in the Bodleian Library at O.xford a collection of papers, many of them in Dr. Sancroft's hand, written about the time of the coronation of King James IL In some of them we may see the remodelling of the coronation order going on. There is the following new form designed for use at the delivery of the ring. " Receive this Ring as a Pledge of the Mariage that is between the King and his People (the Ring is now put on) " and Remember, that as God has made, You, our Lord and King, a Husband to your People ; so it is your Majesties part to Love and Govern them & to Provide for their Welfare, as it is theirs to pay Vou their Affection and Obedience. "Andth(5u Lord that hast made this happy mariage by thy good Providence, Prosper thou thy owne Handy work, keep his Ma'-' & his i*eople together in Love Inviolable, & in faithfull jjerformance of all their duties, to our comfort, & to the glory of thy Name through ^:c." A large space intervenes between these paragraphs and ti)e following which seems designed as an alternative to the last. "And thou Lord, who by thy good Providence hast brought this our King and his peojjle together, blast the wicked designes of all those that would i)ut them asunder. Let it be seen that this was thy own Choice. Bless, Oh Lord, and ])rosper thy owne handywork."-' ' See below, j). 23. " St. John's College Camliriil^ii- MS. I.. 1.}. p. 13. See also Clu. Wonlsworth, ^/. er anulum et bacii/utn and the enthronization and homage : a change which it can hardly be doubted was made because "there was no communion.' But these inept changes would have mattered little if the order of James II. had remained alone, without any following. Unhappily it showed to rash hands how easy it was to destroy the ancient character of the coronation order. In less than four years another coronation followed ; and though there is some evidence that men hoped that the ^ The ring was called " the wedding ring of England." (Sir George Buck, I/istoiy of Richard III. London, 1646. Lib. v. p. 146.) Queen Mary Tudor is said to have had two rings with which she was espoused twice ; first on her accession when she was crowned, and secondly when she became wife of the King of Spain. Also at the time of Wyatt's rebellion, she told the citizens of London " that on the day of her oironation, when the ring which she wears was put on her finger, she purposed accepting the realm of England and its entire population as her children." (Calendar of State Papers . . . of Venice, London, 1873, vol. v. 1534-1554. pp. 460. and 593-) - See below, p. 25. •* If we may judge of Dr. Sancroft's powers as a ritualist from his alterations of the order of James IL it may seem from the liturgical point of view almost providential for the Church of England that he did not take the oaths, and was thus unable to carry out his scheme for the revision of the liturgy and the comprehension of Dissenters. (The Bishop of Lincoln s and the Bishop of Norwich'' s Speeches in the House of Lords JMarcli \']th d-^r. London, John Morphew, 1 7 10, p. 3. See also W. I'alin, History of the Church of En inland from the Revolution, London, 1851. p. 34.) The caustic remark of Mr. Brightman on the new discovered Sacramentary of the Bishop of Thmuis may be remembered here: " Serapion, if he were the first, would perhaps not be the last prelate whose liturgical compositions were not the happiest item in his literary record." {Journal of I'heohqical Studies, Oct. 1S99. p. 91.) * See above, the comparative table of some of the later English coronation Orders. b 2 XX JNTRODUCTIOX. order followed by the earlier Stewarts might again be revived/ yet the times were unfavourable to a very strict regard to precedent in this matter. William of Orange landed at Torbay on November 5th, 168S and on February 14th, 1689 the Crown was offered by the Lords and Commons to ^\'illiam and Mary as joint sovereigns, but with the exercise of the Regal power in the Prince of Orange.- A committee of the Pri\y Council for the coronation was appointed on Feb. 26th, the Bishop of London being added to the committee on March 5th. The Bishop was ordered to inspect the coronation order on March 1 2th, and in the Report by the Committee it is said that he has brought them.-' The date of the coronation was fixed first for the twelfth, finally for the eleventh, of ApriV and it thus seems that the forms were drawn up or revised in a very short time : at the most in two months, and probably less. It is likely that one of the things that Dr. Henry Compton, the bishop of London, had in mind in his revision of the coronation order was the insertion of the coronation into the celebration of the Lord's Supper, so that the sovereign could no longer avoid receiving the communion at the hands of the prelate who had crowned him.^ Hereafter there was to be communion whenever there was coronation. Before King James H.'s coronation, in the recensions which I have called respectively" the second, third, and fourth Latin recensions of the English coronation order, as well as the order of the older Stewarts, the celebration of the Eucharist followed the ceremonies of crowning ; the introit. Protector JVoster, or in the English service, Behold God our defe7ider, was sung when the crowning was over. So that the mediceval ^ On April 5. 16S9 there was licensed The form of prayers and sii-'ices used in Westminster Abhy, at the Coronation of the Kiiii^ and Queens of England, London, Randal Taylor, in folio. It is merely a reprint of Trynne's confused accoimt of James I. 's coronation. {Sii^nal Loyalty ik.c. London, 1660, I'art ii. p. 263.) Hut before this tract was published, the changes in the coronation order liad been already determined on by Dr. Compton. (See below, p. i.) - See below, Appendix IL p. 67. William wore his crown even Iwfore the coronation. (See below, Appendix IV. p. 75.) Mr. H. A. Wilson ptiints out to me an earlier instance, when the convention was turned into a parliament. (John Evelyn, Diary, Feb. 22. 16S8-89. ed. Bray, 1S79. vol. iii. p. 70.) ^ See below, p. 3. It can hardly be said that Dr. Sancroft was entirely neglected in the prejiaralions for the coronation. Throut;hnul the coronation order of William and Mary the chief minister is always the .\rchbishop, most probably the .Xrchbishop of Canterbury, si> that lie could liave underlaUen the oftice, if he had chanj^ed his mind at the last moment. And Mr. II. A. Wilson has pointed out to me in the Bodleian Library the summons to Dr. Sancroft to attend the coronation "there to do and jJerform such services as shall be re(iuired an«i belong unto him." It is dated March 21. 1688-9, and it is sealed with the Larl Marshal's seal. (.MS. Tanner 28. fo. 37S.) ^ Tlie Council Minutes show the date altered from 12 to 11 (see below, \>. 71), and in one of the Chamberlain's warrants the date has been allowed to .stand. (See l>elow, Ap|)endix V. jj. 76.) " Vet the heralds seem doubtful if tliere were to be a celebration of ll»e Lord's Supper. See below, Appendix VIII. note «)n p. lOO. " See A/issale aii usum Eeelesiac ll'estmonasteriensis, II.B.S. 1897. f;\sc. iii. pp. H35-'439. AVA'(; WILLIAM AND QUEEN .l/./A')'. xxi and early Stewart orders were not inserted into the celebration of the Eucharist. Yet, though most likely unknown' to him, Dr. Compton had good precedent for the step that he took in thus inserting the coronation order into the Eucharist. The precedent exists in the earliest English coronation order known to us, that of the pontifical of Egbert. In this order the coronation service begins immediately after the gospel, a liturgical moment which corresponds with the place at which it begins in Dr. Comptoivs arrangement, that is, immediately after the Creed and Sermon : thus in both, the coronation takes place between what is called the mass of the catechumens and the mass of the faithful. It is at this place that the consecration of a bishop is inserted in the book of common prayer, and a reminiscence of this may have been present in Dr. Compton's mind, and determined the place. Thus an important precedent was established, the influence of which is felt to our own day. An important and more serious liturgical change must be noted in the part of the service of William and Mary which deals with the consecra- tion of the King, and the blessing of the oil. This was again caused by the influence of the order of James II. In Liber regalis and the Stewart orders there is a group of formularies forming the central part of the service, and containing the consecration of the King and the blessing of the oil. It begins with Veiii Creator and an ancient prayer Te iiivocamiis, a Litany accompanied in Liber regalis by the seven penitential psalms, said by the bishops in an under- tone,- four prayers, the first of which is Omnipotens sempiterne Dei/s, a prayer named in the second recension consecraiio regis,^ which in Liber regalis contains the words i)i rege7ii consecramus,^ and in all texts the important words defining the duties of the King to the church, Ecclesiatmjite tiiam deiiiceps cum plebibus sibi annexis ita enutriat acdoceat, muniat et iiisiruat.^ These four prayers are followed by the consecratory preface of the oil and the anointing of the King. In James II.'s order this sequence of forms underwent grave changes at the hands of Dr. Bancroft. The Litany was moved to an early place in the service, and thus separated from the blessing of the oil and anointing of the King ; and the ancient prayers that accompanied the consecration of the King were moved with the Litany away from the anointing, and reduced in number to two. And of these two, the most important of all, Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, survived only in a mutilated form ; though it preserves the words xve consecrate our King and nourish, instruct, and defend thy Church and Peop/e^' But Veni Creator and Te ' Martenc puhlishcd the coronation order of Ej^ljert's pontifical in his great collection of ancient rites ; but 1 do not find that any ])art of this had appeared in 1689. It seems unlikely also that Dr. Compton was acquainted with the German and Frankish orders. (See J//.ort!/6' . . . U'esnii. iii. 1434.) - See below, Appendix XI. p. 117. " See below, p. 54. * In the second and third recension it is (lii^iimis instead oi toiisiiraii/us. •'■ In the Stewart orders this is translateil luiiirish and teach dijeiid and inslruct thy chuirh and pioplr. •' See below, notes to ca]>. 4. j). 13S. xxii INTKODUCTIOX. invocamus remained, immediatel)- preceding the blessing of the oil, which is still introduced by Siirsiim lorda, but is reduced in length just as Omnif'oietis scmpitcrne Deus has been cut down, and hardly an)thing left of the old form Electorum fortitudo except the first words and the allusion to kings, priests, and prophets." Certainly the sen'ice here has been shortened, if we do not say broken up, in its central and most important part ; and yet it was requested that essentials should be preserved.- The mischief thus wrought by James II. and Sancroft seriously affected the order for William and Mary. The Litany and one collect remaining out of the four ancient prayers said at the consecration of the King were set at the very beginning of the order, immediately after the first oblation, and before the beginning of the communion service. In the consecration of a bishop in the 15ook of Common Prayer, the Litany is said in the communion service ; and 1 )r. Compton might have followed this precedent if he had remembered the analogy between the consecration of a king and the consecration of a bishop. The entire disappearance of Omuipotens sempiterne Deus, the formula used for the consecration of a king even in the mutilated form in which it appeared in James II. is a grave omission, and Dr. Compton seems to have desired to supply it by the insertion of the word consecrate in places where this particular word does not occur in earlier coronations. For example, in his new form for the blessing of the oil there appears this sentence : " who by our office and ministry are now to be anointed and consecrated King and Queen,"' and in the form used at the anointing : " be you anointed, blessed, and consecrated King and Queen. "^ Te invocaftiiis, which is to be found in the very first recension t)f the English coronation service, was also removed from the order of William and Mary. Thus for the central part of the service there remained only Veni Creator and a new consecratory prayer for the oil. This is for the most part new for this purpose. It retains, as in James II. the ancient introduction, Electorum fortitudo, even if inverted ; but without Sursui/i corda ; the rest is made up for the most part of portions taken from the baptismal and confirmation services of the book of common prayer. Some of these are not unhappily adapted. It may be said on behalf of the changes made by James 1 1, and William and Mary that the ancient form, Electorum fortitudo, which, with Te invocamus, goes back to the very first recension, had, like other forms in the Libcr rci^a/is, something of the grotes(iue in it, and that even in the early middle ages it had been thought needful to moilify the le\t of Electorum fortitudo' ; also that Sursum corda is a comparatively ' See Ik:1o\v, notes to cap. i>. |). 14 1. - See l~clow, notes, p. 129. •' This seems to l)e liorrowed from Di. Sancroft 's form for priv.itely lilessinj; tl>e oil. (St. John's College, Cambridge L. 14. |i. 13. and Chr. Wordsworth, c/. (//. p. xx. note.) * See Ik-'Iow, pp. 21 and 22. '* See l)eler rei:;a/is. Further it might be said that the new forms, whether of James II. or of ^^'iUiam and Mary are decidedly better than the old. But of James II.'s form this can hardly be maintained. It has nothing of the picturesqueness of the old, nor of the doctrine of the new, form. All that can be justly claimed for it is that the "gifts and graces of thy holy Spirit" are spoken of, which may possibly have given the idea to the fuller expressions in the new form of William and Mary. The direct prayer for a blessing on the oil " Bless this oil " is to be found only in the order of William and Mary. In the next order, that of Anne, it disappears and does not return. But the direction to the Archbishop to lay his hand upon the ampulla remains throughout all the succeeding orders. It has been doubted by ritualists of repute' whether the present form be really intended for a benediction of the oil. ^^'hat has been just said seems to be a sufficient answer to any question- ings on this subject. The form in William and Mary is plainly intended .for a blessing of the oil, just as the form in the baptism of infants in the book of common prayer is intended for a blessing of the water in the font, when it is said : " Regard we beseech thee the supplications of thy congregation ; sanctify this \\'ater." In \\\^ processus factus of William and Mary- the form is headed Benedictio olei : and in the account published by order of the Duke of Norfolk of the coronation of these sovereigns the consecration of the oil is attributed to the recitation of this prayer.^ Thus there can hardly be any doubt that, at the time of AVilliam and Mary's coronation, this prayer was looked upon as the form for the consecration of the oil. It seems, however, that only in William and Mary is there an unmistakable blessing of the oil. If we look backwards, or if we look forwards, from this point, there is a want of definition in the forms. In Liber rei^a/is there is indeed Siirsinn corda and its accompanying versicles which are the signal of an approaching consecration from that of the Eucharist down to that of a cross or a reliquary* ; but the form itself contains no distinct prayer for the blessing of the oil, although there is a petition that by " the fatness of this creature thou wouldest vouchsafe to sanctify with thy blessing this thy servant N." which may indeed be a prayer for a blessing on the King but is hardly a direct invocation for the consecration of the oil. Thus the modern form and the mediaeval resemble each other in this point. This want of definition it may be led the Laudian ceremonia- lists to introduce a separate blessing of the oil early on the day of coronation before the service began.' This blessing is not super- ^ W. Maskell, Mojitimeii/a A'itiialia, Oxford 1882. Vol. ii. p. xxiv. note. ^ British Museum, Lansdowne MS. 282. fo. 42. /'. ' ' ' Veiii Creator being Sung and the 1 loly Oyl Consecrated " &c. {An Account of the Ceremonial at the Coronation . . . of King William and Queen Mary, In the Savoy, Edw. Jones, 1689. p. 3. * See Pontifuale Romanuni, edited by Benedict XIV. Romac, 1868. pp. 221. and 228. ' The forms have l)een printed by Mr. Chr. Wordsworth, Manner of the Coronation of King Charles I. II.B.S. 1892. pp. xix. and xx. note. xxiv INTKODUCTIOX. fluous ; nor is it necessary. 1 )oubtless the oil of catechumens and the cream formerly used with Liber rcgalis had been blessed on the Maundy Thursday before the coronation ; so that in view of this a blessing in the English recension previous to the blessing in the Elcctorum foriiiudo cannot be said to be superfluous. Nor is the earlier blessing necessary ; because the oil is sufficiently blessed by the prayer now said after Veni Creator. The composition of the anointing oil at the coronation of King Charles I. is well known from the manuscripts in which the receipt is given.' Of the composition of the oil used at the coronation of King James II. we have no precise information except that it was prepared by the King's apothecary and was ''exceeding rich and fragrant." - For William and Mary's anointing an order was given to the King's apothecary to prepare the same (quantity of anointing oil as was provided for the last coronation.^ Of its composition I have no information. In the anointing of James II. there seems to have been no diminution of the number of places which were anointed. They remained the same as in Liber regalis and the Stewart orders. 13ut in William and Mary the number of the places was diminished to three, as in some early mediaeval coronations,* that is if the text of their order represent what was really done. But the document drawn up by the heralds which purports to give a full account of the ceremonies, reports very precisely that the old number and the old order of places were preserved.^ In this and some other matters the heralds seem to have spoken of what should have been done, not of what was really done, as they themselves declare that they did not receive full information upon what was intended, by which ancient precedents were not observed. The statement of the heralds as to the anointing is indeed supported by the Processtis /actus of William and Mary. According to this document the Bishop of London anoints the King's hands, breast, shoulders, and boughs of the elbows, but it omits the head of the King, while the hands of the (Jueen only arc anointed.'' The ' It has been printed by -Mr. Chr. Wordsworth, c/. .//. j). 4. - V. Sandford, op. til. p. 91. niaryin. •' Sec bi'low, Appcnilix V. p. 76. ■• See below, in the notes to cap. 8. p. 144. ' See l)elow, Apjiendix VIII. pp. I02 and III. " British Museinn, Lansdownc MS. 282. Processus faclus .id Coron.it ioncm Sercnissimi Domini (Uiiliclmi, et Serenissima; Dn"" : Maria' Kcijis et Kcgina* Aiiglia- &c. On the verso of tlie fly leaf is written : tVr. Negus, 16S9. fo. 42. /' [formerly p. 82. J " Benedictio olei. " Mag : Camerar^ : |)rimas regis robas exuit Similiter Comilissa Derby roiws rcginae. " Sedcnl Kex & Keg: in duabus Cathedris rege amicto robis S"' Edv' : palliumquc ornatum super Capita regis & rcgina; extenditur, Sustcntatum j) Duccm Norfulcia" Ducem()ue (jraftoni.e. " lip'" : I.oiulin : unguel numus. Pectus, Scapulas, ambasquc Comj»ges bmchiorum regis, nianusijue regina-, cum orationibus ;iplis \i-. KING WILLIAM AND QUEEN MARY. xxv ^accuracy of this account may be called in question. For before the .anointing it is said that the parliament robes of the King were taken ■off, with those of the Queen ; and that the King and Queen, clad in the robes of St. Edward, then sat down in two chairs in order to be .anointed ; while after the anointing it is said that the King was then •clothed with the colobium sindonis and his head covered with a coif because of the anointing. The colobium sindonis is the first of the ornaments of St. Edward to be put on. It cannot be put on both before the anointing and after the anointing as well. And if the head of the King were not anointed, why was a coif put on because of the .anointing? Also the Queen's hands only were anointed; thus indeed making her only a queen consort, and not a reigning sovereign. Thus the account is confused and may be suspected in its details, although this document was the j)roperty of Mr. Negus, the Secretary of the Duke of Norfolk, of whom the heralds complain as retaining too much in his hands.' We have again an instance of the frequency with which , different accounts are given of the same action by eyewitnesses. I am inclined, however, to think that the coronation order gives the most .accurate account of the ceremonies really practised. After the anointing of the King in Liber rega/is, he is invested with ■certain ornaments, some of which are sacerdotal, and others knightly or royal. The sacerdotal ornaments are of linen or silk, such as the ■ colobium sindonis, the armill, the tunicle, the buskins and the pallium ; the knightly are the spurs and the sword ; the more royal are the crown and the sceptres ; while the ring and rich silk gloves are signs of dignity common to the nobler ranks of men. They were delivered to the King in a certain order preserved from Liber regalis down to James II. 'inclusive ; and before the sovereign was invested with these ornaments they were blessed by the archbishop with a prayer beginning Deus rex regum {O God the king of ki/igs). This prayer was altered by Dr. Bancroft after his manner into a prayer for a blessing on the wearer of these ornaments : and setting this point aside, the prayer in this case is • certainly improved, though hardly shortened. Charle-S I. James II. O God the King of Kings &c. O Clod, the King of Kings and •by whom Kings do reign, and law- Lord of Lords, by whom Kings givers make good laws. Vouchsafe reign and Princes decree justice; ;in thy favour to bless this Kingly vouchsafe with thine especial Ornament ; and grant that thy favour and grace to bless this thy servant Charles our King, who servant James our King, whom in shall wear it, may shine in thy thy name we now clothe with this " Post hive Induitur Rex Sindonis Collobio Capite amictu operto, propter unctionem : " Pedibus Sandaria coaptantur, Calcaria adfert Mag : Camerar^ : " &c. It will be owned that not only in the particulars of the anointing but in many other jpoints \.h\n processus faclus is exceedingly confuftcd. ' See below, Appendix VIII. p. III. xxvi INTRODUCTIOX. sight with the ornament of good Royal Vestment : that he may Hfe and holy actions, and after shine in thy sight with the orna- this life he may for ever enjoy that ment of good works, and a holy life and glory which hath no end ; conversation : and this life ended, through Jesus Christ our Lord. may for ever enjoy that Life and Amen.' Cilory which hath no end, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.^ But in A\illiam and Mary the order of the delivery of some of the ornaments was changed, more particularly in the order of the delivery of the crown, sceptres, and ring ; and the prayer for the blessing of the vestments, Deus rex 7-egu?n was wholly omitted. In Liber rega/is the crown was put on the King immediately after the pallium or cope. The ring and the two sceptres were then given to him. This was also the order in James IL But in William and Mary it seems to have been thought desirable to lead up to the setting of the crown upon the King's head by delivering all the other ornaments first, as if an anti- climax were to be avoided ; so the ring was first delivered, then the rich gloves and the sceptre and rod, and last of all the crown. Here again there is a return to the order in Egbert's Pontifical which pre- scribes the delivery of the two sceptres first, and afterwards the galea or crown is put on the head. The heralds in their report^ have preserved the old order of the delivery of the ornaments, as it was in James IL But from what they say themselves at the end of the document it would appear that they were not perfectly informed as to the ceremonies performed in the abbey church, and indeed they show their knowledge of ecclesiastical matters by calling that foundation a " Cathedrall,"* 'i'he omission of all mention of the Colobiimt si/idonis, supertunica and armilla in the text, together with the disappearance of the prayer Deiis rex region might well lead to the opinion that these ornaments were discontinued at the coronation of \\'illiam and Mary, if negative evidence only be considered. But i)utting aside, for reasons which they themselves allow, the statements made by the heralds that these ornaments were worn,** there is in other documents further direct evidence of their use. They are ordered by the Committee of Council. and tlie charges for their making exist in the records of the Lord (Chamberlain's accounts, which include even the wrapper in which the vestments were carried to the Abbey Church.'' Another of the innovations in James IL (ontinued to William and Mary and thence onwards, is the delivery of the orb wiih the cross at the same tinn- as the pallium. The words of delivery by the arc hbishop ' Ilarl. 5222. fn. 30. Sic also Chrisioplu'; Wonlswoith, of. . 7S. KING WILLIAM AND QUEEN MARY. xxvif have been altered so as to include the orb, which however has to be taken back to the altar again almost immediately as the right hand of the King is required to hold the sceptre with the cross. It would seem that Dr. Bancroft did not really understand that the sceptre with the cross and the orb with the cross were ornaments that could be exchanged one for the other, if not altogether the same, though differing in size and shape. The orb is of very considerable antiquity amongst the royal ornaments. It is seen in the Bayeux tapestry, and on many early great seals.' It is in the hand of the King in the Corpus picture and of Richard II. in the picture in the choir of Westminster, while a verge is in the other. In the miniature of the dead King in the Westminster JMissal, he supports with the left hand a verge, with the right an orb on which stands a crucifix. ■ More instances could easily be given of representations of the King bearing in his hand an orb with a long cross on it instead of a sceptre with a cross. Even the modern sceptre shown by Sandford has a round lower end. It would seem that the orb and the sceptre with the cross are interchangeable and that where one is used, the other should not appear. Unfortunately Dr. Bancroft's error has continued down to our own time. The sacerdotal ornaments cannot be traced much farther back' than Liber regalis, the earliest manuscript of which is of early fourteenth century writing. The sceptre and staff and helmet {galea,*' it may be a crown) appear in the first recension after the anointing in this order. In the second there appear, also after the anointing, first the ring, then the sword, the crown, the sceptre, the staff; so that they are in much the same order in the second recension as in Liber 7-egal is : but after the staff and in the variety of this recension printed in this volume, the pall. In the third, after the anointing, come the sword, the armilla, the pallium, the crown, the ring, the sceptre and rod. In Liber regalis after the anointing the ornaments come in the following order : the colobiuvi sindonis and coif for the head ; the tunicle, buskins, sandals, and spurs ; the sword ; the armilla ; the pallium : the crown ; the ring ; the sceptre with the cross ; the rod with the dove. ' See Wyon, Great Seals of England, Lond. 1887. plates. At the coronation of King Richard III. the orb seems to have been actually delivered in the place of the sceptre with the cross. "The Cardinall of Canterbury and other Bishopps them crowned according to the custome of the Realme, giving him the Scepter in the left hand, and the Ball with the Crosse in the right hand." (Bodleian, Ashmole MS. 863. p. 441.) - Mi.isale . . . IVcslin. ii. plate 8. ^' The ingenious may perhaps discover the colohitiin sindonis, the tunicle, and the pallium in the coronation of Harold in the Bayeux tapestry ; and if any one should be pleased to assert this as a fact, I do not see how it could be disproved. ^ In Captain Halford's manuscript of the life of St. Fldnumd, illustrated about the time of William the Conqueror, there is a picture of the coronation, made widely known by Mr. W. H. St. John Hope in Dr. S. R. Gardiner's Stiidrnfs History of England, Lond. 1890. vol. i. p. 99. There is being placed on the King's head an ornament that might be described as galea and is not unlike some of the helmets depicted in the contemporary Bayeux tapestr}-. The cope or pallium may be seen in this drawing, but the (olohitiin sindonis or tunicle is by no means clear. ,Nxviii INTRODUCTION. In James II. 's coronation this order was observed, except that with the pallium the orb was delivered, and a rich glove given after the ring. As far as can be made out in the absence of details concerning the •delivery of the sacerdotal ornaments, in William and Mary the order would seem to be as follows : the co/olniim sindonis and coif, the tunicle, buskins, sandals and spurs; the sword; the armilla; the pallium and orb ; the ring ; the sceptre with the cross, and the rod with the dove : ■the crown. Perhaps no change was made with the linen and silk ornaments, but we know that the order of the delivery of the metal ornaments was considerably changed. After the delivery of the crown in A\'illiam and Mary, there follows a ceremony which I almost think may be particular to the English coronation since 1689 ; that is, the delivery of the bible to the new- consecrated sovereign. It was introduced by Dr. Compton and has continued ever since. I have not met with any contemporary account of the motives which induced Dr. Compton to insert this ceremony after the coronation. A bible is delivered to the new consecrated bishop in the ordinal of the book of common prayer : and in the mediaeval pontifical, of which this delivery of the bible is probably a reminiscence, the book of the gospels is delivered to the bishop when the episcopal ornaments have all been taken.' It is not likely that Dr. Compton had this in his mind. But a legend preserved by Bale, of Edward VI. 's coronation, may have been present to his memory, and determined the carrying of the bible in the procession and its gift afterwards. This pious young King, of the age of nine at the lime of his coronation, seeing three swords prepared to be borne before him, •doubtless the ancient curtana and its companions, but misunderstood by Bale, asked yet for a fourth, the sword of the Spirit, the word of dod, that is the Bible.' Dr. Compton may have thought it would be a popular thing if in the coronation of a king who came to maintain the hberties of England and the Protestant succession a hint could be followed taken from the coronation of an early Protestant King of England, without being too scrupulous in the matter of the historical truth of the circumstance alleged. Another ])recedent has been pointed out by our Secretary, Mr. H. A. Wilson, that is much nearer than Edward VI. 's coronation to the time of AV'illiam and Mary, And that is the inauguration of Oliver Oomwell in Westminster Hall on June 26, 1657. The memory of this transaction might well have been present to the minds of miildle-aged men in 1689. Part of this civil ceremony was the delivery of a bible to " I lis Highness" with a robe of ])ur[)le velvet lined with ermine, a ' Sec J.iluT Tonti/ualis Chr. Hniiibridi^e, Surtees Society, 1875. p. 2jO. - lohn \\n\c,Si r/ptoriiiii J/tiisfriinn maioris Btytaniiiai ,ViA^\\c^i.\\iXinn. OjxirimiN. 155<; |). 673. Iltlwartl \'I. " CO ilii- quo corcmiilialm in icgtin, Ins ^;lildii, in >i^niini <|Uik1 i-sscl triuMi putciuissinuiriiin rcjjnoruni, An^;liai-, I'Vauciac, \ llylKriiim- inonarcha : c|uy Mrs. Circcn in J. R. (Ircen's Shml JJhtoij of the Eii^^Ush JW/ wear his pallium outside his diocese not only at the consecration of bishops and churches but at other solemn functions. (Calendar of entria in the tapal Ktpstirs rclalint; to Circat liritaiu and Inland, ed. Hliss, Stationery t)fhce, lJ>9J. Vol. i. pp. 174. &'2I2.) ■ All tin mitfLS in tin picture are reprehcnted a> gulden in coU'Ui. •' .l//jj(i/i . . . //', J'///, ii. 0S3. ANGLO-FRENCH VERSION. xxxv hand a golden vessel, witli stem, fool, and lid, is being lifted uj), whicli lid the Arehbishop of Canterbury is raising with his right hand. 'I"hc inside is represented of the same golden colour as the outside and nothing can be detected within. On the left hand of the King is a figure similar in many respects to that on the right. He holds up a golden vessel with a lid, opening, but which none of the bystanders is touching ; and of the rayed chasuble, the same in colour as his fellow's but without eagles, it may be said that the draughtsman seems to have begun to draw a chasuble, but changed it while working into a cope with a sex-foiled golden brooch. It is lined with blue ; the apparel to the amice is golden while the apparels to the alb are green and yellow. On the middle finger of the right hand there is a ring yellow in colour. The buskins are l)lack in both these mitred figures, and they have brown hair. Both the golden vessels have round knobs on their lids. To return to the right side of the King. By the side of the mitred figure is a layman, the face bearded and the hair long, the head uncovered ; he is clothed in a long red gown lined with fur over a green coat : from the hood hang two tabs :' he has yellow hosen and red boots ; hair and beard blue in colour. In his right hand he holds a pair of white gloves. He would seem to be the forerunner in office of the Lord of the Manor of Worksop, who presents gloves to the King on the day of his coronation, and supports the right arm of the King while holding the sceptre royal. On the left, corresponding to the figure just described, is another which from the white coif worn on his head may be thought to be a judge or serjeant, or some other dignitary of the law. He also has a red gown over a blue coat, and blue beard and hair. Just above him may be seen a head, apparently that of a layman ; while considerably above this last is a figure with long blue hair and beard, wearing a furred red gown with sleeves over a green coat, and holding in his hand a round piece of gold. In after times this mark of gold was delivered to the King by the Great Chamberlain. Corresponding to this figure on the right side of the King is another dignitary of the law, if we may judge by the coif, long blue-grey gown, and furred blue hood which he wears. Other heads are scattered about the picture mainly it would seem to fill up the vacant space. And on the background of the picture is a diaper of stiuares, divided into two by the tO[) finial of the King's chair. On the right side of the King the diaper is pink ; the left blue. In these the artist has amused himself by drawing what look like human faces, to represent, it may be thought, the maxima plcbis coiijlueiitia or the tiirba conjliiens, looking through the cancelli \ against which crowding Liber re^:^alis says special precautions are to be taken. - If this picture represent the coronation of any particular King ' Mr. W. H. St. John Hope tells me that similar tabs may he seen on monumental effigies at Wadworth near Doncaster and Whcatliampstead, llerlfordsliire. - Mismle . . . IVestin. ii. 6S2. 707. xxxvi INTRODUCTION. Edward, it would seem to represent that of Edward II. rather than that of Edward III. as the King is bearded. Edward III. was only fourteen at the time of his coronation, while Edward II. was twenty-three. It would seem, however, more likely that it is the coronation, not anv particular coronation, that is intended. It will not be doubted that the picture represents the English coronation. But it may be disputed whether it represent a particular moment in the ceremony, or whether it be merely a sort of general view in which more than one ceremony is combined. If the former view be adopted, it will be at once allowed that the time is after the act of coronation, and that it does not represent the setting of the crown on the King's head by the two archbishops. For in Liber rei^alis the crown was delivered before the sceptre and verge ; and the King in the picture has both these ornaments already in his hands. Therefore the moment depicted must be after the placing of ihe crown on the King's head. Liber regalis directs that the crown shall be supported by those of royal blood after the homage ;' and though it is not members of the royal family who support the crown, but the two archbishops, it is reason- able to suppose that the ])icture represents the action spoken of in Liber regalis : which takes place after the actual coronation, the aim being to lighten the weight of the crown during the remainder of the service. What then is being done? My son has elaborated a theory that it is the offertory which is being represented. The two lower mitred figures are the chancellor and treasurer, who carry respectively the stone chalice of St. Edward and the paten, as Liber rega/is directs r or thty are the bishops who act as gos- peller and epistoler.' They are aliout to present these vessels to the King in order that he may offer them at the altar in accordance with the rubric* ; the King is about to rise, and give the orb and the staff to the figures with the coif on the one side and with the white gloves on the other. Above the figure with the coif is the officer who presents the King with the mark of gold which is offered at the altar after the bread and wine. The weak point in this theory is that it does not explain the attitude of the two archbishops at the side of the King holding his crown. At the moment of the offertory it may be supposed that the Archbishop of Canterbury would be at the altar, not supporting the King's crown. And the lifting up of the lid of the chalice, or whatever the vessel may be, is not exjiiained, unless it be said that its contents are being exhibiteti to the King, like the contents of the other vessel called a paten, but which more resembles a pyx for obleys than a paten. It must be owned that these vessels have hitherto been a great puzzle. At one time I had fancied that they were for the cream and holy oil ; but the moment for anointing has been long past when the King has received the crown and sceptres, not to speak of the robes of St. Edwaril. In ' MissaU- . . . IWstin. ii. 70S. ~ Missale . . . IW-itm. ii. 679. ' Device for the Coronal ion of A'iin; ILiiry I'll. Kuilaiul I'apois, Ciiindin Siviitj', 1842. p. 21. * op. (it. ii. 716. ANCrO-FRENCIT VERSION. xvxvii support of the view that one of the vessels, at least, is a chrismalory, our Treasurer, Mr. Dewick, points out to me a vessel, very like that on the left hand of the King, on fo. 12 of Egerton MS. 1067 in the British Museum, which the clerk holds by the side of a bishop ad- ministering confirmation, and which is therefore very likely indeed to be a chrismatory. There is also another example of a flattened vessel of the same kind in use at the coronation of St. Louis, from which it would seem unction is being administered.' On the other hand, Mr. Dewick thinks that we have no particular moment represented ; but the King is shown with the great officers about him who take part in the ceremonial ; that it depicts a sort of G/ory of Regality, the King crowned and vested, with all the courtiers around him that serve in the coronation, with the symbols of their respective duties. Still, the picture shows none of the three swords, which so back to the coronation of Richard I. During Mr. E. J. L. Scott's researches in the Muniment Room of Westminster Abbey, he discovered a large fragment of an Anglo- French version of the Liber rega/is, which he edited at the expense of Dr. Bradley, the present Dean of Westminster, who, with great courtesy, has given me some copies of this print. I have collated Mr. Scott's work with the text in this volume and given the variants under the symbol W. There is a document akin to this version which I have printed as Appendix XI. Certain points in the ceremonial of the «iediaeval coronation have light thrown upon them by this short paper.- A version into French of the order for the coronation of Charles V. of France was made by a Carmelite friar in 1372, and explanations given of the ceremonies after the manner of Durandus. It has been edited l)y Charles Barthelemy.' ' Thirty two miniatures from a Boole of Hours of Joan II. Qncen of Na^'arrc, Roxburghe Club, 1899, plate xxiii. - See below, p. 116. •■ See his translation of Durandus, Rational on .Manncl drs Divins Ojjict's, Paris, 1854. t. i. p. 377. There is no need 10 remind members of the Henry Bnulshaw Society of the sumptuous edition put forth by Mr. Dewick in 1899 of tlie coronation order of this same prince. III. INTRODUCTION TO THE CONSECRATION OF IIIE ANGLO-SAXON KING. Tins recension of the consecration of the Anglo-Saxon King is takrn from a pontifical belonging to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, thi- number of which is 44. It appears to have been written in the eleventh century. Mr. Warner assigns the writing to the later half of this century, probably after the Conquest. A collotype of the script appears as Plate III. reduced considerably in size, for the portion of the page of the manuscript covered by writing is large, nine inches by six, while the leaves themselves are 135: by 9}-/;. This pontifical has been attributed to Canterbury by more than one writer. It cannot be doubted that it is an English pontifical. It would also seem to have been written for some church in the province of Canterbury : for in the examination of the bishop elect he is asked if he will be obedient to the ("hurch of Canterbury. Vis siibicctus esse et obocdiciis in diuinis ncf;ri>nnti of the old bencdi" lion except the wordb at the begin- ning and end of the form. It has already been noticed that the same kind of change was made by Dr. Sancroft at the time of the coronation of lames 11.' the old forms being eviscerated, and nothing left but the beginnings and ends. It is thus to be observed that after all the liturgical methods of the eleventh and seventeenth centuries have a good deal in common. Another variation from the usual text of this recension is the intro- duction of anthems in greater abundance than before, and this feature is also shown in another manuscript, Vitellius A. vii. which, however, preserves the usual forms of the recension in the ijrayer.s. There are traces of the writing of an anthem in this latter manuscri])t after Deus cuius omnis on p, 56, where there is no anthem in the present edition : but the state of the manuscript is such that it has resisted the attempts made to read it. In the coronation of the queen there is a curious adaptation of the anthem Tota piilchra es,' inserted again in a place where the present edition has no anthem, at the moment of the coronation, after Dcus iuius est on p. 62. Where, too, the ordinary text of this anthem has arnica niea, Vitellius A, vii. has regina nostra, which in one place immediately j^recedes Veni coromxberis. Mr. Micklethwaite has said that the established religion at Westminster is Basiliolatry.^ This seems another instance of it ; and the changing of an anthem a^ddressed to St. Mary into an anthem addressed to the queen is as striking as the change of the text of Tc Dcu/n into the Bonaventuran Te Dciim, or of Victimac paschali into a hymn in honour of Martin Luther,' Amongst the anthems one i)eculiarily is well worth noticing : the absence on p. 55 of this edition of the anlhem Unxcnait Sa/ainancfi, whicli is found as early as l^gberl's Pontifical, and remains in all our coronation orders down to the present time. In its i)lace is an anthem, which a])pears to be rare ; over the writing of its Jirst word the scribe has stuml)led, and the author does not seem to have exhibited an exact knowledge of Latin, using the deponent verb obliviscor as if it had the force of the j)assive. Another addition which this printed edition of the second recension shows is the giving of a pallium to the King when he has been crowned, and the prayers, anthem, and benediction connected with this are all peculiar to the edition now printed. In tlie prayer Omnium Domine on p. 58, amongst other changes the text, together with two other manuscripts, reads rcgibus Britanniac instead of regibus tcrrae. This may jjoint out that at the lime at which this prayer was written there were other kings in Britain before , ' Sec above, p. xvii. - Sec below in ihc iiulcs, p. 172. (or rikiiiiccs to lla Icxl o( lliis .iiiiIkiii. •' Saaisly, 1872. vol. ii. p. lo. «. ♦ Sec '/'ntmaclions oj Ihc Siiiitt PtiuTs Erdesiolositaf Socitiy, 1S95. Vol. iii. |>. .54. //. 2. CONSECRATION OF THE AA'GLO-SAXON KING. xli whom the new crowned king might be honoured. Or it inay be merely a prayer that he may be honoureci more than his ancestors. The usual text of the second recension acknowledges very fully the righ s of the Kin:,' of England over the Church of England, which our Anglo-Saxon f:xthers were wont to uphold.' In the prayer for the consecration of the King Omnipotens setnpiterne Dcus on p. 54 appear the words: "hie Domine quaesuuius totius regni anglo-saxonum ecclesiam deinceps cum plebibus sibi commissis ita enutriat ac doceat, muniat et instruat contraque omnes visibiies et invisibiles hustes idem potenter rega itcrque tuae virtutis regimme regat et defendat,"' which continued in our coronation orders until with the whole prayer they were removed by Dr. Compton from the ( orona ion of \V'illiam and Mary." In this edition of the second recension tiere is also an allusion to the teaching that the King rules the Church, which is contained in the new benediction on the delivery of the rod, on p. 58, with which the King is bidden to rule peaceably the church of God, per quam .... Ecclesiam Dei pacifice regere. And the anthems added to this edition show a further development of the idea that the ofifii e of a king is of afifinity to the office of a bishop. For besides the prayer Dens qui populis, which is taken from the service of the consecration of a bishop, or the anniversary of the consecration of a pope,^ one of the anthems added to the present edition has a similar source. Bedei7iptor mundi on p. 54 is taken from the service for the reception of a bishop. Its first words* appears in the Corpus pontifical (44) a little before the coronation order, on p. 273 as part of the service for the reception of an archbishop. Another point in which the consecration of a King in this recension touches the consecration of a bishop is the direction, if I read the rubric on p. 53 aright, that three bishops at least shall assist in the coronation of the King, thus resembling the rule made in the first Council of Nicaea that three bishops shall assist in the consecration of a bishop. But there is no directicm for any imposition of hands in any English order, although there is evidence which leads up to the thought that at one time there may have been some such ceremony at the coronation of an English King. For in the first account that we have of the benediction of a Kino- in these islands,' it is said that St. Columba laid his hand upon the head of King Aidan, consecrating him and blessing him."' Also during the ("luarrel between Henry II. and St. Thomas of Canterbury, the Archbishop of York crowned the King's son at Westminster, thereby, it was said, doing a wrong to the Church of Canterbury, because the ' See Dr. R. W. Church, late Dean of St. Paul's, On the Relations between Church rt«flf6Va/t', Macmillan, 1899. Reprinted from the Christian Remembrancer oi A^iiW, 1850. - Sec above, p. xxii. and below, p. 138. * See below, in the notes, p. 164. ■• For the text of the anthem see notes, p. 165. below. ' William Reeves, Life of St. Columba written l>v Adamnau, Book III. Chap. \i. Edinburgh, 1874. p. 81. COR. ORDERS d xlii INTRODUCTION. Archbishop of York had laid his hands upon the King's son within the l^rovince of Canterbury.'" There is also positive evidence that abroad a laying on of hands was, at one coronation at least, a part of the ceremony. It appears that when William, Count of Holland, was crowned King of the Romans on November ist, 1248, immediately after the anointing by the Archbishop of Mentz, the Archbishop of Triers laid his hands upon the King saying: "May the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of knowledge and true godliness, the spirit of counsel and streni^th come down upon thee ; and mayest thou be filled with the spirit of the fear of the Lord."- The form is allied to that of confirmation, rather than to the^rrz/c Spiriiufn Sanctum of orders. Our Treasurer, Mr. Dewick, has pointed out as remarkable the expression quae per niatius Jiostrae itnpositionem hodie regina constituitur in the coronation of the Queen, which in this edition is on p 62 ; and he considers it '' possible that laying on of hands was once the general practice at coronations."^ In this second recension, however, there is none of that resemblance in structure to the order for an episcopal consecration which we see in the fourth recension, or Liber regalis : nor is it more marked in the third recension, although this has many points of contact with the fourth. In the fourth recension, with the delivery of the sacerdotal ornaments, the use of cream at the anointing, and the alteration of the structure of the coronation order, the mediaeval idea of the analogy between the office of a bishop and the otfice of a king seems to have reached its fullest developement.^ In the Secret of the mass on p. 63, a considerable change in the meaning of the prayer has been brought about by the interpolation into the text of the word saiutare, and the change oifiaiit \x\\.ofiat, changes which are not found elsewhere. Proficiant later on has also been changed into profitiat. In the ordinary text the prayer is that the gifts may become to us the body and blood of the Son of God. In the text of this edition the prayer is that the body and blood of the Son of God may give health to us. Such a change if made in a later age would certainly be pointed out as indicating a modification of doctrine, which at this period is not likely. ' J. C. Robertson, Materials for the history of Thomas Becket, Rolls Series, 1S75. Vol. i. p. 81. " Asseverabanl j-lii quia Cantuariensis ccclesiae derogarct dignitali. Iniposuii autcm ei maniim archiepiscopus liboraceiisis in Cantuariensi provincia \or \ dioecesi, in ccclesia videlicet beati Petri apud Wolmonaslerium] conlru dignitatem ecclcsiac Cantuariensis el antiquain consueluilinem. - lohannes de lieca, Ijistoria 7>ttcruni tpiscofonim Ultraiectinac scdis et comitum llollandiae, Franet)uerae, R. Doyema, 161 2. p. 67. "Archiepiscopus autem Treverensis CanceiiariusGalliae manus illi su|X'rimposuit, ita dicens ; ...... " Desccndat in te Spiritus sapientiae intelligeuliae, scientiae, piclatts, fortiludinis, ct consilii, replearis<|ue spiritu linioris Domini." =* E. .S. Dewick, Coronation Boole of Charles V. of France, H.B.S. 1S99. notes, p. 90- ■• Sec my paper on llie " Sacrinu of the English Kinjjs," in Archirohi^iiai /ournal, I S94. vol. 11. p. 2S. CONSECKATJON OF THE ANGLO-SAXON A7AV/. xliii The consecration of the Queen begins on p. 62, and three manuscripts give permission to a simple priest to perform this office : a/t episcopo vel presbytero dueinia. In Ajjpendix X. is printed the modern order; and it is of interest to sec that, though the order for the King has under- gone so many and repeated changes, yet the order for the (Jueen remains not unlike that which appeared nearly a thousand years ago. The constitutional lawyer may note that although the author of the second recension of our coronation order has retained in the jirayer Omnipoiens Scmpiterne Dens on p. 55, the word c/igiiiiiis, which in Liber regalis appears as consecramiis^ yet in Sta cf refine there already exists }iereditario iiire in the sentence reg/ii solium hereditaria iure iibi delegattim per aucioritatem Dei. ^ A/is.ui/e . . . I Vest III. ii. bSS. CORONATION OF KING WILLIAM AND OUEEN MARY. COR. ORDERS. [The Report concerning the Coronation of King William and Queen Mary.] /The Report concerning the Coronation. [p. i May it please yc Majesty The Cofiiittee appointed by yo"" Ma^'^: to consider^ the Preparations and manner of yo^ Ma^''-'^ Coronation, having sent unto the several Offices and Officers who are to provide all things in this great Solemnity and to attend therein, to transmit unto Us''^ what was furnished and provided in their respective Offices, and also in what manner the same was done, do humbly report to yo"" Ma^'^^ That We find the method of the Preparations of the last Coronation, w^h we judge to be most exact to be as followeth. An Order was made for M^ Atturney to prepare a draught of a Proclamation, and also a draught of a Comission to pass the great Seal, for erecting a Court of Claims which is here prepared accordingly with Blanks for yo"" Ma^'s to put in the names of the Cofnissioners, and the day yo"" Ma.^'^^ shall appoint them to meet in the Painted Chamber at Westm''. And that yo"" Ma^'^ please to pass the said Proclamation at Council, and to Order the Coinission to pass the great Seal accordingly. The Duke of Norfolk Earl Marshall hath brought a Scheme of the Proceedings at the last Coronation, and also offered a new Scheme for this Coronation, in regard yo"" Ma^'e and the Queen are to be both Crown'd as Soveraigns. The Lord Bishop of London hath brought the forms of the Divine Service to be used in the Abbey. The Lord Steward is preparing the manner and Estimate of a Dinner with the same number of Tables as at the last Corona- tion but miore proper and not exceeding in the Expense. Sf" Ctir Wren hath delivered a Report that the exact charge of all the work done by his Office at the last Coronation, for fitting and preparing Westm"" Hall for the Dinner with Galleries, taking down and setting up the Courts of Justice, The Throne and ^ of : interlined, not in Council Register. - In the Council Register the third person is used, not the first. B 2 4 COr.ONATrON CI-- Jl'ILIJAM AND .UAA'V. [heralds l. 19. Scaffolds i.i Wcscm-" Abbcy^ Kayling the Streets &c. as appears particularly in his Report amounted to 1670" 7^ and in regard that Timber and Boards are now dearer one 5''' part, this charge may be 1800'' to be done by the Lord Chamberlains Warr'. The Clerk of the great Wardrobe Certifies that the charge of what was provided in that Office at the last Coronation in preparations for the King and Queen, and covering the Thrones, Chairs, Stools, Blew cloth. Red Say, Coats for the Officers of Arms, Trumpets, Drums, etc^^. did amount to 4553'' 9^^ 4''. To be by the Lord Chamberlains warrants. And by the Earl Marshals Warr^s for the Officers of Arms. /Besides the Liveries for the Yeomen of the Guard which [p. ii. will amount to — 2200''. Besides the Watermens Liveries — 315I' — lo^. Besides the Liveries for the Stables and Footmen came to 1608I' 08s ic^l The Master of the Jewell house reports. That he hath the Regalia in his Custody which were provided at the last Corona- tion, except what the Dean of Westm^ hath in his keeping, both which make the Regalia compleat, Ikit he further saics that the Crown called S^ Edwards Crown is dismantled of the Jewells. That the Queens Coronation Crown is dismantled. That the Queens Crown of State is dismantled. That her Ma^'^^ Circle or Coronet is dismantled. That the Queens Scepter is dismantled. To be provided 2. Ingots of Gold one a pound weight, the other a Mark for the King to offer, the like for the Queen, and 2. Coronation Rings for the King and Queen. And certifies that the Jewellers charge for making and fur- nishing the Jewels, for adorning these Regalia will come to — 3703. \6. s- All which must be refitted and adorned. To which must be added for the Queen an Orb of gold, adorned as the Kings, and a Scepter aLlorn'd as the Kings instead of the Ivory Rod. Other I'articulars to be pro\ided out of the Jewel house. For the chief JUitler a ("up of 32. Ounces of (".old as I'.arl i)( Arundell. A guilt Bowl and Cover for the Ma\-or of Oxford as under liutler of about 108. Ounces. Another for the Champion 30. Ounces. Another for the chief Cup-bearer 26. Ounces. HERALDSL. 19.] CORONATION OF WILLIAM AND MARY. 5 Two guilt Basons, one Ewer and Assay Cup for the Lord great Chamberlain about 342. Ounces. Two guilt Basons for the chief Almoner about 305. Ounces, These to be by my Lord Chamberlains Warrant. Crowns, Collars and Badges for the Officers of Arms. By the Earl Marshals Warrant. Particulars to be provided out of the great Wardrobe by the Lord Chamberlains Warrant. For the King. The Colobium Sindonis of fine Linnen or Sarsenet in fashion of a Surplice without Sleeves. The Supertunica a close Coat of Cloth of gold, reaching to tlie heels lined with Crimson Taffata, and girt with a broad Girdle of Cloth of Gold to be put over the Colobium. Tiie Armilla in fashion of a Stole made of Cloth of Gold to be put about the Kings Neck, and fastned above and beneath the Elbows with Silk Ribbands. /A Pall of Cloth of Gold in fashion of a Cope. [p. iii. A pair of Hose or Buskins of Cloth of Gold. A pair of Sandals of Cloth of Gold. All these to be laid ready upon the Altar in the Choir. A shirt of fine Linnen to be opened in the places for the anointing. Another Shirt of red sarcenet over it. A SLircoat of Crimson Sattin (over that) made with a Collar for a Band, both opened for the Anointing and closed with Ribbands. A pair of under Trowses and Breeches over them, with Stockings fastned to the Trowses all of Crimson Silk. A pair of linnen Gloves. A linnen Coif. A Silk Towcll to be held before the King and Queen at the Comunion by 2. Bishops. Three swords viz^ Curtana and two others with Scabbards of Cloth of Gold. A Sword of State with a rich embroidered Scabbard. 2 Swords with Scabbards of Purple Velvet for the King and Queen to be girt with. Two iMantles of Crimson Velvet furr'd with P>mine, and 2. Caps or Hats with Cloth of gold lin'd with Ermine for 2 Persons representing the Dukes of Normandy and Acquitain. A Canopy of Cloth of Gold to be borne over the King 6 CORONATION OF WILLIAM AND MARY. [her.\i.I)S l. 19. and Queen by . . . liarons of the Cinque Ports 2. to a Staff with a Silver Bell guilt at each corner of the Canopy viz^ 4. Bells. A Pall of Cloth of Gold for the King and Queen to offer. Another Pall to be held over the King and Queen during their Anointing by 4. Knights of the Garter. Cloth of Gold to cover the Throne. Two rich Chairs with Cushions and P^ootstools on the Throne. Two other below on the East side of the Throne opposite to the Altar in which the King and Queen first sit. Two rich Chairs and Traverse for the King and Queen, with Foot Stools and Cushions whereon the King and Queen sit on the South side below the Altar during the Sermon. Two other Chairs placed for the King and Queen before the Altar when they arc aiiointed and then cloathcd. S^ Edward's Chair (and another Chair like itj richly furnished with Cloth of gold placed in the midst against the Altar, towards the Throne whereon the King and Queen are Crowned. Two Chairs of Purple Velvet for the Bishops to sit in on the North side of the Altar. Two Chairs and Traverses for the King and Queen within S^ Edwards Chapell. Red Say to cover all the Throne in W'cstni'' Hall & in the Church. Blew Cloth spread in the way from the Steps in the Hall to the Choir in the Church. Fine cloth or Cotton Wool to dry the places anointed for both their Majesties. /Particulars to be provided out [p. iv. of the great Wardrobe by the Lord Chamber- lains Warrant. For the Queen. A Robe of Crimson Velvet with a Tra\n. A Kirtle turn'd up with luinine. A Mantle of Crimson Velvet laced as the Kings powdcr'd with Ermines with lUittons and Tassels of Silk antl GoUl w ilh a Train. A Surcoat of Crimson Velvet Ci\/iui- liiu. - — '^ inttrHn:d. ' — ^ uiuiertiinii. HF.RAi-ns I.. 19.] CORONATION OF WILLIAM AXn MARY. 17 tliem, go down to y"-' Altar, and kneeling down upun the Steps there, make each of them their first Oblation : Which is, each of them a Pall (or Altar Cloth) of Cloth of gold ; deliverd by the ^Master of the Great Wardrobe to the Lord great Chamberlain, and by him to their Majesties ; and each of them an Ingot, or Wedge of gold of a Pouml-Weight, which the Treas"" of the Houshold delivers to the Lord great Chamberlain, and he to their Majesties : Both to be received by the ArchBishop stand- ing, (in which posture he is also to receive all other Oblations) 'the Palls' to be reverently laid upon the Altar, and the gold to be received into the Basin, and with like reverence put upon the Altar. The Archbishop saith this praier ; the King, and Queen still kneeling. " O God who dwellest in the high, and holy place, with them " also who are of an humble Spirit ; Look down mercifully upon " these thy Servants William Our King and Marie Our Queen, " here humbling themselves before thee at thy Footstool ; and " graciously receive their Oblations, which in humble acknow- " ledgement of th\' Soverainty over All, and thy great Bounty " to them in particular, they have now offerd up unto thee. " Accept, We beseech thee, this their Freewill-Offering, through " Jesus Christ Our only Mediato"" and Advocate. Amen. %. The King and Queen having thus offerd, & so fulfilled Deut. xvi. 16] his Commandment, who said -Thou shalt not appear before the Lord thy God empty- ; go to their Chairs, set for them on the South side of the Altar ; where they are to kneel at their Faldstools, when y*^ Litanie begins. /In the mean time the Lords, who carry the Regalia [p. 8. both of the King and Queen (Except those who carry the Swords; come in Order near to the Altar, and present every one what he carries to the Archbishop & the Dean of Westm'' (to be by them placed upon the Altar;) and then retire to the places, & Seats appointed for them. Cap. 4. The Litanie. •I Then followeth the Litanie ; to be sung by two Bishops, vested in Copes, & kneeling at a Faldstool, above the Steps of the Theater on the middle of the East side thereof; the Quire singing the responses to the Organ. And at the end of the Collect, '^We humbly beseech thee," shall be added by the Archbishop or one of the Bishops. ' — ' interliii'd. - — - underlined. ' — •' tinderlineii. COR. OKDEKS. C l8 CORONATION OF WILLIAM AND MARY. [HERAl.ns l. 19. " Oh God, who providcst for thy People by thy Power, and " rulest over them in Love, grant unto these thy Servants " Wilh'am and Marie Our King & Queen the Spirit of Wisdom " and Govcrmentf ; that being devoted unto thee with all " their Hearts, they may so wisely govern this Kingdom, that " in their time Christian Religion may continue in Peace, and " thy Church and People in Safety and Prosperity ; that so " persevering in good works to the end, the>- may b>- thy " mercy come to thy Everlasting Kingdom : through thy Son " Jesus Christ Our Lord. The Grace of Our Lord Jesus Christ, and the Love of God, and the Fellowship of the Holy Ghost be with Us all Evermore. Amen. Cap. 5. The Beginning of the CoMUNiONf Service.^ IF Then the ArchBishop beginneth the Cofnunion. ^Our Father which art in Heaven &c. Almighty God unto whom all hearts be open &c. Almighty God whose Kingdom is Everlasting- &c. (as it stands before in pag. 3.) IF The Epistle to be read by a Bishop, i Pet. ii. 1 1-17. IF The Gospel to be read by another Bishop. S. Matt. xxii. 15-22. IF Then the ArchBishop beginneth the Nicene Creed, and the Quire singeth it ; the King and Queen standing up. /Cap. 6. The Sermon. [p. 9. ^ At the end of the Creed one of the Bishops is read)' in the Pulpit (plac'd upon the Pillar at the North East corner of the Theater'*) and begins the Sermon ; which is to be short, and suitable to the great Occasion. IF The King and Queen hear the Sermon, sitting in their Chairs, on the South side of the Altar, over against the Pulpit : And whereas the King was uncovered during the Oblation, & the Litanie' ; when the Sermon begins he puts on his Cap of Crimson Velvet, turn'd up with Ermines,'' and so continues to y<2 end of it. On his right hand stands the Bp. of Duresme* ; and beyond the Bp, on the same side, the Lords, that carry the ' in fuaripti is rvritteit in red ink : begin E.\'. Affer this a number of additions and alterations have been made in red ink on the next three leaves, 2 — '■* underlined with red. •' '/'he two last letters of this 70ord are in red, altering tico Others which cannot he viaae out. ■* The last lettei; written in Hack y, has been altered in red into ic. " The last c is struck out with red. HERALDS L. 19.] COKONATJOX OF WILLIAM AND MARY. 19 Swords : on his left hand the Bp. of Bath and Wells, and the Lord great Chamberlain. 11 The Queen sits in her Chair on the left hand of the King ; the 2. Bps that support her standing one on either hand of her. And the great Lady Assistant, and she that bears up her Train, constantly attend near her during the whole Solemnity. The other great Ladies are in the Seats prepared and appointed for them. H On the North side of the Altar sits the ABp in a Purple \'elvet Chair ; the Bp^ being plac'd on Forms along the North Wall, betwixt him and the Pulpit. And on the South side, East of the King's Chair, nearer to the Altar, stands the Dean of Westmr. the rest of the Bp*. and the Prebendaries of Westm"". H How the rest of the Peers and great Ofificers etc^ are to be disposed ofift, may be seen in the Ceremonial of ye Heralds. /Cap. f The Oath. [p. lo. IF The Sermon being Ended, the King uncovers his head ; and the ABp. ariseth and goeth to the King and Queen, and standing before them, asketh them ; ^Are yo"". IMaties willing to take the Oath *usually taken by y^ Predecessors* - ? And the King and Queen each of them answering ^I am willing •? the ABp. ministreth these questions ; and the King and Queen having each of them their^ book in their hand, answer each Question severally, as followeth ; ^Archbishop. Will you solemnly promise and Swear to govern the People of this Kingdome of England, and the Dominions thereto belonging, according to the Statutes in Parliament agreed on, and y^ Laws and Customes of ye same ? King & Queen. I solemnly p»-omis3 so to do. Archbishop. Will you to yo"" Power cause Law and Justice in Mercy to be Executed in all yo"" Judgments ? King & Queen. I will. Archbishop. Will you to the Utmost of yo'^ Power maintain the Laws of God, the true Profession of y^ Gospell and the Protestant Reformed Religion Established by Law ; and will you preserve unto y^ Bishops & Clergy of this Realm, and to y^ Churches committed to their Charge, all such Rights and Privi- leges, as by Law do or shall appertain unto them or any of them. King & Queen. All this I promise to do.' ^ wHtten in red ink. 2 — - tituierlined with red. * — * struck out lintk a Idack line. ^ — ■* underlined in blick. ■* struck out and a interlined. ■' — ■'' Written by same hand but xcith different pen and ink. It does not Jill up the iK'hole of p. 10. C 2 20 CORONATION OF WIIIJAM AMI MARY, [heralds I.. 19. /If ^Tlicn the Kint; and Oiiccn arisinc^ out ofthcir Chairs, [p. 11. supported as before, and assisted by the Lord great Chamberlain, the Sword of State bcini^ carried before them, shall ^o to the Altar, and there make a- solemn Oath in the sii^ht of all the I'eople to observe the Premisses ; ''each of them' layintj their riefht^ hands'* upon the holy Gospels in the great Bible, (which was before carried in the Procession, and is now brought from the Altar by the AHP, and tendered to them as ''he kneels'"' upon the Steps,) and saying these words each of them. " The things which I have here before promised, I will perform " and keep ; so help Me God. Then each of them l^isseth y^' book. Cap: 8. The Anointing. ^ The King and Queen having thus taken their Oaths, return to their Chairs ; and both kneeling at their Faldstools, the ABp beginneth the Hymn 'Vexi, Cri.A'iou Si'lRlTUS,' and the Quire singeth it out. /" Come holy Ghost, our Souls Inspire. [p. 12. " And warm them with thy heavenly fire. " Thou, who th' anointing Spirit art, " To Us thy sevenfold Gifts impart. " Let th\- blest Unctif)n from above, " Wq. to Us Comfort, Life, and Love. " Lnable with Coelestinl light " The weakness of Our mortal Sight. " Anoint, and chear Our hearts, Our face " With the abundance of th\' Grace. " Keej) far Our foes ; give Peace at home : " Where thou dost dwell, no ill can come. " Teach us to know the Father, Son, " And Spirit of both, and all but one ; " That so through ages all along " This may be Our triumphant Song : " In thee, O Lord, We make Our boast, " Father, Son, and lloly Ghost. ' A lar^c li/aitk spaif is left at (he head of t/iis /la^v ; appaitntly intimhii for part of the Coronation Oath, the Irn'^h of which was not kuoxvn at liiiu of l>f_i;innint;; tht- writing; of this fara^'rafh. ']he royal assent was only ji^ivcn to the hill for establish itii; the Coronation Oath on Afril 9, the Coronation itself bein}^ on the I \th. (See .\l>p. IN'. ) '^ strntic out and llieir interlined in red ink. '"'—•'' interlined. * interline {. , ' The s sirnek out. " — " underlined wit'i red ; ami in the margin is written in red : rhcy kiu-el. ' — '' underlined with hiaeh and then struck out with red line ; Vcni Creator SjiiriUis '.(iritten in inar>;;in in ret, underlined xuith Hack, HERALDS L. 19.] CORONATION OF WILLIAM AND MARY. 2r ^\ The ^Veni Creator' being sung out, the ABp. saith this Prayer. *! O Lord, holy Father, Allmighty and Everlasting God, the Kxalter of the Humble, and tiie Strength of thy Chosen ; who by the Anointing with Oil didst of old make and Consecrate Kings, Priests, and Prophets to teach, and govern thy Peoyile Israel. Regard, We beseech thee,- the Supplications of thy Congregations''; Bless this Oil, (^Here the ABp lays his hand upon the Ampulla^) and sanctify these thy chosen Serv^^ William and Mary, who by our Office and Ministry, are now to be annointed, and Consecrated King and Queen of this Realm^ Strengthen them O Lord with the holy Ghost the Comforter ; Confirm, and Establi.sh them, with thy free, and Princely Spirit ; the Spirit of Wisdom, and Government ; the Spirit of Council, and Ghostly Strength ; the Spirit of Knowledge, and true Godliness ; and fill them, O Lord, with the Spirit of thy holy feat ; now and for ever. Amen. IF This Prayer being ended, the Quire sing, /[ 'Kings i. 34' " Zadock"' the Priest, and Nathan the [p. 13. " Prophet anointed Solomon 39' King f and they blew the •' Trumpets, and Piped with Pipes, and rejoyced with great Jo}', "so that the Earth rent with the sound of them ;^ and they said, 40'' " God save King Solomon Long live the King, may the " King live for ever.-' Amen.^" ^ In the mean time the King and Queen rising from their Devotions, go before the Altar (supported, and attended, as before :) and the King is there by the Lord great Chamberlain etc"^. disrobed of his upper Garment (His Crimson \^elvet Mantle) (which are immediately to be carried thence into the Kings Traverse, set up for him in King Edwards Chapell :) And the Kings under Garment is opend on the breast by the Dean of Westm"" and the Queens by the chief Lady Assistant. f The King and Queen sit down" in their Chairs (plac'd in the midst of the Area over against the Altar with Faldstools before it'-j wherein they are to be anointed. Four Knights of the Garter hold over them a rich Pall of Silk or Cloth of Gold. The Dean of Westm"". taking the Ampulla, and Spoon, from off the Altar, holdeth them ready, pouring some of the Hoi}- Oil into the Spoon : And with it the ABp. anointeth first the King, and then the Queen, in the form of a Cross. ' — ' Underlined with black line. - Lnterlitied. •' The final s struck out in black. * — ■• Underlined with red. ■' — ^ written in margin in red ink. " The c struck out with black ink. ~ Here a vertical red line. •* written in viarx'in in red ink. " This anthem is underlined with red. '" This word is written in red. '' interlined in red. '- struck out and ihem interlined in red. 22 CORONATION OF WILLIAM AND MARY, [heralds L. 19. 1. On the Crown of the head ; saying, " Be thy head anointed with holy oil, as Kings, Priests^ and Prophets were anointed." 2. On the Breast ; saying, " Be thy Breast anointed with holy Oil.- 3. On the Palms of both the hands ; saying, " Be th}- hands anointed with holy Oil." " And as Solomon was anointed King by Zadock'' the Priest, " and Nathan the Prophet ; so be You anointed, blessed, and " consecrated King and Queen of this Kingdom over the Lord^ " People, whom the Lord your God hath given You to rule, and " Govern, In the name of God the Father, the Son, and the Holy " Ghost, Amen. II Then the King and Queen kneel down at the Faldstool ; and the ABp. saith this Pra\'er, or Blessing over tliem. " Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who b\' his Father " was anointed with the Oil of Gladness above his Pillows ; b\' /" His holy anointing pour down upon your heads and [p. 14. " hearts, the blessing of the Holy Ghost, and prosper all the " Works of yo*" Hands ; That by the Assistance of His heavenly " Grace, You may govern, and preserve the People, Comitted to " your Charge in Wealth, Peace, and Godliness ; and after a " long, and glorious Course of ruling this temporal Kingdom, "wisely, justly, and religiously, You may at last be made Par- " takers of an Eternal Kingdom, thro the Merits of Jesus Christ " Our Lord Amen. IT This Prayer being ended the King and Queen arise ami sit down again in their Chairs ; and the Dean of Westm'". closeth again the fore part of the Kings under Garment, which before was open'd ; and the chief Lady Assistant the Queens, having first wip'd or dried the places anointed, with fine Linncn or fine bombast Wool, deliver'd to them by the Lord great Cham- berlain. *The Spurs are then brought from y^' Altar by y^ Dean of Westm"". & deliver'd to a Nobleman appointed thereto by the King, who kneeling down touches the Kings heels with them & forthwith sends them back to the Altar, that they may not encumber the King.* IF In the meantime this short Anthem is sung. Ps. 84. 9. *Behold, O God, Our Defender : and look ujion the face of thine Anointed. ' inter lined hi red. • litis address under It tied with red. ' The c struck out in red. * stniek out ivith blaek. ■* — ' This is all rvritlen in the niars^in in Idaek in/.: * — * Underlined with red ink, cxeept the references ^ which are written in the margin. HERALDS I.. 19.] COKONAT/O.V OF WILLIAM AND MARY. 23 xviij. 51. Great Prosperity givest thou unto thy King: &' wilt show loving kindness to thine Anointed for evermore. I. Sam. ii. 10. The Adversaries of the Lord shall be broken to Pieces ; out of Heaven shall he thunder upon them : But He shall give strength unto his King, and exalt the Horn of his Anointed. Allelujah.^ * Cap. 9. The Oi'.lation and Girding on of the sword IF While the Anthem is yct^ singing, the King riscth up, and ungirds his Sword, and going to the Steps of the Altar offers it up there in the Scabbard ; and then returns, and sits down again in the Chair : And the ABp. having receiv'd the Sword from the King, laies it upon the Altar, and saith the following Prayer. **' Hear Our Prayers, We beseech thee, O Lord ; and with thy " heavenly Grace so sanctify and bless these thy Servants King " Wiftm and Queen Mary, that they may not bear the Sword " in vain, but /may use it as the Ministers of God, for the [p. 15. " terror and Punishment of evil doers, and for the protection, " and Encouragement of all, that do well ; through Jesus Christ " Our Lord Amen. IF Then the ABp. takes the Sword from off the Altar, and the Bp* assisting, and going along with him, delivers it into the Kings right hand, and then into the Queens, and they both holding it the ArchBP. saith. " Receive this Kingly Sword, brought now from the Altar of *' God, and deliver'd to You by the hands of Us the Bp^, and '* Servants of God, though unworthy. IF The King and Queen standing up, the Sword is girt about the King, by the Lord great Chamberlain, or some other Peer thereto by them appointed ; and then the King and Queen sitting down, the ArchBP saith. " Remember Him of whom the Royal Psalmist did Prophesy, " saying ; Gird thee with thy Sword upon thy Thigh Oh thou " most Mighty, Good luck have thou with thine Hono"". Ride " on prosperously because of Truth, Meekness and Righteous- " ness. Be ye followers of Him. With this Sword do Justice. " Stop the growth of Iniquity. Protect the holy Church of " God. Help and Defend Widows and Orphans. Restore " the things that are gone to decay. Maintain the things '• y* are rcstor'd. Punish and Reform what is amiss, and " confirm what is in good Order. That doing these things You ^ altered with red ink into Alleluia. '^ interlined. 24 CORONATION OF WILLIAM AND MA AT. [hekails i.. 19. " may be glorious in all Vcrtu ; and so represtf Our Lord " Jesus Christ in this life, that you may reign for ever with Him " in the life to come. Amen. % Then the King and Queen rising up, the King ungirds his Sword, and both of them going to the Altar, offer it up there in the Scabbard, and then return and sit down in their Chairs : And the chief Peer (or He to whom their Maties shall vouchsafe that Honour) offereth the Price of it (scii' loo^) and having thus redeemed it, receiveth it from off the Altar b>' the Dean of Westminster, draweth it out of the Scabbard, and canieth it naked before their Maties during the rest of the Solemnity. /Cap: 10. The Investing with the Royal [p. i6. ROBE.S, AND THE DELIVERY OF THE OrHS. f Next the Robes Royal, or Purple Robes of State, of Cloth of Tissue, wrought with golden Eagles, and Flowers de Liz, and lin'd or furr'd with - arc by the Masf. of the great Wardrobe delivcr'd to the Dean of \\'estm''. and by him put upon the King and Queen standing ; who having received them, sit down : And then the Orbs with the Cross, are brought from the Altar by the Dean of Westmr., and delivcr'd into the Kings'' and Queens hands, by the ABi'. pronouncing this Blessing, and Exhortation. " Receive this Imperial Robe and Orb ; And the Lord \or " God endue You, with knowledge and Wisdom, with Majesty " and with Power from on High. The Lord cloth You with the " Robe of Righteousness and with the Garments of Salvation ;. " •'and gird You about with Strength, and with Gladness. Let. " Righteousness be the Girdle of )'our Loins, and FaithfuUncss ' the Girdle of Yo"" Reins.-* " And when }'ou see this Orb, thus set under the Cross ; " Remember that the whole World is subject to the Power and " Empire of Christ Our Lord. For all Power is given unto him " both in Heaven and Earth. He rulcth in the Kingdoms of " Men, and giveth them to whomsoever He will. He is the " blessed and only Potentate ; y*-" Prince of the Kings of the " Earth ; on whose Vesture, and on His Thigh, a Name is " written. King of Kings, and Lord of Lords. So tiiat no Man " can reign happil)- upon Earth, who derives not his Authority " from him, and directs not all his Administrations and Actions *' according to His Laws. ' 7//<^ I /las hccii si ruck out and a I iiifiiliiitii. The word coutratKd is represent. '^ 'J'herc art here six dots in the ori^na/. ^ s stnieh out with /•eueil. •' — •• Kti iieh out with Idaeh line. HERALDS I.. 19.] C0K0iVA7'J0N OF WILLIAM AM) MARY. 25 Cap. II. Tin: Ixvkstiturk pkr annulum et Baculum. If The .Ma', of the Jewel Mouse dehvers the Kinj^ and Queens Rin.s^s (in each of which a Table Ruby is ICnchaccd, and on that S'. Geori^es Cross Encjraven) to the Arch lii\ who puts first the Kings Ring on the 4'''. finger of his Alaties right hand, and then the Queens Ring on the 4^^ finger of her Maties right hand ; and the ArchBP. saith. /" Receive the Ring of Kingly Dignity, and the Seal of [p. 17. " Catholick Faith : that as You are this day consecrated 1 lead " of this Kingdom and People ; so being rich in Faith and " abounding in good Works, You may reign with Him who is " the King of Kings: To whom be Honour and Glory for ever " and ever Amen. IF The Scepters and Rods are next to be deliver'd, but before the King and Queen receive them, they redeliver their Orbs to the Dean of Westm"' to be again laid upon the Altar : And y*^ Lord of the Man no'' of Worsop (who claims to hold an Estate by the Service of presenting to the King, a right hand Glove on the day of his Coronation, and supporting the Kings right Arms' while he holds the Scepter with the Cross) delivers to the King and Queen each of them a pair of rich Gloves, and upon any Occasion happening afterward, supports their Maties right Arms or holds their Scepters for- them. IF The Glo\'es being put on, the Arch Bp. takes the Scepters with the Crosses, and delivers them into the King and Queens right hands, saying, •'" Receive the Royal Sceptre, the Ensign of Kingl}' Power " and Justice." IF And then he delivers the Rods with the Doves, into the King and Queens left hands ; and saith, " Receive the Rod of Equity, and Mercy. And God from " whom all holy desires, all good Counsells, and all just works " do proceed, prevent, and follow You, direct and assist You, in " the just and equal Administration, and Exercise of all these " Powers which He hath given You. Be so mercifull that Ye " be not too remiss : So execute Justice, and Judgment, that You " forget not Merc}\ Judge with Righteousness, and reprove with " Equity, and accept no Mans Person. ]^reak the Jaws of the " Wicked, and pluck the Spoil out of his Teeth ; that the " blessing of him that was ready to perish may come upon " You : Repress the Proud and lift up the Lowly : Punish the " Wicked and protect and cherish the Just and lead them all in ' s sli lick out Toilh black line. - for struck out with Mack line and 1 .y inlcrlinca. "^— •* UnJolincd xvith black. 26 CORONATIO.X OF WILLIAM AND MARY, [heralds l. 19. " the ways of Righteousness ; and thus in all things follow his " great, and holy Example, of whom the Prophet David saith, " Thou lovest Righteousness and hatest Iniquit}' ; the Scepter " of thy Kingdom is a right Scepter, even Jesus Christ Our Lord *' God blessed for ever more. Amen, /Cap: 12. The Puttinc; on of the Crown. [p. 18. If The ArchRP standing before the Altar, taketh the Crowns into His hands ; and laying them again before him upon the Altar, saith, " Oh God the Crown of the FaithfuU, who alone dost Crown " them with Mere}- and loving kindness ; Bless, and Sanctify " these thy servants William and Mar\-, Our King and Queen, "who now in lowl}- devotion* bow their heads to thy Divine r* Margent. ^, " ^^ajcsty : And as \ Here the King and Oueen must \ I ^^°" ^° ''^^ '^V' ^^ I ^ _ . • • J i. u " 4.1 • 1 ] seta Crown of pure I be put m mmd to bow their heads I .,/-,, ^ ^ ^ J « Gold upon "their heads, so enrich their Royal hearts with thy heavenly "and abundant Grace, and Crown them with all Princely " Virtues which may adorn the high Station, wherein thou hast " plac'd them ; through Him, who is the King Paternal, Immortal, "Invisible, Jesus Christ Our Lord, to whom be Hono"" and " Glor}' for ever. Amen. II Then the King and Queen sitting down in their Chairs ; the ArchBP assisted with other Bi« and the Dean of Westmr ; comes from the Altar, 2. Bi« carrying each of them a Crown, the AbP taking of one of them, the Kings Crown, reverently putteth it upon the Kings head ; then taking the Queens Crown of the other Bi.shop, he' reverently putteth it upon the Queens head. 1 At sight whereof the People 'vith loud antl rcjieated Shouts, cry -God .save the King and Queen- ; and the Trumpets sound ; and (by a Signal given) the great Guns at the Tower are then also .shot off. IF The noise ceasing the ArchBi' goes on ; and saith, "God Crown You, with a Crown of Righteousness, and vertue, "of Victory and Hoiio'". The Lord himself be unto \'ou fi>r a "crown of Glory, and for a Diadem of Beauty: And ma\' \'ou "be also a Crown of Glory in the Hand of the Lord ; and a " Royal Diadem in the hand of yo"" God. Be strong, and of a "good Courage. Observe the Comandments of God, ami walk " in his ways. I'^ight the good I'ight of Faith, and la\- hold of ' inlLtliiiid. -' — - iDiiitiliiUil with hLuh liiu. HERALDS L. 19.] COkONATIOX OF WILLIAM AND MAKY. 27 " Eternal life, that when You shall have finished }'o'' Course, "You ma)' receive a Crown of Glor)-. and HonC. and Immor- " talit\- that fadcth not away ; which God the righteous Judge, "shall give You in that da)'. 1i Then the Quire singetii this short Anthem. /Ps. cxlvij. 12. n^raise the Lord O Jerusalem, Praise [p. 19. thy God O Sion. Esa. xlix. 23. For Kings shall be thy Nursing Fathers, and Queens they Nursing Mothers. Ps. xlviij. 7. As W'c have heard, so We have seen, in the City of Our God ; God upholdeth the same for ever. Ps. 21. 13. Be thou Exalted Lord in thine own Strength: So will We sing and Praise thy Power. ALLELUIA.^ IT. As soon as the King and Queen are Crown'd ; while the Anthem is singing, the Peers and Peeresses put on their Coro- nets ; and so also all the Kings of Arms. Cap: 13. -The presenting of the Holy Bille.^ If Then shall the Dean of WcstnT" take the Holy Bible, (brought by one of the Prebends of Westm'' and brought back b)' the Dean'' in the Procession for this purpose) from off the Altar, and deliver it to the ABp. who with the rest of the Bishops, going along with him shall present it to the King and Queen, first sa)'ing these words to them ""'Thus said the Lord of old to his peculiar People by the "hand of his servant Moses.''' When thy King sitteth upon the " Throne of the Kingdom ; he shall write him a Copie of this " Law in a Book, and it shall be with him, and he shall read " therein all the days of his life ; that He may learn to fear the " Lord his God and to keep all the words of this Law to do " them, and that he turn not aside to the right hand, nor" to the " left ; to the end that He may prolong his days in his King- " dom, He, and his Children. 'And accordingly afterward, when " they made Jehoash'^ King, they not only anointed and Crowned "him; but they gave him the Testimony also, that is the Book " of the Law of God, to be the Rule of his whole life and " Government. " To put you in mind of this Rule and that You may follow " this Example, We present You with this Book, the most ' — ' 'J'he anthevi is underlined with black , except the references which arc in the margin. '^ — - uuderlittcd with black line. ' or Bi' : writ/en in margin in red. * Before this is added in margin : Our gracious King & Queen. ^ Dcut : xvij. xviij. &c. etc'*, added in m. ^ n in this word struck out by black line. '' 2 Kings xi. 12 cuidcd in vt. ^ This word has been altered. 28 CORONATION or WILI lAM AND MARY, [heralds i.. 19. " valuable thing that this World affords. Here is Wisdom ; " this is the Royal Law ; these are the lively Oracles of God. " Blessed is He that readcth and they, that hear the Words of " this Books/ that keep, and do the things conteined in it. For " these arc the Words of Eternal life ; able to make Vou [p. 20. " wise and happy in this World, nay wise unto Salvation, and so " happ\- for evermore, through Faith which is in Christ Jesus, to " whom be Glor)' for ever Amen. Cap. 14. -The Benediction and Te Deum.- If And now the King and Queen having been thus anointed, and Crowned, and having recciv'd all the Ensigns o*" Royalty ; the ArchBP solemnly blcsscth them ; and all the Bishops stana- ing about him,'^ with the rest of the Peers, follow every part of the Benediction, with a loud and hearty Amen, in this manner. " The Lord bless You and keep You. The Lord make the " light of his Countenance to shine forever upon You, and be " gracious unto You. The Lord protect You in all yoi' waies, " and preserve You from every evil thing. The Lords* prosptr '* the works of your hands upon You ; the Lord prosper all your "handy Work. Amen. "May all the blessings of Heaven and Earth plcnteousl\' '• descend upon You. The Lord give you of the Dew of " Heaven, and of y*-' fatness of the Earth ; a fruitfuU Countr}-, "and hcalthfull Seasons; a faithfull Senate, and a quiet Empire ; " Wise Counccllors, and Victorious Armies ; a Loyal Nobility^ " and a dutifull Gentry ; and an honest, peaceable, and obedient " Cornonalty. Amen.-' " In yo'' days may Justice flourish, and Righteousness look " down from Heaven. May Mercy and Truth meet together " and kiss each other : Ma\' Wisdom and Knowledge be the " Stability of yo'" Times, antl the fear of the Lord \-o' Treasure. " Amen.'' " The Lord preserve yo'' Life, ami establish yo' Throne ; " that your Reigns" may be prosperous, and }'o'' da) s many ; that " You may live long in this World, obe\''d, aiul honour'd, and " belov'd by all }-o'' People, ever encreasing in fa\o''. both witli " God and Man ; and leave a numerous Posterity to rule these " Kingdoms after You, by Succession in all ages. A.MEN.'' " The glorious Majesty of the Lord Our God be ujwn You ; " and He who hath made You King and Queen, o\er this great ' /■iiial s sinich out wilh b!a(k. - — '•' iiiidtrlincJ zvith I'lafk line. ^ struck out with black line and llicni iutcrlincii. ■• the final s stni.k out with Idack line. * underlined with black line. •• s struck out icith b\ick line. UKRAl.Ds L. 19.] C0K0N.4TJ0X OF WILLIAM AND MAIW. 29 " People, bless You with all encrcase of Grace, Hone and " Happiness in/ this World, and Crown You with [p. 21. " Immortality and Glory in the World to come. Amen.' ^ Then the Arch Bishop turneth to the People and saith. " And the same Lord God Allmighty grant, That the Clerg)- & " Xobles gathered together this day, for this great and Solemn " Service : and together with them all the People of the Land '■ fearing God, and honouring the King and Queen, and yielding *' all chearfull Obedience to Gods Cornand and theirs ; may by " the gracious assistance of Gods infinite goodness, and by the " Vigilant Care of his anointed Serves Qur Gracious King and " Queen, be continually govern'd, and preserv'd in Peace, " Plenty, & Prosperity through Jesus Christ Our Lord ; To " whom with the eternal Father and God the holy Ghost, be " glory in the Church throughout all Ages, world without End " Ame\.^ * % The blessing being thus given the King and Queen sitting down in their Chairs, vouchsafe to admit^ the ArchBP\ and Bp^ assisting at their Coronation, "to kiss the Kings Cheek, and the Queens Cheek or Hand'' : they kneeling before them one after another. IT Then the Quire begins to sing ■'Te Deum LaudamuS* and the King and Queen go up to the Theatre, upon which the Throne is placed ; all the Bishops, great Officers, and other Peers attending them, every one in his place, the Swords being carried before them, and there they sit down, and repose them- selves in their Chairs below the Throne. Cap. 15. The Lxthroxization. 1[ The ^Te Deum* being ended, the King and Queen are lifted up into their Throne, by the ArchBP and Bps and other Peers of the Kingdom, and being Inthroniz'd or plac'd therein, all the great Officers, those that bear the Swords, and the Scepters and the rest of the Nobles stand round about the Steps of the Throne ; and the ArchBP standing before the King and Queen, saith. " Stand firm, and hold fast from henceforth the Seat and " State of Royal and Imperial Dignity, which is this day " delivered /unto You in the Name, and by the Authority [p. 22. " of Allmighty God, and by the hands of Us, the Bishops, and " Serv's of God, tho' unworthy. And as You see Us to approach '■ nearer to Gods Altars, and to wait there ; so vouchsafe the ^ ittiderlined wi'.h black line. - struck out ivith black line and kiss interlined. •' — •' struck out with black line. •» — •• Underlined ivith black lincy as well as written in capitals. 30 CORONATION OF WILLIAM AND MARY, [heralds l. 19. " more graciously to continue to Us yo"". Royal favo''. and Pro- " tection. And the Lord God Allmighty whose ^linisters We " are, and the Stewards of his Misteries, Establish your Throne " in Righteousness ; that it may stand fast for evermore, like as " the Sun before Him, and as the faithfull Witness in Heaven. " Amen.' Cap; 16. The Homage. H This Exhortation being ended, all the Peers then present do their Homage jiublickly and solemnly unto the King and Queen upon the Theater. And in the mean time the L^^ Chancell"'. or Lord Keeper)- attended by Garter King of Arms &c. proclaims the Kings and Queens general Pardon, reading it distinctly, and audibly at the 4. sides of the Theatre : And at every of them as he goes along, the Treasurer of the Household, throws among the People, ^ledails of gold and Silver ; as the King and Queens Princely Largess or Donative. H The ArchBP. first kneels down before their Maties knees, y^ rest of the Bishops kneel on either hand, and about him and they do their Homage together ; for the shortning of the Ceremony ; the ArchBr. saying. P " I. N. ArchBP. of Cant: (and so every one of the rest, I " I. N. Bishop of N. and then repeat the rest audibl)- after j " the ArchBishop) will be faithfull and true, and Faith and 3 J " Truth will bear unto You, Our Sovereign Lord and Lad}', " and your heirs Kings of England : And I will do and " truly acknowledge the Service of the Lands, which I " claim to hold of You as in right of \-^" Church ; so help Me _" God II And then the ArchBP kisseth the Kings left Cheek, and the Queens left' check or Ilaiui, and sc^ the rest of the Bp=^ present after Him. *f After this the other Peers of the Realm, do their Homage in like manner; the Dukes first by themselves; and so the Marquisses, the Earls, the Vicounts, and the Barons, severally ; the first of each Order kneeling before their Maties and [p. 23. the rest with and about him, all putting off their Coronets and the foremost of each Class beginning, and llie rest sa}ing after him. ' uihlcrlincd with hhul: line. - 'I'hc fellow 0/ tin's I'rdiUrt is not /lac/:. ^ ("liorus writtr-ii in the iiiart^iii. * — * IVritteii ill capitals a 11 it uiidiiiiii •lack\ * strut k out. " — " written in ea/.\7re benesson que a tuz iours dem'• c : W. " ((c : W. '•' scrg.iunt : W. '■' plus : W. '■• oyniHimnt : \V. "> oin. W. '"' V. : pni. W. " :i : \V. "* huincit : W. ''■' out. W. '•'" — '-* scvulnns oue la tir : W. I s cccc. 20.] THE EXGLISH CORONATION ORDER. 45 benefier eel real ornemcnt & ^ijrantcz ojie cestui wostxo} roy ojic ceste ucsture portera resple/zdissc devant uo;/s par le ourneme;/t des bo//s morj' ct ap/vs ceste uic- la uie pardurable. Ccst la bencscon del espeie li Roy. Sire dieux oiez XKOstxo. p;Vere & ccst espeie de qi cesti wostro. seriau;/t^ Edward se desire estre saint de \xostxc saint main deignet benefier & sainteficr ojic il pusse estre defeissur a uedues auenes* & orphains & a tuz ojic dieu serue//t centre la cruelete de pains & soit dote de tuz iceux <\iic lui getent. mal. ^Ptiis resceua-a Ic Roy lespeye par la viain lerceuesque & de tuz les eiiesqn&s & pzx eel bail resceiiera snrenicwt & entleremcn^ la graee^' del realnie & donks li dirra levceucsquc. "D Esceuetz lespey (\nc realement \ous est bailie par. les mains -*-^ des euesq/^rs sacretz del autorite des saintz apostles & Qjic ordene' de la g/v?ce de dieu S:'* defendre la'' seint esglise & remembretz \oiis de qi dauid prt^pht'/iza soiet sai;/t pussante- me«t de nostxo. espee (\uc parmi ceo eiez la force de eq///te [col. 12. destruet^" pussa;/teme;zt les fees de mauoisete^^ & la seint esglise dieu & ses lealx p/zr eux cowbatawt defendez & destreez ceux ojic su;/t faus a la foy sicome les enemis de cristianete aidez & defendez les ueues et les orfanyms confortez les descowfortez & restorez & gardez les choses (\iie sunt restorez le tort uengez et conferme;/t ceo qest dieu^- ordine <\nc\7is pusset auoir oue \us^'^ le saueor del monde qi figure xiis portet la uie pardurable. ^^Piiis qndifit il serra saint del espey il reseera les bracers dor sur les^^ bras & lui dirra lerceuesqnc. "O Eceuet les bracers de clarete & del aiournemez/t^" de -^^ sauoir dieu par les quex viis deuetz entendre tuz votz huretz^' garnis contre tuz voz enemis. ^^Ceo dirra lej'cetiesqne quTiut le Roy rcsceuera nianntel}^ Receuez'^ mauntel oue les quatre corners \)ar qi deuez ente//dre les ojiaXxQ. parties del mounde estre soget a la poeste de dieu & c\ue nul howme poet en tere regner fors celui a qi-" le poer du regne est done de ciel. ' votre : W. - eit : ad I. W. -^ sergant : W. ■• om. W. 5 E. pref. W. a small guide letter for P in CCCC. « garde : W. ' est : W. 8 a : W. * « sa : W. '" Letters have been altered : e destruez is the reading ofW. " nianeyte : W. 12 bien : W. i^ om. W. i-« E. fref. W. ^'^ deus : add. W. '* atiironnemenl : W. '^ oueres : \V. 18 — 18 £ pyg quant il receyuera le mantel dirra lerceuesqc : W. »» le : add. \V. '^ om. W. 46 ANGLO- FRENCH VERSION OF [cccc. 20. Cest la beuescon sus la coroue du roys ou dc reync. Dieu qi cstes la^ corone dc voz lealx gcntz & ojic a lur testez mettez la corounc de pere p;rciouse bcncfiez & sainttcfictz cest corone (\ue si zoui cle est adurne de diurz-se pieres pnxiousis issint MostxQ. scriauwt- c\nc la portera soit rcplein de tuz mantves de uertuez. Piiis^ sena la corone arosce deivc benetc & Cfiscnse', & [col. 1 3. (jua.f/t la corone Ini scrra done si dirra IcrccuesqvLQ. DIcu VO//J- corone dc la corone de gloyre & de droiture &* de honur & de eourc de force ensi* (\iic i>ar nostrc benescon oue droit foy & fruit des bons eoures pusset ucnir al regne*^ pardurable oue le don' dicu que regnera sancz" fin. Quant'^ la cnrorc'^'^ Ini scrra niisc si dirra lerccuesqnc cest oracioun. Sire dieux de pardurablete deus" de uertuus le uencur de tuz enemis benefiez cesti wostxo. seriauwt'- c\ue ad eux encline sa teste & lui gardez oue longe sancte & oue'" bone uie & ojiani & quel oure wostxo. aide priera tost a lui uenetz & lui defcndez 6c lui donetz les richesses de uostxi^ gr^ce otreiez a son desir en bicn lieu coronotez de wostro. nitvci ojic a \ons pusse seruir a'* bone deuocioun. E^'" donks soit^^ chauntc ontrc lui cest}' COnfortetz \us & soiez howme & gardetz les comandemez/tz deu & Qjie vous aletz en ces voyes & gardez ces leys & ses comaundcmewtz en (\ne\ part (\ne \us tournetz^"* dieux \ons conferme. Cesf'^ la benescon del anel le Roy. DIeu-" ojic fcistes cecl & tore & totes creaturus & le deboncre reparitur de huineignc ligne le donur de gn?cc espirital dc totes manures de benescoz/s ojie la droit///-e de u<'i-//-e lai cscriuetz de dey de nostxo. cher ficz a ojii tutz les sorscrs dc egipt ne poient encontredire. Mes dissoient cest le des-' /dieux enuo)'et [col. 14. ut-j/re scin esprnt du ciel sur cest aynel cnbeli par orfauerie & de la gnzce de U6'.j7re hautesce issent le i)urefietz q//<* le metal q//<- de \us est fourme soit mouz/de de chcscunc ordure del enemi & chcscunc mauestc del ucninious serpent de lui soit forclo.s. ' oiii. \\. - servant : \\ . ' V. : piff. W . * .'w. \V. * issuil : \V. " Corunc : \V. " dc : atlJ, \V. '^ sauiu : \V. '•• E: prtf. \V. a small gtiidc Uttcrvi in CCCC. '" Conine : W . " Dunk : W . '- servant: W. '•' en : W. " oue: W. " .-/ ^ •;//»//-///or c in CCCC. '^ en : W. '•" dci : W. cccc. 20.] THE ENGLISH CORONATION ORDER. 47 Dicux bnvfictz & scinttcfictz ccs and & sur lui ma//dct/, wostxc seint cspr/'it i\iic wostx^ seriaunt^ q//r le uscra soit douzc & aire del and dc la fo}' & soit garde sancz- pecchc par la ur;luc dc uous mesmtw & totes les bcnesco;/s ojie trouetz sunt en saint escripture sur cest anel plentifouseme//t descenduwt & ojinwVQ il seintefiera soit saintefie soit saintefie'' & ojianojie \Y b^'nrfiera soit b^n^fie de Viostxo. saint b ordeynour e defendour dc : W. "^ deboneyre e oeuere Riches eu fei : add. \V. ^ — " E quant le ceptre serra donee Dunk lui dirra lerceucsqo : W. " dereiture : W. '" de : W. " meinens : W. '■- a small };uide letter for c hi CCCC. '•' sergant : \V. " voz : add. W. '^ regne : W. "i« A small guide letter for d in CCCC. " Dunk : W. 48 ANGLO-FRENCH \ERSION OF [cccc. 20. uoie a ceux q\uc forneient & a ceux c^ue sunt chcux tendecz la main reuiletz les orgulous & releuetz les vmbles q//^ nostxo. seignur \\\cs\x crist \oiis eoure son eops^ qw^st dit de li mesmes. leo sui eops* ojie p^r /moi entrc il serra sauue & il est- la [col. 16. clief ciauid & le ceptre de isracl q//t' eoure & nul ho;;/me clost' et nul howme oure cil \us soit en ^a)"ede queu main* cesti q//t' est en pr/son en oscurete et vmbre de la mort hors dc pr/son ojic lui puissetz \us suire en totes choses de i\ui dauid le p/vphtVe chauwta Sire dieu \ostre see sancz fin la verge de uostvQ regne est droiturcle & si wetz celui qe dist amez droiture & heiez mauesce pur ceo \us ad dieu oynt dc oillc^ de io\-e. Puis'''' soit done siir le Roy cat bcncsconn 'par /erccuesquc' NOstre seignur \iis bcnefie & uous garde & sicome il yus ueut estre roy sur son people issi xus face en ceo secle bon & dcboncre & pcrceucr de la ioie pardurablc la clergie & le people c\He del aide delui mesmes veuf* ore si estre ensemble^ par la '"sue seinte^" gr^ce & uostvc administracion par long te;//ps face estre gou^me quil coient obeisaunt a les comandeme;/tz deu & nul adurrsite neyent mes de tuz biens eieiit plente & a uostre comaundeme;/t seruent ^ar leal amour & en ceo secle eient pes & oue \'?(s pussent auoir la co7;/paigne de ciel. Puis^^ apvQS q\i7i)it il serra corone tuz les Euesijncs lui bevserefit desques il serra aniene & mis nobleiiioit en son sec & de toiia soit cliaunte sollexvLpnenicnt Te dtv^m laudam/zi" & gnzint ceo serra chaunte lui dirra IcfxeucsquQ. ESteez & reccuez /desoreenenant le lui que \oiis [col. 17. tenetz pc^r succession de la'-' heritage & par lautoritc dc dieu & n^.y/re baill"^ & de tuz euesq;/<'s & autres ministres dieu tau//t come \us vcrez'* la clergie plus prcchein le seint auter dc tant le fatez le plus donur que '\\\es\x crist qcst mccn 'Me d'^ entre la clergie & le people en ceo realme vous conferme & celui uous face rcgner au ciel qest roy de roys & sire de sires que vist en regne od son piere & le seint espirit sauncz fin amen amen. PUis^'^ serra la tncsse solcmpne/nent el/a un tee & quant /<•'' eu:iunifeille serra leuivc le roy ueudra a lautcr & a la main lereeuesquc fra oblacion de pain & de I'in od le c/ialiec saint > hfus : W. - eu : \V. =■ clost : ref>tat(d by W. ••— •• aycic qe incisnc : W. " cl : add. \V. " K : pr/f. \\ . 7_7 om. W. " imill : \V. " assemble : W. "'—"•» si wcz scintc : \V. " E: pref. VV. '= om.: \V. '•' baillif: \V. '* voo/ : W. m — li crossed thioui^h in red. \V h-is : mccn dc dieu cl dcs lioiius vo/ j^otis nu-cii in the place 0/ (he words crossed through, " E : -"ref. VV, " Here VV. ends. cccc. 20.] THE ENGLISH CORONATION ORDER. 49 edzvarcV en la forme qe fist melehisedeeh le roy dc sakm & puis offra le roy vn mark dor & se serra a genuhe devant lautcr & lerceuesqxxe. dirra outre liii ceiix deus oreisouns. DIeu tut pussant \ous doint plc;/tce de la rosee de ciel &' de la gresce dc la tere de furment & de vin & le people serue a \OHs les nacions vous aourent a celui (\ue voiis b^n^-fiera de bcnesco/^/^ de ciel soit rcpleins & deu uous soit en aide. Dieu tut pussa;/t \ous b^rn^'fietz de la bencscon de ciel & en mountaynes & en ualeys & la benescon de quanque bone' paramount & p<'?;'aual & de les benesco;/s de" les de four- met & de g;'(?pes /& de pouwmes & les b^-n^-scons de [col. i8. uocz au;/ciens pieres. abraham & ysaac & iacob veingent sur vous. Sire brn^'fietz la force de cesti prince Edward & receuetz les oueraignes de ses mains & la tere de lui soit replein de uosfre b^n^scon & de tuz biens de pou7;/mes & de checune manere des frut & de la rosee de ciel & de la rosee pf^raual du solail &de la lune & deleshautescesdeauncienes montaignes de les frutz de pardurables ualeies de blee & de la gresce de la tere de la benescon de lui q!/e aparut a moysen au busson veigne sur cesti ro\- & la pleine benescon de dieux veigne sur sa gendrure Eduixj que a cil mounta lui soit a tuz iours en aide ameN. T)Uls cerra la messc cJiauntce. E ly Roy a Jionur an palays -*- remenee. interlift'.d. "^ Blank space for one %uord here. COR. ORDERS. CONSECRATIO REGIS ANGLO-SAXONICL E 2 [CONSECRATIO REGIS AnGLO-SaXONICI.] hicipit consccratio regis, qiieni de comicntu scniortim per vianus prodncant duo cpiscopi ad ^cclesiani. let clems Jiaitc decdntet [p. 279. antipJionain ditobiis episcopis precineiitibiis. Firmetur manus tua ut supra. Ver. Gloria patri. Peruenietis rex ad aecclesiain prosternat se coram altare et yimtizctiir. Te deum laudamus. quo fincte^ius yinnizdto. rex erigatiir de solo, et ab episcopis. et a plebe electiis. hec tria se -seniatiirnm iiira promittat. et clara uoce coram deo omniqtie popiilo dicat hoc viodo. rTJlAcc^ tria populo christiano. et michi subdito. in christi L^^ -^J promitto nomine, inprimis ut aecclesia dei. et omnis populus christianus ueram pacem nostro arbi'trio in omni tempore seruet. aliud ut rapacitatcs. et omnes iniquitates omnibus gradibus interdi'cam. tcrtium ut in omnibus iudiciis aequitatem. et miseri- cordiam precipiam. ut mihi et nobis indulgeat suam misericordiam clemens et misericors deus. qui uiuit et regnat. His- peractis omnes dica)itl amen. [p. 280. postmodiini cantetur responsoj'ium. Omni tempore benedic deum. et sequantur he orationes a singidis episcopis singide super regem dicende. nPE inuocamus domine sancte pater omnipotens aeterne deus. ^ pro hoc famulo tuo iih quern tu? diuin? dispensationis prouidentia in primordio plasmatum. usque in hunc presentem diem, per human? aetatis incrementa conseruasti incolomem. ut eum tuae pietatis dono ditatum. plenumque gratia ueritatis. de die in diem coram deo et hominibus ad meHora semper proficere facias, ut summi regiminis imperium gratia supernae largitatis tuae gaudens suscipiat. et misericordiae tuae muro ab hostium aduersitatc undique munitus. plebem sibi commissam cum pace propitiationis. et uirtutc uictoriae feh'citcr regere mercatur. per dominum. ^ Haec in Pontificali nouo anglicano habeiUur per modiim interrogationis & responsionis : written in iiia7-gin in vmch later, post mediaeval hand. '^ hie plura stipulantur in nouo Pontificali anglicano : tvritten in margin by same hand as above. 54 CONSECRATIO REGIS ANGLO-SAXONICI. [cccc. 44. oratio alia. DEus qui popuHs tuis uirtutc consulis. /et amorc [p. 281. dominaris. da huic famulo tuo. itt. spiritum sapientiac cum rcgimine disciplin?. ut tibi toto corde dcuotus. in rcgni rcgi'minc mancat semper idoneus. tuoque muncrc ipsi'us tem- poribus securitas aecclcsiae dirigatur. et in tranquillitate pacis deuotio Christiana permancat ut in bonis operibus pcrscucrasf ad eternum regnum te di'ice ualeat peruenirc. per. Alia oratio. IN diebus tuis oriatur omnis aequitas et iustitia ami'cis adiutorium. inimicis obstaculum. humilibus solacium. el.itis corrcctio. diuitibus doctn'na. paupcribus pi'etas. peregrinis pacifi- catio. propriis in patria pax ct securitas. Tu unum qucmque secundum suam mensuram moderate gubcrnans. te ipsum sedulus discLitias. ut superna irrigatus compunctione. omni populo christi placita uitae prebere possis excmpla. et per uiam /ueritatis cum grege gradiens. tibi subdito. opes [p. 282. frugales iustitiae et misericord iae habundanter adqui'ras. et regale imperium omnibus ad salutem non solum corporum :' scd etiam animarum a deo tibi concessa. felicitate letus accipias. Sic que in te cogitatum animi consiliumque omne deo inspirante componas. ut plebis gubernacula cum pace simul et sapientia dei semper regere uidearis. christo auxili- ante presentis uitae prolixitatem percipias. et per temporalia bona pacifice usque ad summam senectutem peruenias. postque huius fragilitatis fincm pcrfectum : ab omnibus uitiorum uincuiis libcr supernae pietatis largitate caelos transcendas. et infinite prosperitatis premia perpetua. angelorumque acterna commercia consequaris. auxiliante. domino nostro iesu christo. T7inc incipiat arcJiycpiscopus Jianc antipJionaui. /Redemi)tor mundi conseruet uitani tiiam. [jx 2S3. Scquitur consccratio regis ab cpiscopo qui arccm toiucrit super eiDii dieenda. OMnipotcns sempiterne dcus :' creator ac gubernator c^li ct tcrrae :' conditor et dispositor angelorum ct hominum. rex regum et dominus dominantium. qui abrah;'im fKlciem fanuilum tuum de hostibus triumphare fecisti. moysi. et i6sue populo tuo prelatis. multi'plicicemf uictoriam tribuisti. humilem quoque daukl puerum tuum rcgni fastigio sublimasti. eumque dc ore Iconis ct (le manu bestigiae atque goli'ae sctl ct dc glatlio maligno saul ct omnium inimicorum cius liberasti. et sahMiioncm sapientiac paciscjue ineffabili niunere ditasti. Respicc propitius ail j^rcces nostrae humililatis. et super hunc fanuilum tuum. itt. cjuem cccc. 44-] CONSECRATIO REGIS ANGLO-SAXONICI. 55 supplici deuotionc in rccjcm anglorum ucl saxonum/ [fo. 284. pariter cligimus. bcnedictionum tuarum dona multiplica. ct eum dcxtera tuac potcntiac semper ubique circumda. quatinus predicti abrahc fidelitate firmatus. moysi mansuetudine fretus. iosue fortitudinc munitus. daui'd humilitatc cxaltatus. atque salomonis sapicntia decoratus. tibi in omnibus complaceat. et per tramitem iustitie inoffcnsuf gressu semper inccdat. hie domino quaesumus toti'us regni anglosaxonum aecclesiam deinceps cum plebibus sibi commissis ita eniitriat. ac doceat. muniat. et instruat. contraque omnes uisibiles et inuisibiles hostcs idem potenter regaliterque tuac uirtutis rcgi'mine regat et defendat. ut in regale solium uidelicct anglorum uel saxonum tua gratia sublimatus. ad pristine fidei pacisque concordiam eorum animos te opitulantc reformet. atque populorum debita sub/icctione ftiltus. et condigno amorc glorificatus r^ per [p. 285. longum uit? spatium. paterne apicem glori^. tua miseratione Qnita stabilire et gubernare mereatur. tue quoque domine protectionis galea munitus. et scuto insuperabili iugiter pro- tectus. armisque celestibus circumdatus. optabilis uictoriae triumphum de hostibus feliciter capiat, terroremque su? potentiae infidelibus inferat. et pacem tibi militantibus letanter optineat. uirtutibus christe hunc quibus prefatos fideles tuos decorasti. multiplici honoris benedictione condecora. et in regimine regni sublimiter colloca. et oleo gratiae spiritus sancti periinge. per dominum. in unitate eiusdem. Hie iinguatur oleo et Jiaee cantetiir, Aiit. Anglica' non es oblita in conspectu domini in te enim exaltetur rex qui regat populum dei anglicum unguatur oleo letitiae et confortetur dei uirtute. Oratio. /^"^Hriste perunge hunc regem in regimen regale, unde [p. 286. ^-^ unxisti sacerdotes. reges. perprophetas.f ac martires. qui per fidem uicerunt regna. et operati sunt iustitiam atque adepti sunt repromissiones. Tua sacratissima unctio christe super caput eius defluat. atque ad inteoraf descendat. et cordis illi'us intima penetret. ut promissionibus quas adepti sunt uictoriosissimi reges. gratia tua dignus efficiatur. quatinus ct in presenti seculo feliciter regnet. et ad corum consortium in c?lesti regno perueniat. per. ^ Thus. A letter (e) between g aiid 1 has been erased. Before Anglica there is written in mar^n a red A. for Antiphona. 56 CONSECRATIO REGIS ANGLO-SAXONICI. [cccc. 44. Alia. DEus clectorum fortitude ct' humilium cclsitudo. qui in primordio per effusionem diluuii crimina mundi diliiere uel expiare uoluisti. et per columbam ramum oli'ue portantem. paccm terris redditam demonstrasti. itcrumque aaron famulum tuum per unctionem olei sacerdotcm sanxisti et postca per huius ungenti infusio/nem. ad rcgcnduin populum israheli'ticum [p. 287. sacerdotes. ac reges. et prophetas perfccisti. uultumque aecclesiae in olco exhilarandum per propheticam famuli tui uocem daui'd esse predixisti. te quaesumus omnipotens pater, ut per huius creature pinguedinem. hunc seruum tuum sanctificare tua bene- dictione digneris. eumquc in tuo scruitio diligentcr rcgni fastigia in consilisfscientiaeet acquitatciudicii semper obtinere, uultumque hilaritatis per hanc olei unctionem et iudicium iustitiae et miseri- cordiae in populo tuo te inspirante clementer exhibere concedas. qui uiuis et regnas deus. Item alia oratio. DEus dei filius iesus christus dominus noster qui a patre oleo exultationis unctus est pre participibus suis. ipse per pre- sentem sacri unguinis infusionem. spiritus sancti paracl)'ti super caput tuum infundat benedictionem. eandemque usque ad interiora /cordis tui penetrare faciat. quatinus hoc uisibili[p. 288. et tractabili dono inuisibilia dona dei precipias. et temporalia regna iustis moderami'nibus regendo. eternalia cum christo pos- sidere merearis qui uiuit et regnat. Hit detiir auulus rcgi ct dicatur. A Ccipe anulum :' signaculum uidelicet sancte fidei. soliditatem -^*- regni. augmentum potentiae. per quern sci'as triumphali potentia hostcs repcllere. hercses destruere. iustitiam dei colerc. ct subditos catholice fidei corroborare constantia. per dominum. J^ost datum anulum. canatur antipliotia. Ant. Signaculum sanctae trinitatis muniat cor regis glorietur anulo fidei ad augmentum honoris regni. pax et habundantia salutis sit in nationibus cunctis anglisaxonicae gentis. Exindc scquatur oratio. DEus cuius est omnis potestas ct dignitas. da famulo tuo per hoc signaculum sanctQ fidei bonac lu^luntatis et digni- tatis/ cffectum in qua tua benedictione longcuus per- [p. 2S9. maneat. td' semper timeat. tibique iugiter placcrc contcndat. per. ' ft : /',-!:t;-,ii the tin a. \ cccc. 44-] CONSECRATIO KEGIS ANGLO-SAXONICL 57 dicatur sibi. quando rex gladio ci)igitiir ah episcopis. A Ccipe huric gladium cum dei bcnedictione tibi collatum. in -^*- quo per uirtutem spiritus sancti resi'stere et ei'cere. omnes inimicos tuos : ct cunctos sanctae dci accclcsiae aducrsarios u;ilcas. rogniimque a dco tibi commi'ssum tutari atquc protegere dci uirtutc proficias. per auxilium inuicti'ssimi triumphatoris doniini nostri iesu christi. qui cum patrc in unitate spiritus sancti uiuit ct regnat. Post ddtiiiii gladiuin roboctiir\ antiphona. Ant. Diuina protectione munitus et comitatus choris angel icis rex noster inexpugnabili accingatur gladio et glorietur potentis dei uictoria. Tunc dicatur oratio. T~\Eus qui prouidentia tua :' caelestia simul et terrcna moder- ^^ aris. propitiare christiani'ssimo regi nostro. et eum in- expugnabili/ potcntiae tuae circumci'nge constantia. ut [p. 290. omnis hostium suorum fortitude uirtute gladii spiritualis fran- gatur. ct per te sanct? dei accclesi? ad nichilum redigat inimicos. de ore fidelium. laus tua non deficiat in perpetuum. qui uiuis et regnas. Hie coronctur rex eique dicatur. /^"^Oronet te deus corona gloriae. atque iustitiae honorc. et ^-^ opere fortitudinis. ut per officium nostrae benedictionis, cum fide recta, et multiplici bonorum operum fructu. ad coronam peruenias regni pcrpetui ipso largiente. cuius regnum permanet in SQCulof seculorum. Amen. postmodum caiiatur. Ant. Corona iustitie et iocunditatis super caput regis effulgeat. coronet eum dominus triumphis et uirtutibus gaudeat coronatus et adeo glorificatus. Deinceps diecnda est lice oratio super regeni '1 post quavi fucrit corouatus. "r"\Eus pcrpetuitatis. dux uirtutum. et cunctorum hostium -*-^ uictor. benedic hunc/ famulum tuum. itt. tibi [p. 291. caput suum humiliter inclinantem. et longeua sanitate, et pro- spera felicitate eum conscrua. et in omnibus pro quibuscumque auxilium tuum inuocaucrit. cito ei ^dsis. et eum protegas ac defendas. tribuc etiam ei quesumus dominc diuitias gratiae tuac. cdmplc in bonis desidcrium eius. et corona cum in miseri- cordia tua i ut tibi domino pia dcuotione iugiturf famulctur. per dominum nostrum. 58 C0NSECRA7I0 REGIS ANGLO-SAXONICr. [cccc. 44- Jiic dcttir regi sccptnuii ciquc dicatur. \ Ccipe sceptrum regalisclementiae signum. ct regi? potestatis -^*- insigne decus. uirgam scilicet regni rcctam. uirgam uirtutis. qua te ipsum bene rcgas. ct sanctam accclesiam populum uidclicet christianum tibi a deo commissum. regia uirtutc ab improbis dcfcndas. prauos corrigas. rectos paci'fices. et ut ui'am rectam tenere possint tuo iuuamine di'rigas. quatinus de temporali regno/ ad aetcrnum regnum pcrucnias. [p. 292. ipso adiuuante. cuius regnum ct imperium. sine fine permanet in secula scculorum. Amen. Dato ergo regi sccptro psallatur Jicc antipliona. Innocentia iustitiae dei et cordis prudentia imperiale a domino rex et regale possideat sceptrum et regnandi dominium a deo salutari sue. dicendo orationevi hanc super euin. OMnium domine fons bonorum. cunctorumque deus institutor profectuum. tribue quacsumus famulo tuo itt. adeptam bene regcre dignitatem, et a te sibi concessum honorcm dignarc in co corroborare. honorifica eum pre cunctis regibu.s tcrrc. caclesti eum benedictione locupleta. et in solio regni firma stabilitate consolida. elige tibi domine eum in sobole. et presta ei prolixi- tatem uitQ in diebus eius oriatur iustitia. ut cum iocunditatc et letitia aeterno glorietur in regno, per. Hie regi uirga detur. et dieatur. A Ccipe uirgam uirtutis dei. acquitatis scilicet/ ct [p. 293. -^*- misericordiae a deo prouidcntiam. per quam inteilcgas iustitiam dei c61ere. aecclesiam dei pacifice regere. sua cuiquc iura seruarc r^ et subiectos in iudicio non sinas dominari per potentiam. sed quod aequum est diiudicare per iustitiam. hodie uirgam uirtutis suae emittet dominus ex s\'6n. et dabit tibi gentes hereditatcm tuam. ct possessionem tuam terminos tcrrac. ut regas eos in uirga clementiae et gratiae dei. quatinus ipso largiente uirga sis recta, uirga regni dnglisaxonici. in progenic et gerationef scculorum. imitare ipsum qui di'cit. diligas iustitiam. et odio habeas iniquitatem. ut oriatur in diebus tuis iustitia. et habundantia pacis per onmipotentem dominum. qui ct propterca un.xit te deus deus tuus olco Ictitiae. ad e.xemplum lllii sui (]ueni ante secula un.xerat pre participibus suis. icsum christum ilomi- num nostrum, qui uiuit et regnat deus per luunia secula secu- lorinn. Amen. cccc. 44] CONSECRATIO REGIS ANGLO-SAXONICI. 59 \Postea scquatur (XntipJionavi\ [p. 294. Uirga uirtutis dei effloreat in manibus regis sicut triumphantis uictoriae palma insignis uirga equitatis mulceat et baculo misericordiae regat populum dei saluatoris. ci'ii subiuiigatiir Jicicc collccia. T Ncffabilcm misericordiam tuam omnipotens sempiternaef dcus -•■ supplicitcr deposcimus. ut rcspi'cere digneris super hunc famulum tuum rcgcm nostrum qui tua gratia uirgam signum scilicet rectitudinis et iustitiae susccpit hodic ad regendum populum tuum. ut sicut comprimere rebelles et blandi're humilcs. tribue ergo domine obni'xe petimus. in diebus suis tranquillitatcm pacis. fidei. spei. et caritatis augmentum. concede ei domine contra hostes uictoriam. atque omnium bonorum semper habun- dantiam. ut per uiam iustitiae incedens. tibi qui es uia. ueritas. et uita gratiosus ualeat. inherere. uiuenti atque regnanti cum filio tuo domino /nostro iesu christo. sanctoque spiritu : per [p. 295. infini'ta secula seculorum. Amen. Cuinque rex suscipit regale palliiun dicatiir sibi. A Ccipe nunc uestem summi honoris, regalis scilicet decoris ■^^ pallium, ut sit tibi scutum fidei. galea salutis. atque contra omnium inpugnantium aciem obstaculum. indue ergo orna- mentum dignitatis regi?. quatinus eo uallatus. undique uigeas in omnibus actibus tuis. ut dauid rex : polleas sapientiae uigore ut Salomon, ut de die in diem in bonis proficias. et ad premia sem- piterna peruenire merearis. ipso iuuantc. qui trinus et unus dcus. uiuit et regnat per omnia secula seculorum. Amen. Time eantetiir antiphona. Gloriosus uiast rex in conspectu dei amictus purpura regalis pallii. circumdet te dominus salutis et letitiae indumentis seniperque in cristo perpetua felicitate gaudeas cum anglisaxonicis. Quain comitetur oratio. //^Mnipotens deus cuncti honoris iustus dispositor. [p. 296. ^-^ hunc famulum tuum pio tuae miserationis fauore prose- quere. quem hodierna die tua dementia regalis imperii pallio dignatus es decorare. te ergo domine deus pie et misericors humi'lHme deposcimus. ut eum per hoc paUium regii scilicet decoris signum. ab omnibus inimicorum uisibilium ct inuisibilium insidiis conscruare digneris clemcnter illesum. ita eum domine populum sanctae accclcsiae cum iustitia et recto iudicioi facias rcgcre. quatinus isto rcgali circumtcctus pallio. prospcritatem 6o CONSECRATIO REGIS AXGLO-SAXONICI. [cccc. 44. mentis ct corporis ualcat tc annucnte percipcre, ct tibi summo deo studeat semper oboedi're. qui cum filio tuo atque spiritu sancto rcgnas ac moderas saecula cuncta. Amen. Bcncdictio. EXtcndat omnipotcns dominus dcxteram suq benedictionis. ct cffundat super te do/num sue protectionis. circiimdct [p. 297. tc muro felicitatis. ac custodia suq propitiationis. sanct? mariae: ac beati pctri apostolorum principis. sanctique gregorii anglorum apostolici. atque omnium sanctorum interccdentibus meritis. A men. Indulgeat tibi dominus omnia mala que gcssisti. ct tribuat tibi gratiam et misericordiam quam humiliter ab eo deposcis. et li'beret te ab aduersitatibus cunctis. et ab omnibus uisibilium et inuisibilium inimicorum insidiis. Amen. Angclos suos bonos semper et ubique qui tc precedant :' comitentur. et subsequantur. ad custodiam tui ponat. ct a peccato seu gladio. ct ab omnium pcriculorum discrimine sua te potentia liberet. Amen. Inimicos tuos ad pacis caritati'sque benignitatem conucrtat. et bonis omnibus te gratiosum et amabilem faciat. pertinaces /quoque in tui insectati'one et odio. confusione salutari [p. 29S. I'nduat. super te autem scificatiot sempiterna floreat. Amen. Uictoriosum te : atque triumphatorcm de inuisibilibus atque uisibilibus hostibus semper efficiat. ct sancti nominis sui timorem pariter et amorem continumf cordi tuo infundat. et in fide recta ac bonis operibus perscuerabilem reddat. ct pace in dicbus tuis concessa. cum palma uictoriae te ad perpetuum regnum perducat. A men. Et qui tc uoluit super populum suum constituerc regcm. ct in praesenti seculo felicem. ct (^^terne felicitatis tribuat esse consor- tem. Amen. Quod ipse. Deinde ducat nr rex ad sidtum regie suae psallcndo. Ant. Dominus de throne maiestatis suae te glorifiret qui. in rogni solio regem hodie sublimauit. uigeas ut dauid pietatc ei fortitudine. polleas ut Salomon sapicntia diuitiis ct gloria, hinc et cum anglisaxorumt collegio angclorum iungaris ct)nsortio. [p. -99- Et dicatur ei. STd et rctine regalcm statiun. honoris uitlclicet et rcgni s61ium. hercditario.- iurc tibi delcgatum per auctoritatcm dei omni- potcntis. et per presentcm tratlitioncm nostr.im altpie omnium cpisc' in Councill that the Proclamation in order to their Ma'-'* intended Coronation do pass the Great Seal and be forthwith printed and published, and that one of His ^L1'>''* Principall Secretaries of State do direct the Same to be don according to the Form hereunto annexed w'^'' was approved at the Boord. A Proclamation in Order to Their Ma'-" intended Coronation. Wherea-s wee have resolved by the favor and Blessing of God to celebrate the solemnity of Our Royall Coronation upon the 11''' day of Aprill next at Our Palace at Westminster. And forasmuch as by Ancient Customs & usages of this Realm as also in regard of divers Tenures of sundry mannors, Lands and other Hereditaments many of our Loving Subjects do claim and are bound to do and perform divers severall Services on the said Day and at the time of the Coronation as in times precedent their ancestors and those from whom they Claim have don and i)erformed at the Coronation of our Predecessors Kings and Queens of this Realm. W'te therefore out of our Princely Care for the Preservation of the Lawfull Rights and Iiilieritances of Our Loving Subjects whom it may Concern have thought fit to give notice and publish our Resolution therein, and do hereby give notice of ami publish the same accordingly, And wee do hereby further signify that by our Commission under our Great Scale of England \\'ee have appointed and authorized Our R' Trusty and R' Welbeloveil Cousin & Councellor Thomas Earle of Danby President of our Councill ; Our R' Trusty and intirely beloved Cousin ' in Councill having appointed the R* Hono'''^ the Lord President Lord Privy Seal, Duke of Norfolk, ^L1rquis of Winchester, Lord Great Chamberlain, Lord Steward, Lord Chamberlain, Earle of Shrewsbury Viscount Newport, Lord Bishop of London, Lord Montagu, gr w*" Dolbin one of the Justices of the Court of Kings Bench, and S'" John Powell one of the Justices of the Common Pleas or any Three or more of them Commissioners to hear Receive and Determine the 70 APPENDIX 21. Petitions & claimes of such who by their Tenures are to perform any Service at the Coronation of their Ma''**. It is therefore ordered that one of his Ma''' Principal! Secretaries of State do direct the passing of a Commission in Order thereunto under the Great Seal according to the Draught thereof this day approved at the Boord. [Lord gr' Chamberlain to provide things against the Coronation : in margin^ A Report from the R* Hono*''" the Committee appointed to consider of the time and manner of the Coronation of their Mat'"* having been this day approved at the Boord, His Ma'>' in Councill is thereupon pleased to order that the R' Hono'''® the Earle of Lindsey Lord Great Chamberlain Do jssue out his warrants to all Offices and Officers under his LoP'* charge to make such Provisions and Preparations against the day of their Ma'^* Coronation, which is to be solemnized upon the ii**^ of Aprill next, as were don at the last Coronation. [Master of the Robes to provide against y*" Coronation : /// margin^ A Report &•= ut Supra. His Ma'-'' in Councill is thereupon pleased to Order that the Master of his Ma'-'"^ Robes Do jssue out his warrants & Orders to all Offices and Officers under his charge to make such Provisions and Preparations against the day of their ALi'-''* Coronation w<^'' is to be solemnized upon the u'^ of Aprill next as were don by his Predecessor at the last Coronation, as appears by the annexed Paper. [Earle Marshall to provide ag**' the Coronation : in margin.] A Report &*' at supra. His Ma*'' in Councill is thereuix)n pleased to Order that his Grace the Duke of Norfolk Earle ^L^rsl1all do jssue out his warrants and Orders to all Offices and Officers under his Grace's Charge to make such Provisions and Preparations against the day of their Ma'"' Coronation, w^'' is to be solemnized upon the ii'^' of Aprill next as were don at the last Coronation by the Earle Marshall and to Summon the Peers and Peeresses to attend this Solemnity. [Lord Steward to provide ag*' the Coronation : /;/ nuirgin.] A Report &'". His Ma'-'' in Councill is thereupon pleased to Order that the R' Hono''''' the Earle of Devonshire Lord Steward of His Ma-'* Household do give Order for such Provisions for their M"" Dinner in \N'esiminster Hall on the day of their Ma'"" Coronation w*'' is to be solemnized upon the ii"' of Ai)rill next, and such other Tables there as was provided at the last Coronation, And for all other things >\-*^'' are to be don and ordered on that day by the Lord Steward of his Ma'>'" Household. [Lord Chamberlain to provide ag'' the Coronation : /// margin.] A Rei'Out &'■. His Ma" in Councill is thereupon pleaseil to Order that theR' Hono'''" the Earle of Dorset Lord Chamberlain of His Ma'-'» APPENDIX //. 71 Household do jssue out his warrants and Orders to the Great Ward- robe, Master of the Jewell House, Surveyor of the Works, Wardrobes and all other Offices and Persons to make such Provisions and Preparations against the day of their Ma'^" Coronation which is to be solemnized upon the ii"'' of Aprill next as are directed in the said Report, and such other orders and Things which were don by his Lo'"* predecessor at the last Coronation. [Master of the Horse to Provide against the Coronation : in margin.] A Report (S:*^. His Majesty in Councill is thereupon pleased to order that Monsieur Overkerke Master of the Horse to his Ma'-^' do Issue out his Warrants and Orders to all Offices and Officers under his charge to make such Provisions and Preparations against the day of their Ma-^* Coronation w'^^ is to be solemnized upon the ii"" of Aprill next as were don by his Predecessor at the last Coronation. [Master of the Ordnance to provide ag^' the Coronation : in inargin.'\ A Report &''. His Ma*^ in Councill is thereupon pleased to Order that the Marshall de Schomberg Master Generall of the Ordnance do jssue out his Warrants and Orders to all Offices and Officers under his charge to make such Provisions and Preparations against the day of their Ma'-'"* Coronation w'^^ is to be solemnized upon the ii*'^^ of Aprill next as were done at the last Coronation, and particularly such Pro- vision of Armor, Pistolls, Sheild Lance and other furniture as was delivered to the Kings Ma*-^"* Champion out of his Office at the last Coronation. [Groom of the Stole to y® Queen : in margin.] An Order likewise issued to the R' Hono'''® the Countess of Derby Groom of the Stole to her Ma*^ to make such Provisions as her Predecessor did at the last Coronation. [Earle marshall to cause the Proclama: to be proclaimed: in ?nargin.] An Order likewise issued to the Earle Marshall, to take care that the Proclamation for their Ma*-^'* Coronation be proclaimed by the Officers of Arms, Drums and Trumpets in such manner and form as was don at the last Coronation. [Lord BP of London to inspect the office of Divine Service Ag*' the Coronation : in ?nargin.] A Report &^. His Ma'>' in Councill is thereupon pleased to order that the R' Reverend Father in God the Lord B^ of London do inspect the Office of Divine Service to be used in the Abby of West- minster on the day of their Ma'-^"* Coronation which is to be solemnized upon the Eleaventh day of Aprill next. ^ Altered from 12 to 11. In these minutes the date has also been tampered with in every case preceding. 72 APPENDIX J I. [Master of the Mint to provide medalls ag*^ the Coronation : /// A Rkport cV. His Ma*-^ in Councill is thereupon jileased to Order that the Master of His Ma^" Mint do cause' to be made and prepared y*' number of 200 medalls of Gold and y^ number of Twelve hundred medalls of Silver of y° King & Queen's Majesty according to a pattern chosen by his Ma'"" & delivered to him, y^ value of each of y* medalls of Gold & Silver to be y*^ same as at the last Coronation. The same to be delivered by y^ Master of y^ Mint to y« L'' Visc^ Newport Trtrar of ye Household to be distributed by his LdP at the Coronation of their Majesties. [Report of the Lords of the Committee for the Coronation : in margin?^ This Day the Report following of the Committee appointed to consider of the time and manner of the Coronation of Their Ma*'"', was approved at the Boord. May it please your Ma"'. The Committee appointed by yo"" Ma*'" &c. [as above on p. 3]. ' The following h.is hcen eniscd after * Coronation w*'' is to be solemnized on the ll"' of Aprill next. APPENDIX III Extract from Sancroft's Register in Lambeth Palace Library, FO. 275. [In the margin there is written : Commissio ad consecra?idinn epis- copos.^ Wi\\\)(:\\\\\\i pro&t'tlfntta Sibina Cantuariensis archiepiscopus totius anghc'e Primas et Metropolitanus ad infrascripta de lure et Statutis huius Regni Anglice legitime fulcitus Reverendis in Christo Patribus et venerabilibus Confratribus Nostris Uominis Henrico London Petro AVinton Wilhelmo Landaven et Wilhelmo Asaphen respective Epis- copis sakitem et fraternam in Domino Charitatem. Ad consecrandum et benedicendum vice loco et authoritate nostris quoscunque Episcopos et Pastores quarumcunque Ecclesiarum Cathe- dralium et Dicecesium infra provinciam nostram Cantuai^ alias rite et legitime nominatos Electos et authoritate nostra debite confirmatos aut in posterum nominandos Eligendos et confirmandos Atque ad ex- hibendum et impertiendum iisdem et eorum cuilibet Ceremonias in ea parte de lure Statutis et usu moderno Ecclesiae Anglicanse usitatas observatas et requisitas in quacunque Ecclesia sive Capella infra Pro- vinciam nostram Cant, divino Cultui dedicatis quibuscunque diebus Dominicis vel festivis arbitrio vestro ad huiusmodi Ofificium pro tem- pore limitandis Accitis Vobis et Vestrum cuilibet quibuscunque aliis Episcopis Executionem officii sui in Ecclesia Anglicana obtinentibus in numero competent! et requisite qui vobis in huiusmodi Ministerio assistant et congrue opitulentur prout luris et Statuti exigentia et Negocii necessitas aut honestas videbuntur pro tempore postulare Ad exigenduni quoque recipiendum et admittendum vice locoet authoritate nostris in presentia Dilectorum nobis in Christo Radulphi Snovve et Edmundi Sherman Notariorum publicorum Registrariorum nostrorum Principalium vel eorum deputati cuiuscunque' legitimi ab iisdem Reverendis Patribus et eorum cjuolibet sic (ut premittitur) pro tempore consecrandis et benedicendis omnia et singula luramenta in ea parte ^ These two words are written over an erasure, and they do not fill up the space Ijcfore the next. 74 APPENDIX III. prestari solita et consueta et de lure vel statutis huius Regni Angliae requisita. Csteraque omnia et singula faciendum exercendum exe- quendum et expediendum in premissis qux de lure vel Statutis huius Regni Angliae in hac parte necessaria fuerint seu quomodolibet opportuna vel requisita Vobis conjunctim et divisim tenore presentium vices nostras committimus ac plenam in Domino concedimus potestatem ad nostrum beneplacitum tantummodo duraturam luribus nostris Archiepiscopalibus Cantuar cceterisque Emolumentis Nobis et Officiariis sive j\Iinistris nostris in hac parte competentibus semper salvis et reservatis. In cuius rei testimonium sigillum nostrum Archiepiscopale presentibus apponi fecimus Dat'' in manerio nostro de Lambhithe decimo quinto die Mensis Martii Anno Domini secundum cursum et computationem Ecclesice Anglicans Millesimo Sexcentesimo Octo- gesimo Octavo et nostrte Consecrationis Anno Duodecimo. W. Cant. Robertus Woodward Legum D"" Not. Publicus et Actuarius hac vice spezialiter assumptus. Examinat' per me Thomam Tyllott Notarium publicum. APPENDIX IV. Extract from Parliament Rolls of Willlam and Mary, British Museum, Harl. MS. 7104. fo. 198^. Die Martis None Aprilis 1689. ■X- * * * fo. 199*^. His Maj''^. being in his Throne adorned with his Regall Crowne and Royall Robes with his great Officers of State about him And the Peeres being in their Robes commanded the Gent Usher of the Black Rod to signifie his pleasure to the Commons That they attend his Maj'''^ presently with their Speaker : Who being come his Maj^'^ Gave his Royall assent to 3 Bills I. An Act for Establishing the Coronation Oath The Clerk of the Crowne read the Title : And the Clerk of the parliaments pronounced the Royall assent in these Words Le Roy et la Reyne voulent. ' For the Act of Parliament establishing the Coronation Oath, see i' Gul. & Mar. cap. 6. in Statutes of the Realm, 1819. vol. vi. p. 56. APPENDIX V. Extracts from a manuscript at the Public Record Office, Lord Chamberlain 429. [A folio paper book, bound in vellum, leaves 12-} inches high by S broad; the greater number blank ; but 39 leaves have contemporaneous copies of the warrants from the Lord Chamberlain for the provision of necessaries for the coronation of William and Mary, some of which are named on p. 5 above.] p. II. [Anointing oile : in margi)i\ These are to require you to prepare and' the same quantity ot Annoynting Oyle for theire Ma^'*^^ Coronation as was provided for the last Coronation And this shall bee yo"" Warr*: Given vnd"" my hand o this 23'' day of March 168- In the first yeare of His Ma'''^' Reigne. 9 Dorsett To James Chace Esq Apothecary in Ordinary to His Ma*'^'' Royall person. Whereas His Ma*-^ has declared His Royall Pleasure that he will celebrate the Solemnity of theire Ma'-'* Coronation vpon 12"': day of Aprill next, And hath by His Order in Councill directed mee to Issue- out my Warr*^ for provisions for the same accordingly These are there- fore to signify vnto you His Ma'-^** Pleasure, that you prepare Iwo Ruby Rings- for the King & Queenes Ma*-^^ to bee ])utt on at the Coronation ; as theire Ma'^''* shall direct, Twelve Canopy Staves Silvered & Eight Pells guilt, to hang at the Corners of the Canopy ; One Cup of (Jold for the Earle Marshall of thirty two Ounces : One Cup of Gold for y*^ Lord Mayor of London, One Guilt Bowie for the Mayor of ' Evidently a word has been missed out here, hut tliere is no space between and and the. • Kiiby Riiii^s has been hen: written in llie niaryin in iieiicil in a nineteentli century hand. APPENDIX V. 77 Oxford, One guilt Bowie for the Champion, One guilt Bowie for y® Cheife Cupbearer. Two guilt Basons One guilt Ewer, and one Assay Cup guilt for the Lord Create Chamberlayne ; two guilt Basons for the Cheife Almoner, One Rod adorned with gold, One Chaine and Badg of Gold for y'' Gentleman \"sher of the Black Rod ; These particulars to be made to y® Value to y° Value' proportion & fashion as they were made at y'^ last Coronation And this shall bee yr 8 ^^'arr^ Given vnd'^'' my hand this 23'''-' day of March 168- In the 9 first yeare of His Ma'"-'^ Reigne Dorsett To S-- Guilbert Talbott Kn* Master &c. p. 28. These are to signify unto you His Ma^'^^ Pleasure that you deliver unto the Rt Reverend Father in God the Lord Bishop of Rochester Deane of Westminster these perticulars followinge for theire Ma'^'^* Service at theire Coronation (Viz') For His Ma® One Imperial! Crowne of gold one Scepter of gold with a Crosse, one scepter of gold with a Dove, one S^ Edwards Staffe of gold, one Globe or orbe of gold, one Challice, Patten, and Cover, one Ampulla or Eaglett, and one Anoint- ing Spoone : And for Her Ma'= one Imperial! Crowne, one Scepter with a Crosse, one Scepter with a Dove, and one Globe or Orbe And this shall be yo"" Warrant Given und®'' my hand this : ^"^"^ day of Aprill 1689 In the first yeare of His ^Nla®^ Reigne Dorsett For S^ Guilbert Talbott Kn' Master & Treasurer of His Ma®^ Jewellhouse and in his absence to y*^ rest of y® Officers there. These are to signify unto yo'' Lordship His Ma^* Pleasure that you deliver unto the R' Reverend Father in God the Lord Bishop of Rochester Deane of Westminster for theire Ma*^^ Service at theire Coronation the Royall Vestments, that are provided in your Office for that Service And this shall be yo'' Warrant Given und*^"" my hand this fifth day of Aprill 1689 In the first yeare of His Ma®* Reigne Dorsett To the R* Hono'''® the Lord Mountagu Master of His Ma^'* Create AVardrobe and to His Deputy there. ^ Thus, repeated. APPENDIX VI. Extracts from a Manuscript at the Public Record Office Lord Chamberlain, 428. [A large folio book of paper, of 21 leaves, two at the beginning and three at the end being blank. The leaves are 17^ inches high by 11:^ broad. It is bound in vellum.] [Leaves i & 2 blank.] /The Acconipt of the R^ Hono"^*^'® Ralph Earle of Montagu [fo. 3. Master of the Great Wardrobe to their sacred Ma'"* King William & Queen Mary of his emptions and Deliveries of diverse Particulars for their said Ma** Service against their Royall Coronation solemnized at Westmins"" the ii'"^ day of Aprill 1689 in the first year of their Majesties Reigne. [fo. 3 /' blank.] /For the Coronation of King William & Queen Mary [fo. 4. [Por their Ma*'*: Royall Robes Swords Scabbards Girdles belts sandalls buskins : /// w.] To Samuel Coape Mercer for twenty two yards of purple and gold rich brocard for their Ma'"* Dal- matick Robes ex" To him for ten Ells of Crimson Florence TafiTata to line the said Robes vj'' x* To him for ten yards three quarters of sad colour gold and silver rich Brocard iiij^'^ iii:" vj:" iij*' To him for ten yards three quarters of rich gold ground and silver Brocard iiij-'^=':" vij:" vj'' To him for thirty Eight Ells of Crimson Florence Sarcenclt xix": To him for twenty yards of Crimson rich Florence Sattin xiij:'' To him for two Ells of Crimson Florence sarcenett .\x:* To him for one Ell of Crimson Florence Sarcenett for a wrapper to carry the abovesaid robes to the Abby in x' ATPENDIX VI. 79 To him for one yard of purple three pile Genoa uelvett for Scabbards for two Swords for their Ma^'^'' to be girt with xxvij:* To John Hay and George Crumpe Taylors for making a Robe of cloth of gold and purple lined ^vith rich crimson taffaty and tied before with a band of rich gold and purple stuffe makeing one vest or close pall called a super tunic of cloth of gold with an armill of the same lined with the like taffaty also a crimson sattin surcoate lined with crimson taffaty a pair of Crimson Sattin breeches lined with taffaty and pocketts of the same with silk and ribbon to tye for the anointing and a/ [fo. 4^. stiffned Collar with all other necessaries employed about the same. vj ,li [Yet For their Ma*' Royall Robes &c. in w.] To Them For ia pair of Crimson silk trowses bound with ribbon and all small Furniture vj'' To them for making a pair of sandalls and a pair of Buskins of cloth of gold lined with Crimson taffaty and all small furniture xlviij:^ To them For making a belt and girdle covered with cloth of gold and lined with white tabby and siluer buckles for both gilded iiij:'' To them For making a crimson sarcenett shirt with silk to it and ribbon to tye the openings xj:^ vj:'' To them For callicoe to cutt patterns for their Ma''^"^: Robes iiij"^' To them For making robes of rich gold and purple stuffe &c. lined with Crimson taffaty with all neces- saries for the Queene the same as for his Ma^''' ix:'' x^ To them For making a belt and girdle covered with cloth of gold and lined with white tabby silver buckles for both gilded for her Ma^''' iiij:'' To Samuell Day Linnendraper for fourteene Ells and an half of superfine Cambrick Holland for his Ma:*'^* shirt and Colobium Syndonis xiij:'' xv:® vj:'' To Jane Harwood For making the Colobium Syndonis laced with fine Flanders lace with wings to it of the same Holland and making the said shirt xli:'^ vj:'' To Katherine Mulyes for fourteen yards of fine bone lace for the said Colobium Syndonis xxiiij:'^ x:* /[Yett For their Ma:*« fo. 5. Royal Robes /« /«.] To the aforesaid Jane Harwood for makeing four quoifes and starching and for two pair of Linnen gloves for their Ma/* xxx.^ vij: " iiij:* cxlij :''v ij: ^f xx:" XX :» v:" v:* v:" iij" xiiij:* 80 APPENDIX VI. To Edith Colledge & Judith Radcliffe For eight Ells of Holland for a shirt wastcoate and cap for his ^j^.tics owne person To them for fifty two yards three quarters of lace for the said shirt wastcoate and capp To them for making and laceing the shirt To them for making and laceing the wastcoate To them for marking the shirt and wastcoate To them for making and laceing the Capp To them for starching the shirt and wastcoate To them for a peece of white Sattin Ribbon To John Hawgood Cutler for two gilt swords with velvett Scabbards for their Ma:''^* to be girt with [For the Canopy carried ouer their Ma*'": in ;//.] To the aforesaid Samuell Coape for thirty three yards of Murray gold and silver brocard for the walking Canopy carried over their Ma:*'^" cxxv:'' xij;' vj' To him for thirty one yards and a halfe of silver tabby to line the said Canopy xviij:'' ij:* iij:'' To S:^ W:'" Gostline and partner for sixteene yards of deep needle gold twisted fringe and sixteene yards of ditto edgeing for the said Canopy weight 268 oz & an halfe Venice iiij:='-^'' xj* To them for twelve yards of fine twisted silver deep Fringe weight 189 oz venice xlvij:'' v' To them for one hundred forty one yards and halfe of rich gold Cyphering purle chaine for the same xiiij:" iij:" [/Yett For the Canopy carried ouer their Ma:''^* in ;//.] [fo. 5/'. To Thomas Roberts Joyner for a frame for the said canopy to screw together with iron screws xx:* To Richard IJealing for materialls and makeing the said Canopy and all the ornaments at the corners of the same and sewing silk used v:" x:' [For the anointing Pall : /// w.] To the aforesaid Samuell Coape for elcaven yards of rich white and gold brocard for the pall held over their Ma:"'-''* att their anointing Lxvj:" To him for nine yards of white and gold Lutestring to line it I.iiij:" To the aforesaid S.'' W:"' Gostline and partner for ten yards and half of deep needle gold twisted fringe for the said pall weight 76 oz. xxij:" xvj:'' To the aforesaid Ricliard Healing for makeing the said pall lined with laffaly and fringed with silk used about the same xx* X :Hij:^ 5 vjfi L.« iiij:" ob. xiij .s j.d ob. vij:' ' xf cviij • s j^d ob. iij:" iij:^ APPENDIX VI. 8l [For the Altar cloth Pulpilt cloth Deske cloth cusheons carpett for the Lettany Deske & two cusheons to carry their Ma:'^ Crownes on : in w.] To the aforesaid Samuel! Coape for seven yards and halfe of crimson three pile Genoa velvett for six cusheons to putt round "the altar in Westminster Abby To him for three Ells \ of crimson Florence taffaty to line To him for Eleaven yards § of a rich gold and purple brocard for the altar peece pulpitt cloth and Desk cloih there xlij:'' To him for twelve yards of gold tabby to pane the altar peece and pulpitt cloth To him for three Ells ^ of purple Florence sarcenett to line the aforesaid pulpitt cloth xx To him for nine yards of crimson narrow manto for the carpett for the Littany Deske To him for two yards i of gold ground and silver rich brocard for two cusheons to carry their Ma'^ crownes on xxviij:^' xv:^ To the aforesaid S"" W'" Gostline for three yards and three quarters of deep needle gold twisted fringe seven yards of ditto edgeing and two yards of ditto seaming weight xli oz xij:'' vj:^ To him for Eight yards and halfe of needle gold twisted fringe with purple silk under it weight xvij oz f^ iij:" xvij:^ iiij:<^ To him for Eight gold and purled tassells with crimson shagg iiij:ii viij:^ /[Yett For the said Altar cloth &c. i)i m.] [fo. 7 To the aforesaid Richard Bealing for makeing the afore- said six cusheons of crimson velvett and for six cusheons of downe for them iiiji' iiij^ To him' for makeing the said altar peece and pulpitt cloth fringed with gold and silver and for silk used about them xP To him for fine purple callicoe to line the altar peece vij:^ vj:"^ To him for making the carpett of crimson taffiity for the said Lettany Desk v:*^ To him for making the said two cusheons of cloth of gold to carry their Ma:"''^ crownes on and for two fine cusheons of downe for them xxiiij:' [For chaires foot stooles cusheons & faldstoole carpetts &''. for the Abby & St. Edwards Cha])i)". in ///.] ' Written over erasure. COR. ORDERS. G 82 APPENDIX VI. To the aforesaid Samuel Coape for twenty nine yards and half of crimson three pile Genoa velvett for two great chaires two footstooles and two cusheons also a faldstoole carpett and two cusheons in West- minster Abby xxxix:" xvj:' vj:** To him for seven Ells and quarter of crimson Florence taffiity to lyne iiij:'' xiiij:* iij:"* To him for sixteene yards and halfe of blew three pile Genoa velvett for two great chaires two footstooles and two cusheons xix:'' xvj:* To him for twenty six yards of blew genoa rich Damaske and seven Ells and quarter of blew Florence manto for two faldstoole carpetts and four cusheons xix:" ij:* iiij:*^ ob. To him for sixteene yards three quarters of greene three pile genoa velvett and one Ell ^ of greene Florence manto for two great chaires two/ foot- [fo. 7^ stooles and two cusheons in the said Abbey xx:'' xiiij:' v:'' ob. [Yett For the said chaires footstooles &'■. in ;;/.] To him for sixteene yards and half of purple Dutch velvett and four yards and quarter of purple Florence sattin for two great chaires two footstooles and two cusheons for the Bishopps in the abbey xvj:'' iiij: vij:'' ob. To him for sixteene yards of rich gold & blew brocard for two chaires of- state two footstooles and two cusheons for the throne in the said abbey iiij: '^^ '' To him for one hundred sixty seven yards three quarters of gold tabby and ten yards and halfe of gold colour Padesway to cover the said throne and steps vp to it civ:" x:* ob. To him for thirty six yards three quarters of rich gold tissue to cover St. Edwards chaire and another chaire suitable with two footstooles and two cusheons and three yards of gold tabby to bottome the said cusheons cij:'' xviij:* iv:'' To him for Eighty eight Ells of crimson Florence taffaty for two traverse curtaines in S' Edwards Chappell l.vij:'' iiij:' I'o the aforesaid S"" U'"' (iostline for fifty nine yards ^ of rich needle gold nayle deep twisted fringe thirty f(jur yards of ditto edgeing and fifty six yards uf ditto seaming w^ 391 oz cxvij:" vj:' To him for ICight rich all gold jnirled tassells \:" To him for sixteene gold purled tassells with purple and crimson silke viij;'' xvj:* Being for eight chaires ei;,'ht footstooles iV eight cusheons aforesaid (viz*) two of each of cloth of I APPENDIX \ I. 8j tissue two of cloth of gold two of crimson velvett and two of purple velvett. /[Yett For the said ciiaires [fo. 8 footstooles &'^. in w.] To him for thirty four yards of inch deep needle gold and silver twisted fringe twenty two yards three quarters of ditto edgeing and sixty one yards of ditto seaming \s'^ 243 ot -4 Lxvij:'' vij: ob. To him for sixteene gold and silver purled tassells with blew and green shagge for four chaires four foot- stooles and four cusheons of blew and green velvett and six cusheons of crimson velvett aforesaid viij:'' xvj:'^ To him for ten yards of naile deep needle gold twisted fringe and fourteene yards of ditto seaming for one faldstoole carpett and two cusheons of crimson velvett aforesaid w*. 43 oz xij.'^ xiij:^ -To him for twelve purled gold tassells with crimson shagge for the said faldstoole carpett and cusheons vj:" xij:' To him for twenty yards of inch deep needle gold and silver twisted fringes and twenty eight yards of seaming ditto for two faldstoole carpetts and four cusheons of blew damask aforesaid w'. 98 oz f xxvij:'' iij:^ j:*^ ob: To him for twenty four large gold and silver tassells with gold colour shagge for the same xiij:'' iiij:'* To the aforesaid Thomas Roberts for six chaires of State of wallnuttree carved all over horse bone with leaves on the feet and a Crowne and two figures in the fore Rayle and a Scrowle on the top of the back and six footstooles of the same carved all horse bone for their Ma***: in the Abby xvij: ''iiij:*^ To him for two rich chaires of State carved all over very rich with Scrowles and leaves and figures in the fore feet and Crownes and Scepters in the fore rayles and Crownes and Scepters on the top of the backs and all gilt with gold and two/ footstooles of the same [fo. ib carving all gilt with gold for two chaires of State for the throne for their Ma*": in the Abbey xxxij:'' [Yett For the s'^ chaires footstooles &'\ in m.] To him for two footstooles carved all over and gilt with gold for St. Edwards chaire and one chaire suitable to it iiij:'' To him for two chaires of wallnuttree the feet carved horsebone with leaves on them and the rayles with a flower in the middle and two footstooles carved horsebone for them for the Bishopps in the Abbey iiij:'' vf G 2 ?4 APPENDIX VI. To the aforesaid Richard Bealing for bottoming and backing for the two crimson velvett chaires and two footstooles aforesaid x:' To him for downe baggs for the Seates and arms of the chaires and for the footstooles Lviij:' To him for two large cusheons filled with fine downe xxviij:' To him for making the chaires footstooles and cusheons and curled hair to stufife the backs iij:'' xvj:* To him for makeing a crimson velvett faldstoole carpett and two cusheons suitable and two large baggs of downe for them xliiij:* To him for bottoming the two blew velvet chaires and footstooles and backeing the said chaires x:* To him for downe baggs for the seates of the said chaires and footstooles and Elbowes of the chaires Lviij:^ To him for curled haire to stuffe the backs xvj:' To him for two large cusheons of downe for the State cusheons and makeing the said chaires footstooles and cusheons iiij:'' viij' To him For making the afores**. two large faldstoole carpetts of blew damask fringed with gold making the four cusheons & baggs of downe for them and sewing silke iiij." iiij:^ /[Yett For the said chaires [fo. 9. foot stooles &''. /// w.] To him for bottoming and backing two greene velvet chaires and footstooles and for baggs of downe for the seates and arms of the chaires iij:'' viij:' To him for two large cusheons of Downe xxviij:^ To him for curled haire for the backs and lining to stuffe in it and making the said chaires footstooles and cusheons iij:'' xxj:' To him for bottoming and backing the two purple velvett chaires and footstooles aforesaid for the ]Jishop]:>s x:' To him for baggs of downe for the seates of the chaires and footstooles and elbowes of the chaires & two large baggs of downe for the cusheons iiij:" vj:' To him for curled haire to stuffe the backs and lining to the same and makeing the said chaires footstooles and cushccjns iij:" xvj' To him lor bottoming and I)a( keing two fine chaires of rich blew and gold brocard for the throne two baggs of downe for the seates of the said chaires four fur the IClbowes and two for the footstooles iij:" viij:'* To him for fine curled hair for the backs of the s** chaires and making the chaires footstooles and cusheons iiij:" vj:" APPENDIX VI. 8S To him for making two gold stuffe cases for S' Edwards chairest and such another chaire and sewing silke used about the same To him for two large downe cushions for tlie chaires To him for bottoining and baggs of downe for two footstooles suitable & making the footstooles and cusheons To him for two long curtaine rodds for the traverses in Saint Edwards chappell and for Ringes and tape for the curtaines and for sewing silke and nayles and putting them vp To him for rich gilt nailes and tacks used about all the chaires and footstooles iij:'' x:» xxviij:^ xxx:* xliij: iij:» xvuj: /[Chaires of State Footstooles [fo. ()b and cusheons in Westminster hall in w.] - To the aforesaid Samuel) Coape for three yards and quarter of greene three pile Genoa velvett To him for three yards and quarter of greene Dutch velvett Lviij:^ vj:*^ Being to line the backs of both Embroidered chaires and for the bottomes of two great cusheons for the chaires and to cover a footstoole to the rich State putt up in Westminster Hall To the aforesaid S'". \V"'. Gostline for five yards and quarter of gold and silver knotted foot fringe for the said greene velvett chaire of State w' vj oz §. xxxvi:* v'': q"^ To the aforesaid Thomas Roberts for a chaire of State carved very rich vvith scrowles and leaves and flowers in the feet &: railes the arms richly carved and all gilt with gold and a footstoole of the same carved rich all over and gilt with gold^ and a foot- stoole of the same carved rich all over and gilt with gold' xix:'^ To the aforesaid Richard Bealing for bottoming and backing the said great Embroidered chaire x:' To him for a ticking back of feathers and curled haire and canvas to stuffe the back xxiiij:* To him for making the said chaire and altering the other chaire being taken to peeces and for gilt nailes and tacks used about them both Liiij:' To him for a large back of feathers for one embroidered cusheon for the State chaire x:" To him for making the cusheons and altering the other cusheons and makeing a new footstoole and curled haire to stuffe the said footstoole xj:' vj:*^ ' — ' Thus, repeated. 86 APPENDIX J P. /[Vett the said chairs of State &'\ in w.] [fo. lo To Wilh'am West and John Barbor for Embroidering the said footstoole of greene velvett richly wrought with gold and silver for her Ma:*'" in Westminster Hall suitable to His Ma:*'*^'* chaire and footstoole there vj:^ To them for additional Embroidering work to tlio rich chaire of State iij:" [Swords of State /// w.] To the aforesaide Samuell Coape for three yards of very rich gold brocard for the Scabbards for six swords to be carried before their Ma.*'"^"* and for swords of State xxj:-^ To the aforesaid John Hawgood for three large swords of state gilt with scabbards of cloth of gold xv:" [Robes for the Dukes of Normandy & Aquitaine in w.] To the aforesaid Samuell Coape for twenty two yards of crimson three pile Genoa velvett for Robes for two persons representing the Dukes of Normandy and Aquitaine xxix:'' xiiij:'' To him for Eight Ells of white Elorence taftata to hne iiij:'' xij:^ To him for two yards of crimson and gold brocard for their Hatts v:" x-* To the afores'' John Hay and George Crumpe for making the two crimson velvett mantles lined with white taffaty with ribbon to tye the necks and all other necessaries tliereto belonging iij.^ To them for makeing and ])Litteing the two gold stufie hatts with all Small necessaries xl.^ /To them for altering the Duke of Aquitaines robes and [fo. lolf making them iitt for S'" Edward Sutton and for expences in going about the same ij:'' vj:'' To Daniell Browne for furring the said two Robes and Hatts with powdered Ermins iiij''^ v:'' [The rest of the book, some nine leaves, is taken up with items which have no great liturgical interest: on ff lo/^ and ii ,xx6 SaJd/cs d^r. for their Ala''" C/iampion ; on fo. 1 1 i> are ConffS ^^c. for three Kin}::;s att Amies ■^ndi Coates for six Hera u Ids ; on fo. 12 are Coafes for four Pursuivants and Robes for Garter A'ini;- att Arms and the Gent usher of the Jy/ack Rodd ; on fo. 12/- are Rol>es for the L'' high Steivard L''. GK Chamberlain &> Master of the G' Wardrobe, Robes For the Deputy 6^ clarke of the G' Wardrobe, Robes for the yeoiti 6^ t7VO Groonies of the removing ]Vardrobe ; on fo. 13 are items /vr ///«■ /t/i"// APPENDIX VL 87 Constable of Westminster, For their Ma''" Apothecary, For the Jt'ishopp of London, For the Subdeane of the Chappell, For the Con- iessor SerJ'. o^' one yeom of the Vestry, For twelve Priests, For tumity Gent, of the chappell and thirty five Musitians, for one yeom and ^room of the vestry and a coition serf. These are mainly allowances of cloth. On fo. 13/' are allowances For the Af'' of Mitsick 6^ ttvelve Chappell Boyes ViwA Chappell boyes Liveryes. On fo. 14 Yeotnen of the Guards Liveries and ll'ardo/^ of the Tower of London. These fill up ff. 14/^ and 15. On ff. 15/^, 16, and 16b Liveries for 16 Trumpetters 4 Kettledrum''^ 4 Drutn"^ 6^ a Phife. On fo, 1 7 A livery for the Serf Trumpetter. On i-]b a livery for the Drum major, For furnishing the Court of claims : On fo. 18 For furnishing the house of Lords JFestm''. abbey the hall and severall Roomes passages ^ Lobbyes thereto belonging. On fo. \Zb blew cloth For their Ma'"^ to walk on and canvas For the Master Cooke.'\ APPENDIX VII. Extracts from Wardrobe Accounts at the Public Record Office, Audit Office, Declared Accounts. Concerning the Coronation Robes, from Queen Anne to King George III. QUEEN ANNE. Wardrobe accounts. Bundle 2366. Roll 133. Henry Furness Mercliant for xiiij''" Ells & a halfe of Holland for a Lynnen Habbitt a Collobiumt Sindonis, Two Quoifes and a paire of Gloves for the Queenes Royall Person when Annoynted. xiii:'' .\ii:' Anthony Reilham Merchant for xj*"" yards of Rich Gould and Crimson Brocard for a Ualmatick Robe. iiij^'' xix:'' For xj''" yards of very Rich Blew and Gold Brocard for a Super Tunica, a Girdle with hanger and ]}uskins Sandalls & Armilla. iiij" xix:'-' KING GEORGE I. Wardrobe accounts. Bundle 2368. Roll 146. Robert Graham Taylor for making a Robe of Cloath of Gold lined with Crimson Taffuta and a Supertunica of Cloalh of golil with an Armilla of y^' same both lined with Crimson Taffata, ft)r making breeches, Trousers, Sandalls, Buskins of Cloath of gold with all furniture, making a belt, fme Linnen gloves, a hollaiul Habit, a Crimson Taffata habit and other work for the Kings person at the Coronation. . . . Kalherine ve/ian Milliner, for l-'ourteen Ells and a half of Fine 1 lolUind for a Colobium Sindonis, two Coifes and a pair of gloves for the Kings Royall person when Anointed. APPENDIX VII. 89 KING C.EORGE II. Wardrobe accounts. Bundle 2371. Roll 159. Matthew Vernon Mercer for 1 1 yards of Rich Scarlet and Gold Brocard with Green and White Flowers for a Dalmatick Robe for his Majesties Royal Person iii.j^-'' v'' v** For 1 1 yards of the same for a Supertunica, a Girdle with Hangers Buskins Sandalls and an Armilla * * * Joseph Windham and Partners Linnen Drapers for 14^ Ells of Superfine Cambrick Holland for a Colobium Sindonis, a Shirt and a pair of Gloves for his Maties Royal Person at the Coronation xij": yjS. yjd * * * Katherine Vesian Millener for a Coife a Poynt Crevat. . . . KING GEORGE III. Wardrobe accounts. Bundle 2383, Roll 194. Robert Carr Mercer for Blue and Crimson Velvet Cloth of Gold & for his Majesty's Robes, Altar Cloths &c at the Coronation. . . Elizabeth Gower Milliner for Cambrick Holland for a Shirt and Colobium for Brussells Ruffles Lace &c and for making and trimming the same for his Majestys Royal Person at the Coronation. . . . James Bryer Shoemaker for making a pair of rich Brocade Buskins and Sandals for his Majesty at the Coronation. . . . Mary Inglis and Agnes Gardner Milliners for point Lace and making it into a Cravat, and Cambrick Holland point Lace &c for a Waistcote Coife and Gloves, for his Majesty's Royal person, at the Coronation. [In connexion with the coronation of King George III. the following extracts from the Lord Chamberlain's warrants may be noted.] Public Record Office, Lord Chamberlain, Series L No. 435. Warrants for necessaries to be furnished against the Coronation of King George the 3'"'' tScc. p. 4. A List of Particulars necessary to be provided against the Coronation by the Office of the Great Wardrobe. 90 APPENDIX Vn. [xMem :"'"•" Those Articles underlined with red were provided but not used therefore unnecessary. And those underlined with black were not provided at all.' Written in red ink in margin?^ A Colobiiini Sindonis of fine holland pear in the list without any note that they were not worn or provided.] ' The artiilcs unileiliiud witli red have lucn printed in italics, and iho^c underlined vvitli hhuk in smaller type. ■•' — ■ Tlicsc t\vt> p;nai;rapliN are struck out. APPENDIX VIII. Ceremonial of the Coronation of King William and Queen Mary. [Tract dealing with the ceremonies of the Coronation of King William and Queen Mary from a collection of heraldic papers in Add. MS. 633S in the British Museum. The paper is certainly drawn up JDy one of the officers of arms on duty.] p. 105 [now fo. 56] /Proclamation King William & Queen INIary Coronation of [Pages 106 & 107 dealing with the Proclamation are omitted.] p. 108.] The Proceeding to the Throne in Westminster Hall. The King and Queene came from Whitehall to Westminster betwene ten and eleaven of the clock on the ii"''^ Aprill 1689 in the Morning, whereupon the Officers of Armes began to marshall the Proceeding to the Throne in Westminster Hall. The Drums and Trumpets at the lower end of the Hall. The Judges and others of the long Robe, The Gentlemen of the Privy Chamber, and others their Ma'^'^ ser\'ants. The Lord Maior, Aldermen, Sheriffs of London, and such others as were to goe in the Proceeding attended in the Court of Requests. The Peers repaired to the Lords House of Parliament. The Peeresses to the Painted Chamber The .Archbishop and Bishops to their adjacent Chambers. [The Proceeding into Westm"' Hall in the morning, in w.] They proceeded into Westminster Hall as followeth. First the six Clerks in Chancery, 3. a breast. Chaplains having dignityes, 4. a breast. Aldermen of London, 4. a breast. The Masters in Chancery. The Kings Sergeants at lawe. 92 APPENDIX VIII. The Kings Solicitor and Attorney Generall. The Kings two ancient Sergeants. Esquiers of the Body. Gentlemen of the Privy Chamber. The Barons of th' Excheq'' and Justices of both Benches. Lord Cheife Baron, and Lord Cheife Justice of the CoiTion Pleas. Master of the Rolls, and Lord Cheife Justice of the Kings Bench. ^, J.J r Sergeant Porter and Sergeant of the Vestry. 1 nese aja^J^ot goe. i (^i^jij^en of the Chapell. (_ Chore of Westminster. 2. Pursuivants of Armes. Baronesses^) in their Robes their Capes poudered with 2. rowes of I Ermine. Barons. r4. a breast. Li their Robes. i Bishops. J 2. Pursuivants of Armes. Viscountesses^ in like manner, the Capes poudered with 2. Rowes and an halfe of Ermine. Viscounts in their Robes. 2. Heralds. [4 a Breast /;/ ?«.] Countesses ^ In their Robes, the Capes poudered with 3. Rowes of V Ermine. J In their Robes Earles J In their Robes. 2. Heralds. A Marchioness. In her Robes the Capes poudered with 3. Rowes and an halfe of Ermine. 2. Heralds. Duchesses In Robes, the Capes poudered with 4 Rowes of Ermine. Dukes. p. 109.] /The 2. Provinciall Kings of Armes. Lord Privy Scale Lord President of the Councell. Lord Archbishop of Yorke Prince George of Denmarkc, Duke of Cumberland. His trayne borne. [His Royall Highness Prince George of Denmarke Duke of Cumber- land was ordered to goe in the Proceeding next before the Dukes of Normandy and Acjuitaine with 2. bars of Ermine more then a Duke & his trayne carried up. /// ///.] ' In the original F/.V(W\ The rest in order as before were in like manner all layde upon the Table, and the Deane & Prebends as soone as they had delivered them descended. Then Garter by the Kings romand called the Earle of Manchester to whom the Lord Great Chamberlain gaue St. Edward's Stafle. [A Liste of the Peers appointed to carry the Regalia was before delivered to Garter : in m.\ In like manner, the Lord Grey of Rulhyn being called received the spurs. APPENDIX VIII. 95 The Earle of Clare, the Queens scepter with the Crosse. The Earle of Northampton the Kings scepter with the Crosse. The Earle of Shrewsbury the Sword Curtana, betwene the Earle of Derby with the pointed Sword and the Earle of Pembroke the blunted sword on the left hand. The Earle of Oxford, the Sword of State in the scabbard. The Earle of Bedford, the Queenes Scepter with the Doue. The Earle of Rutland, the Kings Scepter with the Doue. The Duke of Bolton, with the Queenes Orbe. The Duke of Grafton, the Kings Orbe. The Duke of Somerset, the Queenes Crowne, the Cap Purple Velvet. The Earle of Devonshire, Lord High Steward, the King's Crowne, the Cap purple Velvet. The Lo'^ Bishop of Rochester, Deane of Westminster, with the Chalice. The Lord Bishop of St. Asaph, the Patin. The Lord Bishop of London, the Bible. At the foote of the staires leading up to the Throne, the Barons of the Cinque Ports attended with the Canopye. The way from the Throne in "Westminster Hall to the Quier in West- minster Abbey was spread with Blue cloth. p. III.] /The King and Queenes Royall Proceeding to their Ma*^"^* Coronation from Westminster Hall to Westminster Abbey. These stayd at fP^^'V.^' 4;. \breast. \\7 ,. ■ ,. Tj ^^ J Ihe Drum r^Iaior. u estminster Hall < rj. , u <. I 1 rumpets 4. a breast. [_The Sergeant Trumpeter. f The six Clerkes in Chancery 3. a breast ^ Chaplaines having dignityes in scarlet, 4. a breast. Sheriffs, and Aldermen of London, In scarlet 4. a breast. Masters in Chancery in Gownes. The Kings two younger Sergeants, in their Robes. ...raliedVyThe < l^^ ?°''^'^°/ ^'^^ '"^"^''f >' ^^enerall. Off" of A-rmes I Kmgs two antient Sergeants m their Robes. & conducted into | ft'^l"'^^^ ^^ '^,^ J°^y ^" ^^f "1"'^" habits. the Hall Gentlemen of the Pnvy Chamber, 4. a breast, to be ranked by the Lo'' Chamberlains order. I Knights of the Bath, In this place if any had bene L. made. ' The Proceeding to Westm'' Abbey : adi/c,^ in tnai^dn in otiur hand. gate. These ordered to meete in the Court of Request where they were mars 56 APPENDIX VIII. Barons of the Excheq'" and Justices of both Benches. Lord Cheife Baron and Lo'' Cheife Justice of the CoiTion Pleas. Master of the Rolls, and Lo'' Cheife Justice of the Kings Bench. Sergeant of the Vestry with his Verge, and the Sergeant Porter, \\\ scarlet Gowncs. Children of the Chapell In Scarlet Mantles. Chore of Westminster, In surplices. Gent : of the Kings Chapell, In scarlet Mantles. The Subdeane of the Chapell, In a scarlet Gowne turned up with black velvet. Prebends of Westminster. In Copes. The Deane of Westminster, In a rich coi)e, In an other place. The Master of the Jewell House, In a scarlet Robe. Privy Councellors, not Peers, If any. Two Pursuivants of Amies. Baronesses 4. a breast. In their Robes of Crimson Velvet, the Cap)es poudered with two rowes of Ermyne, their Coronets in their hands. [The Peeresses met in the Painted Chamber. /// ;//.] Barons in their Robes in like manner. [The Peers in the Lords House. /// ;//.] Bishops. Two Pursuivants of Armes. Viscountesses 4. a breast, In their Robes, the Capes poudered with two rowes and an half of Ermyne, their Coronets in their hands. Viscounts in their Robes in like manner. [No Traynes borne but the King and Queenes. in w.] Two Heralds, wearing their Collars of SS. of silver. Countesses 4 a breast, In their Robes, the Capes poudered with 3. rowes of Ermyne, their Coronets in their hands. Earles in their Robes in like manner. [The Kn*^" of the Garter did wcare their great collars & Georges. in w.] Two Heralds of Armes as before. A Marchioness, in her Robes, the Cajie poudered with 3. rowes and an halfe of Ermine, her Coronet in her hand. p. 112.] /Two Heralds as before. Duchesses, 4. a breast, In their Robes, the Capes poudered with .}. rowes of Ermyne, their Coronets in their hands. APPEND fX 1 7//. 57 Dukes in like manner, except employed to carry the Regalia. '"larenceux King of .Armes, wearing a silver collar of SS. g[old.] l.o'' Privy Seale the Marq: of Hallifax, and the Lo'^ President the Earle of Danby, In their Kobes carrying their Coronets in their hands. The Lo"' Archbishop of Yorke' His Royall Highness Prince George of Denmarke, Duke of Cumber- land, In his Robes poudered with six rowes of Ermyne, his Coronet in his hand, and his Trayne borne according to the order before mentioned. Two Persons in Robes of State, representing the Dukes of Aquitaine and Normandy, Viz^ S'' Edward Sutton kn' and S"" Purbeck Temple Baronet. St. Edwards Staffe. The Queenes Scepter w"' the Crosse. The Pointless sword. Lo'' Mai or of London bearing the (jtye Mace. Curtana. The Spurs. The Kings Scepter with the Crosse. The Pointed sword. Garter Principall King of Armes in his Collar and Jewell his Coronet in his hand. The Gentleman Usher with his Black Rod. I'he Lord Great Chamberlain, in his Robes, his Coronet in one hand, his white staffe in the other. > 3 o The Earle Marshall in his Robes, his ("oronet in one hand. In the other the Earle Marsh"-^ staffe. Duke of Norfolke The Sword of State, The High Earle of Oxford. Constable in his robes in one [hand] his Coronet, In the other the Constables staffe. Duke of Ormond. The Queenes scepter with a Doue by Earle of Bedford. The Queenes Orbe by Du. of Bolton. The Queenes Crowne by the Q Du. of Somerset. 3 The Patin by the 2 Lord Bishop o of St. Asaph. a V V The Kings scepter with a Doue Earle of Rutland. The Kings Orbe by the Du. of Grafton. The Kings Crowne by the Lo'^ High Steward the Earle of Devonshire, c/j The Bible by the Lord Bishop of London. The Chalice by the Lord Bishop of Rochester. ' A Q /tas been oiidc.i in margin before Ihc Arehhishop of York, probably standini^ for QutT)-. COK. ORDERS. H 9S APPENDIX VIII. The Canopye borne by i6. of the Barons J? of the Cinque Ports. o = Lo'' Bp. of T, r\ Tu i'- I'O'' Bp. of S r- T, • . I T he Queene. The King. ,.- , ^. JJ c Bristol. ^ ^ \\ inchester. "S >' c 9 On her head a Circlet of On his head a Crimson ^ gold her \' el vet Cap Ma'' Trayne borne by the Duchess his great Collar of the Order & of .Somerset, Lady Elizabeth Pawkt, Cieorge, his Ma'^ Traine borne Lady Diana Vere, Lady Elizabeth by the Lo'' Eland, L*' Willough- Cavendish, Lady Henrietta Hyde. by, Lord Lansdoune, Lo'* Dun- blaine, and the Master of the Robes. The Countess of Derby, Grome The Earl of Monmouth, Gent: of the Stole. of the Bedchamber. 2. of her Ma*^ women. 2. Groomes of the Bedchamber. The Capt. of the 'Ihe Capt. of the The Capt. of the Yeomen of the Horse Guarde Pentioners. Guard. in wayting. Ensigne and Lieutenant of the Yeomen of the Guarde. Yeoman of the Guarde. 4. a breast. p. 113.] /Westminster Abbey, and the Cerimonies and transactions therein. \\'ithin Westminster Abbey a large Theatre was erected, which extended to the 4. Pillars betwene the Quier and the Altar, the ascent to the said Theatre was by severall steps, and the descent from thence to the Altar two steps. In the middle of the said Theatre was erected a Throne raysed upon 5 degrees, or steps, where was placed two Chaires of State of Cloth of gold with footstools and Cushions respecting the Altar. The Theatre was floored with red say, and the Throne, and the steps going up to it was covered with cloth of Gold. The Area or Sacrarium betwene the Altar and the Theatre was covered with red Say. At the Foot of the Throne upon the Theatre facing the Altar, two rich Chaires were placed with a Faldstoole and cushions before them, for the King and Queene. Upon the South syde of the said Area betwene the Theatre and the Altar was a Traverse of Crimson Taffeta and two Chaires with Foot- stooles and Cushions and Faldstooles before the Chayres. Opposite thereunto on the North syde was a Chayre of Purpli- Velvet for the Lord Bishop of London, who at this Solemnity officiated instead of the Archbishop of Canterbury. About the middle of the Area, some what neerer the Theatre then the Altar was placeil St. ICdwards Chayre, and another by it for the (Queene. APPENDIX Vlir. 99 T5clo\ve the Traverse were- placed Formes for tlie Circat Ofificcrs. Formes were also provided for the Bishops behind the Archbishops Chayre. The first that did ascend the Theatre were the Prebends who had a place appointed for them on the South syde of the Altar beyond their Ma**, traverse. The Sergeant Porter and the Sergeant of the Vestry repaired to their Station towards the North syde of the Altar. The Children of the Chapell, the Chore of Westminster, and the Gentlemen of their Ma*^ Chapell did not enter the Quire, but repaired to the Galleryes aboue on the North syde of the Altar. The Drums and Trumpets did goe to their station over the dore of the entrance into the Quire. The six Clerks of the Chancery &c., did passe to their places in the Galleryes on both sydes of the Quere leading to the Theatre. The Baronesses conducted by an officer of Amies did ascend the Theatre and goe to the outermost seates prepared for them on the North syde of the Throne. The Barons did in like manner repaire to the outermost seates on the South syde of the Throne. The Bishops did pass to their seates on the North syde of the Area leading to the Altar, The Viscountesses were conducted to their seates iiTiediatly before the Baronesses by an officer of Armes. The Viscounts in like manner to their seats before the Barons. The Countesses, Earles, Marchionesses, Marquis, Duchesses, Dukes did after the same manner repaire to their seates, placed in order before each other. The Chore and Prebends of Westminster, when they came within the Abbey dore did fall off and stayde on both sydes the middle Isle of the Church, till their Ma** coining thither, and then they did goe before them singing an Anthem, Psal. 122. I was glad, tScc. When their Ma''* were arrived at the Quire dore, the Canopye borne by the Barons of the Cinque Ports stayde there with it. The King and Queene having ascended the Theatre repaired to their Chaires placed at the foote of the Throne, there the King and Queene kneeled downe, and after a little tyme arose and seated themselves in their Chaires, those Noblemen who carryed the Regalia, and the swords stood in order on the one syde of their Ma*^, the Great Officers, and the Lord Great Chamberlaine on the other syde, The two Bishops who supported the King and Queene stood on the right hand and left hand of their Ma^. The Officers of Armes did goe to their Stations at the 4 Corners of the Theatre. The members of the House [of] Conions and their Speaker did sit on the North syde the Theatre behind the Peeresses. p. 114.] /Then the Lo'' Bishop of London (insted of the Archbishop of Canterbury) with the Lo'' Great Chamberlaine, the Lord High Constable, and the Earle Marshall repaired to the King and Queene, H 2 lOO APPEXDIX Mil. and from their Ma'* pa.sscd to the South sydc of the Altar, Garter King of Amies going before them, there the Lord Bishop of London with a loude voyce said as followeth, the King and Queene standing up, [Their Ma** presented to the Lo''" & Coinons : in ///.] S"^ I here present unto you King William and Queene Mary, undoubted King and Queene of this Realme, wherefore all yee, that are come this day to doe your Homage, service, and bounden duty, be yee willing to doe the same. From thence the said Bishop of London, accompanied as before, passed to the West syde of the said Theatre, and repeated the same words, and after that did the like on the North syde, their Ma** turning themselves where the said words were pronounced, at every of which sydes was testified their Jo}' and consents by their loude acclamations of God preserve King William and Queene Mary. The Drums also beate and the Trumpets sounded. Their Ma** then repaired to their chayres on the Area nere the Altar. The acclamations ceasing an Anthem was sung, and at the beginning thereof the Bishop of London repaired to the Altar, where he was vested in a rich Cope, and stood at the North end of the Altar. The' other Bishops who did beare any parte in the service, and the Deane of Westminster vested themselves also. At the same tyme the Officers of the Wardrobe spread a large carpet before the Altar, and the Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod, assisted l)y some of the \Vardrobe, layd over it another rich Carpet, &: Cushions. The Anthem ended. The King and Queene did rise from their Chaires, and being sui)ported by the two Bishops, and attended by the Deane of Westminster, the (ireat Officers, the 4 Swords, and the Regalia going before them, they repaired to the Altar, and there kneeled downe. [The First offering : /;/ ;//.] There the Master of the Great Wardrobe, delivered to the Lord Great (Chamberlain a Pall of cloth of gold, or Altar cloth, who upon his knee presented it to their Ma** who offered it, and the Lo'' Bishop of London having received it layde it ujion the .Mtar, assisted by the Deane of Westminster. After the same manner the Queenes Pall was offered. Then the Treasurer of the Household delivered to the Lo'' Great (Chamberlaine two Ligots or wedges of gold each of them allmost a pound weight, w'^'' he on his knee presented to their Ma'" who having offered them they were in like manner layde upon the Altar. After this a Prayer having bene read by the Lo** Bishop of London, the King and Queene rose up, made their reverences, and returned to their chayres, attended by the Lords with the 4. swords. ' ./ small (J has liccii lure oilikJ in Niarj;itt, for queiy^ APPEXDjX Vlll. loi Then the Lords who carryed the RegaHa (the swords excepted) presented them to the Bishop of London severally, who as he received them delivered them to the Ueane of Westminster by whom they were layde upon the Altar. First the Bible. The Patin, & Chalice. The Kings Crowne and the Queenes. The 2. Orbes. The 2. Scepters with the Doue. The 2. Scepters with the Crosse. The Spurrs. St. Edwards staffe. These being offered, the Noblemen who carryed them repaired to their seates amongst the other Peers. Then Prayers were begun by the Bishop of London, and two of the Bishops' kneeling read the Litany, after which some other collects were read, and the sermon began by the Bishop of Salisbury. During sermon the Bishops who supported the King and Queene stood on each syde of them, and the Noblemen that carryed the swords did beare them erected on their Ma'^ right hand. The Lord Great Chamberlain did stand on their ]Ma*' left hand. After Sermon their Ma** tooke the new oath established by Act of Parliament which was as foUoweth. p. 115.]^ * * * p. 116.] /The King and Queene having taken the aforesaid Oath, they did goe to a Faldstoole (where cushions were layde for their I\Ia*^) which was a little distant from the Altar, and there they kneeled while the Quier sung the Anthem Veni Creator &c. After which the Bishop of London read a Collect &c., which being done, the Quier sang Zadoc the Priest and Nathan the Prophet &c. [The King & Queene disrobed. /;/ w.] The King and Queene then rose up, and did goe to the Altar supported by the two Bishops and attended by the Lord Great Chamberlain and the Countess of Derby, where his Ma*^'' was disrobed of his Mantle and Surcoate by the Lord Great Chamberlain, and the Queene by the Countess of Derby, which Robes were imediatly carried away, and layde in the Traverse in King Edwards Chapell. [Ampull. /;/ i7i.\ From thence they were conducted to St. Edwards Chaire and the other Chaire placed by it, where their Ma*'* sate downe, and the Bishop ' St. Asaph & Bangor, in margin. ^ p. 115 and the first seven lines of p. 116, containing only the Act of Parliament regulating the Coronation oath, have not been printed here. (See above, p. 19, and appendix iv. p. 75 and Staftifcs of the Realm ^ I0I9, vol. vi. p. 56.) I02 Ai''i]ENpiX MIL of IvOndon opened his Ma*^ Clothes, and the Countess of Derby the Queens, the Deane of Westminster having in the meane tyme brought the Anipull with the Oyle and spoone, poured out some of it into the spoone, and deliverd it to the Lord Bishop of London, to anoynt their Ma*^ which was done as followcth. [The Anointing, in ///.] First in the Palms of his Ma'^ hands, and next in the Queens, sayng Be these hands anointed, &c. In like manner the said Bish of London anoynted their Ma'-'* Breasts sayng, Be these Breasts anointed &c. The said ]5ishop did also anoynt their >LV'' shoulders, saying be these shoulders anointed &c. And on the bowing of the Amies sayng be these. Lastly on the Crownes of their ^Ll*^■' Heads sayng Be these. During the tyme of their Ma''* anoynting 4 Knights of the (iarter supported a rich Pall of cloth of gold over their Ma*-"*. The King and Queene being thus anointed, the Bishop of London read a Collect, and the Deane of Westminster having dried all the places anointed (except their Ma*"* heads and hands) closes the places of his Ma*-"* garments that were opened for the anoynting w^'' fine linnen cloth provided by the Lo'' Great Chamb and the Countess of Derby did the like to the Queens. [Coyfe. /// w.] Then a shallowe coyfe of lawnc was delivered to the Bishop of London by the Lord Great Chamberlain, which the said Bishop put upon the Kings head. The said Bishop having also received an other for the Queene, he gave it to the Countess of Derby, who put it upon the Queenes head. [Lynnen Gloues. /// w.] Li like manner 2. payre of linnen gloues were jiut u])on their Ma'-'' hands, whilst these things were doing an Anthem was sung. [Colobium Sindonis. /// w.] After this the Deane of Westminster (the King standing up) put on his Ma'^ the Colobium Sindonis, 'i'he like was put upon the Queene, the Bishop of London reading a prayer. [Supertunica. in mi\ The Supertunica was next, or close Pall of cloth of Tyssue was put upon the King with a gyrdle of the same, by the I )eane of Westminster, ^vho also put the like upon the Queene. [Bu.skins and Sandalls. /// ///.] Then the King silting downe, the deane put on the Tyssue hose or Buskins and sandalls of cloth of i^old upon the King, he delivered also t!ie like lu the Countess of Derby, who put ihem on the (Jueene. I APPENDIX VI 11. 103 [Spurs. /// w.] The last was the Spurs which the Deane brought from the Altar, and delivered to the Lo'' Great Chamberlain, who kneeling downe put them gently on the Kings heeles, and imediately tooke them off and returned them to the said Deane of Westminster, who also presented to the Queene the Spurs, which she againe returned to him, and he carryed them back to the Altar. /While an Anthem was singing the King and Queene arose [p. 117. from their seates and did goe to the Altar, and there being a little sword carried in the scabbard, the sword of State being borne before their Maiesties, there the said little sword was offered, and the Bishop of London having received it, layde it upon the Altar, and then read a Prayer, which being ended the said Bishop of London takes up the ■sword, and being followed by the other Bishops goes to the King and Queene (being returned to their former chayres) and presented the said -sword to them sayng, Receive this Kingly sword delivered unto you by the hands of the Bishops &c. The King and Queene having received it delivered it to the Lord Great Chamberlaine, and his Ma'-'' standing up, the said Lord Great Chamberlain girt it about him. The King sitting doune againe the Bishop of London sayd, Remember of whom the Psalmist sayth, Gyrde thee with thy sword . is put : in in. The (^ /las />'aldstoole at the foute of the I'hrone, and the Lord Bishojj of London having read some collects concluded with the i)eace of God etc. [The going to S''. Edwards Chapel. /// /-»/.] The Blessing being given their Ma", did rise from their Faldstoole, having their Scepters in their hands, and the Noblemen who carried the Regalia before in the l^roceeding having them againe delivered unto tliem, rc])aired to S'. Edwards Cliapell in the following Order. First the Great Officers. The 3. swords. The Lord Maior of London, Garter, the IJlack Rod. The Lord Great Chamberlain. The Earle Marshall, The Sword of State, The Lo'' High Constable The Scepters with the Doue. 'I'he King & Queene, the Scepters with the Crosse in their hands. They passed out at the South end of the Altar, into St. Edwards Chapell, and repaired to the Altar at the head of St. Edwards Shrine, there their Ma'^. delivered their scepters to the Lo** Bishoj) of London, who layde them on the Altar. After that the said l^ishop tooke off their Crownes, and layde them also on the Altar. The King and Queene then retired to their Traverses, where his Ma'y was disrobed by the Lo''. Great C!iiamberlain of S' lulwards Robes, which were delivered to the Deane of Westminster, who layde them on the Altar; The (^)ueene being also disrobeil ihey were in like manner layde upon the Altar. 'I'he King and Queene being reinvested in Royall Robes of purple velvet furred w"' ICrmine by the Lo'' Gnal ( "hamberlain, and the ' ./ tj ii sti ill I he iiitir^'ni to thix para^^raph. APPENDIX nil. 107 '(Countess of Derljy, repaired to S' Edwards Altar, where the Lord Bishop of London put their Imperial! Crownes upon their heads, and •delivered into their hands the Scepters of the Crosse. [The returne to Westminster Hall, in ;;/.] While the King and Queene were in S' Edwards Chapell, the Officers •of Armes put the Proceeding in order to returne to Westminster Hall, which was in the same manner as they came, except that the Prebends and Chores remained at the Abbey, and the Noblemen who were dis- charged of any of the Regalia they carried to the Abbey, returned according to their places amongst the other Peers. [Lo^ High Stewards place in the returne. in w.] The Lord High Steward also did in the returne goe alone next after the two persons who represented the Dukes of Normandy and Aquitaine. /The Returne from the Abbey [p. 120. to W^estminster Hall. Westminster Hall was furnished in all respects as at the Coronation •of King James, except as to the States, for whereas there was then a large State for the King, and a lesser for the Queen, there was but one large state for their Maiestyes. The Proceeding. They did returne in the same Order as they did goe to the Abbey (excepting as before). First the Drums and Fife did fall off on both sydes without West- minster Hall dore. The Trumpets did goe into the Hall, and did repaire to their Gallery at the lower end of the Hall over the dore. Those who followed passed to the upper end of the Hall betwene the Cupboards and Tables allmost to the lower end of them, where they repaired to their respective Tables appointed for them on the left syde of the Hall as followeth. [Thus ordered. /// ;;/.] On the outsyde of the Tables (except that which was for the Officers of Armes which was the lowest) sate at the lower end the 12. Citizens, aboue them the Sheriffs of London, the Aldermen of London, the Lord Maior, the Barons of the Cinque ports uppermost. [Many of these absent, in m.] I08 AI'PEXDIX Mil. At the inside of the Table, allmost at the lower end sate the six Clerks of the Chancery, the Masters in Chancery, the Kings younger Sergeants, the Solicitor and Atturney Generall, the Kings two Antient Sergeants,' the Barons of the Exchecq"" and Justices of both Benches, The Lo'' Cheif Baron. Cheife Justice of the ('omon Pleas, Master of the Rolls, Cheife Justice of the Kings Bench, the Privy Councillors not Peers, The Bishops and the Arch-Bishops. [Many of these absent, in w.] On the other syde of the Hall, the Baronesses passed to the upjier end of the Tables, then returned betwene the Cupboards and the Tables to the lower Tables, where they repaired to their Seates, and over against them were the Barons. The \'iscountesses and ^'iscounts in like manner placed themselves aboue the Barons and Baronesses. The Countesses and Earles did the like. The Marchionesses and Martjuisses did the same. So did the Dukes and Duchesses. [Here the Off'""' of Armes repaire to theyr Caller) e. /// ///.] The Great Officers, and the two persons representing the Dukes of Normandy, and Aquitaine, stood on each syde towards the Throne till their Ma'"*, were passed by. At the foot of the steps going up to the Throne, their Ma'" ascending the steps, the Barons of the Cinque Ports carryed away the Canopye. Their Ma'"* having ascended the 'I'hrone retyred till their Table was served, and then returned, where the Lord (ireat Chamberlain preceded by the cheife Gentleman Usher and followed by the Cupbearer, the Earle of Bridgewater, and his assistants, the \'iscount \\'eymouth and the Lord La Ware goe to the Cupboard and from thence the Lord Great Chamberlain brought the Basin and Ewer to their ^L^iestyes, the Earle of Bridgewater poured out the water while their ^L'liestyes washed their hands, and his two assistants held the 'i'owell, instead of Mr. Soames, whose claime was allowed to performe that office upon the account of his Mannor of Heyden in the County of Essex. The Earle of Ikistoll was Cupbearer to the (^^ueene, his .\ssistants the Viscount Hatton and Lord iierkley. The Earles of Sussex and Radnor, Sewers. The Earle of .Stamford, the Earl of Kingston, Carvers. Their Maiestyes Sewers did goe to the Kitchen, and the Hot meate was carryed to their Ma'"* Table by the Gentlemen I'entioners, as followeth. /The 2 CMerks Comptrollers. [p. \2\, 'I'he 2 Clerks of the Greencloth. ' Thcsf slmuld l>;i\i sal*, in this maiinci, 1 an did ni«t placing; llunisclvcs nn l>olh sydes of the TahU-, al ilu- uppn ind. /// m. A r PEN D IX 17//. 109 The Master of the Household, and Cofferer. The Earle Marshall, Lo'' High Steward, Lc' High Constable, all on Horseback. Sergeants at Armes. The 2. Earles Sewers. The Meate carryed by the Cent. Pentioners. The first and second Clerks of the Kitchen. 'A Masse of (iruell was then presented to their Ma'^ by Let for which his claime was allowed. The first Cup of drinke was presented to his Ma'-^' on the behalfe of the Lo'^ Allington in minority in a silver Cup guilt, for the Manner of Wymondley, his claime being allowed, and the cup was his Fee. [The Champion. /// ;«.] Towards the later end of the first course the Champion repaired to the Hall. First the Knight Marshall cleared the way to the steps going up to . the Throne. Then entred The Trumpets. The Sergeant Trumpeter with his Mace. Two Pages, the one carr)-ing a Target of the Champions .\rmes, the other a lance upright. A Herald in his Coat of Armes. The Champion mounted on a goodly Horse in complete Armor being come within Westminster Hall dore was there received by the Earle Marshall and the Lord High Constable on Horseback in their Robes, their Coronets on, the first on the left the other on his right hand. The Trumpets sounded thrice, and the Herald having called silence, sayd. If any person of what degree soever, high or low, shall denye or gaine .say Our Sovereigne Lord and Lady William the third and Mary, King and Queene of England, France, and Ireland, Defenders of the Fayth to be rightfuU and undoubted King and Queen of the Imperial] Crowne of this Realme of Eng.land, or that they ought not to enjoy the Imperiall Crowne of the same. Here is their Champion who sayth. That he lyeth and is a false Traytor, being ready in person to combate with him, and in this Quarrell will adventure his life against him on what day soever he shalbe appointed. Then the Champion threw doun his Cantlet, which having layne a little while the said Herald tooke it up, and delivered it to him againe. From thence they advanced into the middle of the Hall, where the same Challenge was againe made in like manner. Lastly they repaired to the bottom of the steps leading to the Throne, where the Herald did ascend the steps, and stayde about the middle of them, where he pronounced the Challenge in like manner, and the ' Their Ma" being set to dinner the Kings scepters and the '^ueenes were de- livered to some Noblemen, who did beare them on their right and left hands. The Swords were also borne on their Ma'* right hand towards the end of the Table. Added in margin aitJ written vertically. In ot/icr margin a (\Jor qiier}-. no APPENDIX VI n. Champion having received his Gantlet as before, made a low obeissance to their Maiestyes, and a silver ("up guilt being filled with wyne was brought by the Cupbearer to their Maiestyes, they drinke to the Champion, and the same Cup and wyne being delivered to the Champion, he there drinks the wyne makes a low obeissance to their Ma^"" and returnes, in the same manner as he came into the Hall dore^ carrying the Cup in his hand as his Fee. [largesse. /// w.] The Hall was then cleered againe as before, and Garter Principall King of Armes followed by the other Kings, Heralds, and Pursuivants, with his Coronet on his head repaired to the lower end of the Hall, where they made their obeissances to their Maiestyes, from thence they advanced to the middle of the Hall, where they did the like, then proceeded to the foote of the steps, where they againe did the same, then they ascended the said steps leading to the Throne where Garter repairing to the middle of the Table (the other officers of Armes being behind him, made their reverences to their Ma^'* and there Garter having /thrice cryed Largesse, proclaimed their Ma'-"' style in the [p. 122. words following. Serenissimorum, Potenti.ssimoruni, et Excellentissimorum Monar- charum Gulielmi tertij, et Mariae, Dei gratia,. Regis et Reginae, Angliae, Franciae, et Hiberniae, Fidei Defensorum. Du Treshaut, Trespuissant, et Tres Excellent Monarques Guiliaume tierce et Marie, par la grace de Dieu, Roy et Reine D'Angletcrre, France, et Irelande Defenseurs de la Foy. Of the most High, most Mighty, and most Excellent Monarques William the third, and Mary, by the grace of God, King and (^ueene of England, France, and Ireland, Defenders of the Fayth. Then the other Officers cryed Largesse thrice made their obeissances to their Ma'-^ retyred going backwards, their faces towards the Throne. From thence they retired in the same jiosture to the middle of the Hall where Garter proclaimed againe their >La'^^ style, and Largesse was also cryed as before. Lastly they did in like manner at the lower end of the Hall, and repaired to their Table provided for them. This being done the second course was carryed up to their Ma*-^ Table, and same solemnity should have bene observed as was at the first, but was omitted for want of tyme, it growing late. Then William Rider Escj'" in pursuance of his claime allowed for the Mannor of bilsington presented their Maiestys with three Maple Cups. Lastly the Lord Maior of London atteiideil by tiie AKlerinen, Sheriffs, and the twelve Citizens in pursuance of their claime allowed to be assistant to the Duke of Norfolke Cheife Hutler of I'jiglaiul presented to their Ma'"" a Cup and Cover of gold and w) ne in it, wln) having iliatike a little thereof, gaue the .said (!up and Cover to tin- Lord Maior, who carried it away as his I'Ve. Their Ma*^^ having dined, tlu Basin and l-'.wi'i uilh water was brought to their Maiestyes by the Lord Great Chambtrlaiii, wlu> having .trpEXD/x nil. Ill washed as before dinner, they received their scepters, and the Regaha and swords Vjcing carried before them they retyred into the Court of Wards, where parte of the RegaUa are dehvered to the Deane of Westminster to be preserved in that Cathedral!, and the rest were comitted to the custody of the Master of the Jewell House, and from thence their Ma*"" departed privatly to Whitehall. If there be any thing in the aforesaid Ceremoniall omitted, or not performed according to former Presedents, the Officers of Arnies are not to be blamed, since the Lords of the Comittee for the Coronation conferred with Mr. Negus Secretary to his Grace the Duke of Norfolke Earle Marshall of England, and very little with them, the said Mr. Negus pretending they were to receive their Orders from the Earle Marshall^ whereas at other Coronations, they constantly attended the Lo'^- of the Comittee till all matters relating to the Coronation were settled and approved before the day of the solemnity ; and at the Coronation of King James the second there was an Order made by the King in . Councell the 1 8* day of March 16S5, a skeme being then presented to his Ma*>'. for the Proceeding to the Coronation, to the effect following,. viz*. Whereas there was a skeme for the proceeding to the Coronation presented to the King by the Officers of Armes, but the Prayers used at the Coronation of King Charles the /second in Westminster [p. 123, Abbey being not at large expressed, his Ma'-\ ordered the Officers of Armes to attend his Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury thereupon,, and to haue theni all set doune at large, that in all particulars the Ceremoniall of the Arch Bishop and that of the Officers of Armes, as to the service and Ceremony to be performed in the Abbey might agree ; which being done, and presented by the Archbishop to the King, it was approved : but nothing of this nature was done at this Coronation ^ which gave the Officers of Armes very much trouble.^ ' This statement may explain the considerable variation that there is between the- account of the service in the Abbey church given in this appendix and that given in the text of this volume. The heralds give the number and order of the places anointed just as in James II. The deliver)- of the regalia also is as in James II., and the second oblation is spoken of as taking place immediately after the delivery of the sceptres (p. 104.), which is a peculiarity of James II. 's order, instead of at the offertory in the communion service, which is its usual place. The delivery of the Bible to the sovereigns, a new ceremony of William and Mary's order, is not properly described. The Bible is spoken of as one of the regalia carried in the procession (p. 95 and 97.) but the delivery is spoken of in dubious fashion after Sta et retiiic (p. 105. note) which is not in accordance with the text (p. 27.) where the Bible was delivered immediately after the sovereigns were crowned. A query is also put against the administration of communion (p. 106.). All these variations would agree with the theory that the heralds did not receive full instructions as to the church ceremonial. APPENDIX IX. Procession' before the Coronation of Kim; William and Queen Marv. [Extracts from Additional M.S. 34,250 in the British Museum, a ■collection of heraldic tracts. The pages printed hclow were written jjrobably soon after the coronation. 'I'he leaves are in some confusion, which has most likely existed since the pages were written. They are now printed in their proper order. It will be noticed that details are given which are not in Appendix VIII. and that in some cases the details differ from those in that Appendix. This document appears to have been drawn up before it was known that the Archbishop of Canterbury would take no part in the ceremony, but after it had been determined to carry a Bible among the regalia.] /The bringing of the Regalia tVom W'cstin''. Abby to \\'estm'". [fo. 75/' Hall. Sergeants of the X'estry Children of the C'happell Royall The Chairet of U'estm. dent' of the Kings Chappell Pursivants Heralds Provincial 1 Kings The Dean Carrying St. luhvards Crown The Scejiter with the Crosse The Scepter with the Dove The Orbe with the Crosse King lulwards Stafle The Queens Regalia The ( "rown 'I'he Scepter with the Oosse Ivory Rod with the Dove Being entred the Hall (after the King and Queen are seated) ihey make three Reverences one Att the lower/ end 2 : in the Middle [fo. 76 of the Hall the ("hoires and Officers of Armes fall t)fl" on either side makeing a lane for the Prebends to passe with the Regalia and comeinj; to the stepp Garter goeing upp before them and approaching near the Table they there make their 3'' Reverence .irrENDix IX. 113 Then the Dean presents the Crown, which by the High Constable and great Chamberlain is sett on so is each of the Regalia by the Prebends that brought them and by the said Lords sett on the Table which done they retire to their place in the proceeding S"" Cilbert Talbot M"" of the Jewell house had brought into the Hall before the Prebends came in," The sword of State within a Rich Scabbard and Hangers Curtana and the 2 other swords and presented them to the Lord High Constable who dielivereA them to the Lord great Chamberlain who having drawn the three last laid them on the Table before the King then he presented the Goulden spurrs (as before) who laid them on the Table. Then the Lord Great Chamberlain p/rsenting y° Regalia severally to the King his Ma"*^ disposes them to the Noblemen appointed to carry the same, the proceeding begins.' /The proceeding to the Coronation [fo. "i^b The 1 )eanes. Beedle of Westm''. The High Constable of Westm'' in a scarlett Cloak A Fife in a Rich Livory of Scarlett Cloth 4 : Drums in Rich Livoreys of Scarlett Cloth Drum Major in a Fine scarlett Cloth Coat richly laced 8 : Trumpetts in Rich Liveries of Crimson velvett The Kettle Drum in the like Livory 8 : Trumpetts more in the like Livory The Sergeant Trumpett with his mace and Collar of SS. The six Clarkes in Chancery in Gowns of Black flowered sattin with Black silk Loops and Tuffs 14 : Chaplins haveing dignities in their Scarlett habits as Doctors 21: Aldermen of London in their scarlett gowns (besides the Record"" who went as one of the Kings Serj*"") ID : Masters of the Chancery in black figur'd silk gowns 5 : The Kings Sergeants att law in their scarlett gowns 5. absent The Kings Sollicit'" and Attorney generall in gowns of black Velvett / The Kings two Antient Serjeants in Scarlett gowns [fo. 77 Esq"^ of the Body (here Kn*-" of the Bath if any) 27 Gent' of the Privy Chamber (2 represented the Dukes of Norm : and Aquitaine and 3 absent) Barons of the Exchequer and Justices of both Benches in their Judges Robes of Scarlett L: C : Baron L: C: Justice of the Common Pleas in their Judges Robes of Scarlett M*" of the Rolls and the Lord Cheif Justice of the Kings Bench in his Scarlett Robes The Serj* of the Vestry and Serjeant Porter in Scarlett Robes 2 The Children of the Choir of Westm'" in Surplices q*^' i' ' This word addwi in other hand. '-' Thus ii would seem to be suj^gcsted that the Sergeant of the Vestry and Sergeant Porter should walk after the children of the choir, as they did in Kinj^ James II. 's coronation. (See Sandford p. 69.) COR. ORDERS. I 114 APPENDIX IX. The Children of the Chappell in Surplices and Scarlet Cloth Mantles The Choir of Westm"" in Surplices A Serv' to the (}ent' of the Chappell and \a blank s/>acc^] in scarlett Livory Cloath Coat Croome of the Vestry in a Scarlett Robe Cloth The 2 yeomanf of the vestry in Scarlett Robes of Cloth (but were ordered to attend the Church- Two Sackbutts and a Double Courtall in Scarlett Cloth Mantles /Gent' of the Chappell Royall in Surplices with Scarlett [fo. 77^ Cloth Mantles over them The Confessor and Subdean of the Chai)pell in Surplices and Scarlett Mantles 1 2 Prebendaries of Westm"" in Surplices and Rich Copes The Dean of Westm"" in a Surplice and rich Cope The Master of the Jewellhouse in a Scarlett Robe Privy Counsellors not Peeres 2 : Pursivants of Armes in their Coats of the Royall Amies Barronesses in their Robes Estate of Crimson \'elvet with their Coronetts in their hands {4 a Brest) Barons in their Robes Estate of Crimson velvet with their Coronetts in their hands Bishops in their Rockettsf 2 Pursivants of Armes (as before) Viscountesses (as before) Viscounts (as before) 2 Heralds of Armes in their Coates and Collars of SS Countesses (habited as before) Earles (as before) 2 Heralds of Armes (as before) /Marchionesses (habited as before) [fo. 78 Mart}uesscs (as before) 2. Heralds (as before) Dutchesscs (habited as before) Dukes (as before) ' It may \>e for (>i\;iin Mrnvr as in Kiiij; |aiiK> i l.'s coronation. - Nt) corrcsjxjniliny round bracket in MS. ATPENDIX IX. "5 Two Provinciall Kings of Armes in their Coats of the Royall Amies with their Coronetts in their hands and wearing their Collars of SS. and Jewells or Badges of their offices. Lord Privy Seal Lord President of the Lord "Yxt^iSurer Councell Lord ArchBishopp of Yorke Lord Arch Bishopp of Canterbury Two representing the Dukes of [NormandyJ and Aquitaine in Robes of Estate of Crimson velvett Faceings of Ermine and Caps of Estate St Edwards Staff carried by the Earle of Manchester The Queens Scepter with the Crosse by the Earle of Clare The 3''' sword by the Earle of Pembroke Lord Mayor of London l)earing the City ALace in A Gown of Crimson velvet wearing his collar and Jewell The Gould Spurs by y^ Lord Grey of Ruthin The Kings Scepter with the Crosse by the Earle of North[amp]ton [fo. 74 Curtana by the Earle The pointed sword of Shrewsbury by y® Earle of Derby Garter Principall King of Armes wearing his Collar and Jewell his coronet in his hand S'' Gliomas Duppa with the Black rod in his hand C/2 n -1 crq The Lord great Chamberlain in his Robes with !iis coronet and his white staff The Earle Marshall of England in his Robes with his Coronet and Earle Marshalls staffe Duke of Norfolke The sword of state carried by the Earle of Oxford The High Constable in his Robes with his staffe and Coronet Duke of Ormond /The Queens Scepter with the Dove carried by the Earle of Bedford The Queens orbe by the Duke of Beltonf The Queens Crowne by the Duke of Somersett The Paten by the Lord Bishop of St xVsophf The Kings Scepter [fo. 74/^ with the Dove carried by y*^ Earle of Rutland The Kings orbe by the Duke of Grafton The Kings Crowne by the Lord High Steward The Bible by the Bishopp of London The Chalice by the Lord Bishop of Rochester I 2 ii6 APPENDIX IX. The Canopy born by 1 6 Barons of the Cinque Ports over the King and Queen O Supporter to the 3 Queen the I^ord ?r Bishoppof Bristoll A Lady of the Bedchamber Two of the Queens women Captain of the yeomanf of the Guard The Queene The KLing in Supporter in crimson Crimson velvet to the velvet Robes Robes a Capp King y* Lord on her on his head Bishop of head of the same Winchester a circlet of both fir'd and [fo. 75 Gold her Ma'''^^ powdered with Train born by' Ermine His greate Collar and George His Ma*'*"" Train born by the Master of the Robes assisted by the Lord Eland y* Lord Willoughby Lord I^nsdowne and Lord Dunblane A Gentleman of y® Bedchamber 2 Groomes of y® Bedchamber Captain of his Ma"®^ Guard Cap' of ye Gentlemen Pention** L'' Lovelace Ensigne and Lievtenant of y® yeomanf of y* Guard yeomen of the Guard four a Breast. ' Tlu- n;imcs nol lillcd in in ll;e MS. APPENDIX X The Coronation of the Queen Consort. [Taken from The Form and Order of the Service that is to be Performed and of the Ceremonies that are to be Observed^ in the Corona- tion of Their Majesties^ King George II. and Queen Caroline, in the Abhy Church of S. Peter, Westminster, on Wednesday the nth of October, 1727. London, Printed by John Baskett, 1727. p, 64.] Sect. XVIII, The Queen's Coronation. The Queen having reposed Her Self in Her Chair on the South-side of the Altar, ivhile the King was Crowned and Inthronized, as soon as the Anthem is ended, ariseth and goeth to the Steps of the Altar, supported by tzvo Bishops, and there kneeleth doivn, 7uhilst the Archbishop saith the folloiving Prayer : Ai.mighty and everlasting God, the fountain of all goodness ; Give ear, we beseech thee, to our prayers, and multiply thy blessings upon this thy Servant, whom in thy Name, with all humble devotion, we consecrate our Queen : 'Defend her now^ and ever with thy mighty hand, and with thy favour protect her as with a shield ; Enable her to over- come and triumph over all her enemies ghostly and bodily ; Make her a great Example of Virtue and Piety in the present age, and continue her Royal Issue for a lasting Blessing to these Kingdoms in all succeeding ages and generations,' through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee, O Father, in the Unity of the Holy Spirit, world without end. Amen. * This coronation of the Queen of George II. has been collated generally with those of George III. and William IV. under the symbols respectively of Geo. III. and Wm. IV. ' — ' Defend her evermore from all Dangers, ghostly and bodily ; Make her a great example of Virtue and Piety in the present age, and grant her a numerous Koyal Issue for a lasting Blessing to these Kingdoms in all succeeding generations. Geo. III. Defend her evermore from all Dangers, ghostly and bodily ; Make her a great Example of Virtue and Piety, and a Blessing 10 this Kingdom. Wm. IV, ii8 APPENDIX X. [The Anointing : /'// ///.] This Prayer bein^ ended, the Queen arisefh, and comcth to the place of Her Anointing : Which is to be at a Faldstool set for that purpose before the Altar, bettveen the Steps and King Edward's Chair. And standing tliere, the greatest Lady that attends Her, takes off Her Circle of Gold, and She Kneeleth down, and four Peeresses appointed for that Sen-ice, holding a rich fall of Silh, or C loath of Gold, over Her, the Archbishop poureth the Holy Oil upon the Crown of Her Head, saying these Words : In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost : Let the anointing with this Oil increase your honour, and the grace of God's Holy Spirit establish you, for ever and ever. Amen. ^Thcn the chief Lady assistant opencth Her Apparel, for the Anointing Her on the Breast ; ivhich the Archbishop also performeth, using the same Words : Let the anointing with this Oil increase your honour, and the grace of God's Holy Spirit establish you, for ever and ever. Amen.^ After the Anointing t/ie Archbishop saith this Prayer : O Most merciful -'and gracious Lord God, we beseech thee of thine abundant goodness to pour out the Spirit of- thy grace and blessing upon this thy Servant Queen Caroline, that as by our Office and Ministry she is this day anointed, and solemnly consecrated our Queen ; so being sanctified by thy Holy Spirit, she may continue thy faithful and devout Servant unto her lifes end, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Anen. ''Then the same Lady close th the Queen '\ Robe at the Breast (having first dried the place anointed) and aftenvards putleth a linen Coif upon Her Head, because of the Anointing:^ [The Ring : in w.] Then the Archbishop receive th from the Master of the Jcivel-Office the Queen's Ring, atid putteth it upon the fourth finger of Her right hand, saying, Rrceive this Ring, the seal of a sincere Faith ; and (lod, to whom belongeth all Power and Dignity, bless and prosper you in this your honour, that you may therein long continue, fearing him always, and always doing such things as shall please him, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Ameti. [The Crown : in w.] i_-i o»i. \Vm. IV. - — ^ Clod, p.iiir out abiiiulantly : llio. III. Win. IV. •'— « oin. Will. IV. I APPENDIX X. 119 Then the Archbishop takcth the Crown from off the Altar into his hands, and reverently setteth it upon the Queen'^ Head, saying, RKccive the Crown of glory, honour, and joy ; and (lod the Crown of the faithful, who by our Episcopal hands (though unworthy) doth this day set a Crown of pure Gold upon your head, enrich your Royal heart with his abundant grace, and crown you with all princely vertues in this life, and with an everlasting Crown of glory in the life which is to come, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. The Queen being crotvn'd, all the Peeresses put on their Coronets. [The Sceptre and Ivory Rod : in 7//.] Then the Archbishop putteth the Sceptre into the Queen's right hand, and the Ivory Rod with the Dove, into Her left hand ; and sayeth this Prayer : O Lord the 'fountain of all good things^ the giver of all perfection. Grant unto this thy Servant Caroline our Queen, that -she may by her piety and good works establish the glory which thou hast given her, and- adorn the high Dignity which she hath obtained, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. The Queen being thus Anointed, and Crown'd, and having received all Her Ornaments, the Choir sing this following Anthem : Anthem IX. [Psal. \Iv. I. in w.] Mv' heart is enditing of a good matter : I speak of the things which I have made into the King. At* his right hand shall stand the Queen all glorious within •? her cloathing is of wrought gold. She shall be brought unto the King in raiment of needlework; the virgins that follow her shall bear her company. With" joy and gladness shall they be brought : and shall enter into the King's palace. Hearken,' O Daughter, and consider, incline thine ear : forget also thine own people, and thy father's house. Instead'' of thy fathers, thou shalt have children ; whom thou mayst make princes in all lands. Praise^ the Lord, O Jerusalem : praise thy God, O Sion. For"' Kings shall be thy nursing Fathers : and their Queens thy nursing Mothers. Amen. Hallelujah. 1— • oiii. Geo. III. Wm. IV. - — - l>y the powerful and mild influence of her Piety and Virtue she may : (Ico. III. Wm. IV. ^ I'sal. xlv. 10. ill III. * Instead of this Anthciii, Wm. W has : Hallelujah : tor the Lord God Omnipotent reigneth &c. ■^ I'sal. xlv. 14, 15. ill III. •* I'sal. xlv. 16. in ni. ' 1 1 . ill III. * ' 1 7. in III. " Psal. cxlvii. 12. .'// in. '" Isai. xlix. 23. in m. AJ'IENDIX X. As soon as this Anthem bci^ins, the Queen ariscth and ^octh from the Altar, supported by Her ttvo Bishops, and so up to the Theatre. And as She passeth by the King on P/is Throne, She boioeth JPer Self reverent/v to His .Uajesty, and then is eonducted to Her 07vn Throne, and without any further Ceremony taketh Her place in it: Reposing Pier Self til! She comes down, with the King, to receive the Holy Communion. APPENDIX XI. i8 Extract from a Chanxerv Miscell. Roll — (dors.) 3 Record Office. [In printing this document, the letters supplied in expanding the contractions are in italics. The underlining of words in the original has been represented by printing the words in italics ; in these words, letters supplied are in Roman. - The writing, Mr. Salisbury tells me, is of the first half of the fourteenth century.] Corouneme//t de nouel Roi. Fait a Remembrer qen le iour q;/(?nt nouel Roi sera coroune affiert que le dist Roi soit pr/mes baignee ^t puis vestu de neste vesturs fenduz deuant et derere nueme;/t tanck al pitz. les queux vestours deynt estre entreliez -par botons, ou pczr laces, du soy, et il doyt estrt' chauce sanz soulers et al matyn doynt estr^ esluz p^r ly quatre nobles pur soen corps garder et supporter p<7r tute la iournede son corouneme//t, ci puis en lui couenable du palays de \\idsimi?ister par la ou le dit Roi se doit monstrer deua;/t les grantz de sa tere, soient apc/railez, iiij lau;/ces de plate dargent couerez, ou quatre tyntinables dargent, sus orrez, vn drap de purpre a ditz iiij lau^ces attachez, ei ceux q/zatrd-s lau;?ces doynt estr^ portes de Barons : cestasauoir a chescu;; lau;/ce iiij baro//s de ditz portez, tenir outre la teste le dist Roi en lieu aua;/tdit, et puis outer li porter quel ^ari quil sen va le dit ioure, ei le dit drap serra le fee de ditz Baro//s de Rortz et les lau/?ces et les tyntinables seront le fee le seg;rstayn de V^e?>imi?ister : et a donqz^^s a lieu aua^tdit, issi apparailez se assembleront les Prelatz, et les nobles de la tere a treter de la consec/-^?c/on de nouel prince et de confermer et establer fermer f les lays et les custumes du Roialme : et ceste chosse acorde soit ordonne par Ercheueq/zc, Kucsq?/'rs, Abbe, et couent de \\cHtm///sfer et daut;rs pr^cessioun couenable hord du dit palays, tanq?/i?n laglise de \Vestmuster en la forme que suit a de pr/mes. le ccmte de Hertford a qi i pr?/-tient de droit office del aumerie serra melour de draps le Roi de south les pees le Roi de dit lieu a tanqua soen pulpit, deinz la eglise le q//i?l le segr^stayn aut'ra pur soen office. apres vendra la p;vcessioun en tiel maner : Labbe et le couent de 122 APPENDIX XL Westmi/z^/'e'r, irouz/t deua//t, puis, Euesq//e nr;m7/am, adonc li sfn-a le ma/2tiel done qest de la trfsorie de Westminster, et dirra lercheuek, accipe palliiim ; puis suira la benic/bu;/ de la coroune oue ceste orison, deus tuorwxw ; ft soit esparlie ewe beneyt meneme/zt sur la corune ft soit ensense del Ercheuek ft q//rrnt la coroune serra mys a chieff sfrra dit ceste oreisou;/, coronet te deus ; aprfs suira la benizou// del anel, oue cfrtayns oreisons, ft si sfrra mys au doit nue, ft [)uis les gau^tz li sfrront mys, et pardesus lanel de Saint Edward : ft do;2C p^-fudfrn il lespeey dou;/t il fuist ceynt, et loffra sur lauter, ft Ic plus aua;/t cou/^te le rfchatf^a, ft cest rfchate deua//t li portf/a puis li sfATa done le septrf en la mayn destrf, ft dirra lercheuek, accipe sceptrum ; ap;-fs li dorra la vfrge en la mayn senestrf, et dirra, accipe z'hgau/. a done le Roi coroune, beisera les Eueskf^- en sa chayer, et done sfn-a mene hon^A-ableme/'^t en sa Roial see de queor chau^tant, /f deum /audamua : cest salme finie lercheuek serra en sa chayer et dirra, sia et ret\ne ; cestes choses acomplis, si encomwf/^cfra la mess, et sfrra continue tantqz/al offra/^d chauz/te, et donk apr^chera le Roi lauter, ft offra, offrand de payn ft de vyn, as mayns de Ercheuek; ft ap/rs offra vn mark sur lautere, ft se enclinfra deua;/t lautere, tant comf lercheuek dirra certayns oreisons, ft de iloq//f xeturner:^ a sa chayere en le dit pulpit, ft la se tendnz tant q//f deua//t, rt!,v/us dei; et dirra lercheuek vne solempne benic/on sour le Roi ft sur le poeple. La mess pa/'chau;/te, mei/ztena/^t aprfs ile descendf/'a, et \cndra a lautere ft iloqz^fs Sfrra comune du corps nosfxe seignf^^r si li plest, ft puis sil se voile deuestir des orname;/tz reaux de Saint Edward deinz le eglise se ret//me al dit pulpit pur li deuester ft iloqwfs oyec autz-fs orname;/tz Reals en toutz pointz \)ur son corps p«;'iteus et apparelez Y>ar ses Ministrfs done il se doit de nouel vestir, ft si al palays oue les 124 APPENDIX XI. ornamC/'/tz Reals dc Saint Edward vula rct///-ner adonk ad rfxettemewt, de lautere voise al palais n tanttost soil desuestuz de ditz ornamewtz et dautrrs nouels reucstuz, com de suis est dit, et les ditz orname//tz de Saint Edward oue saf<' conduit soicnt reportez ent^'reme/zt a leglise de WasXminsfer sicom aprt/tient a droit, etc. NOTES. NOTES ON THE CORONATION OE KING WILLIAM AND OUEEN MARY. SV.MBOLS USED IN THESE NOTES FOR THE CORONATION ORDERS OF THE Several Sovereigns. The references are given in full for information drawn from other sources : such as tlie London Gazette^ «S:c. The numbers which follow the symbols in the notes are the numl:)ers of the pages. Anne : J. R. Planche, Regal Records^ London, 1838. pp. 111-145. In cases of doubt, Add. MS. 6336. fo. 16. in the British Museum has been consulted. Car. I. : Chr. Wordsworth, The Manner of the Coronation of King C/iarles the First, H.B.S. 1892. pp. 13-53. Car. II. : Sir Edward Walker, A circumstantial account of the preparations for the Coronation of His Majesty King Charles the Second, London, 1820, pp. 91-120. Geo. \.: A Formulary oj that part of the Solemnity li'hich is performed in the Church at the Coronation of His Majestic King George at IVestniinster Oct. the 20th 1 7 14. A contemporary manuscript written in red and black, 58 pages, paper, 7I by 53 inches. (The pi-operty of the Rev. E. S. Dewick.) The rubrics are given \n An exact account of the Form ami Ceremony of His Majesty's Coronation, London, J. Baker, 17 14. Press mark in British Museum : 605. c. 52. Geo. I.* : MS. Heralds' College, unnumbered, labelled on back : Coronations. Queen Anfte. George I. (jCO. II. : The Form and Order of the Service that is to be Performed, ando/ the Ceremonies that are to be Obser^'cd, in the Coronation of Their Majesties, King George //. ajid Queen Caroline, in the Abby CJiurcJi of S. Peter, JVest minster, on Wednesday the \ith of October, 1727. London, John Baskett, 1727. (ieo. III. : Tlie Form and Order of t lie Service that is to be Performed, and of the Ceremonies that are to be Obserr'cd, in the Coronatio/i of Their Maje sties King George HI. and Queen Chat-lotte, in the Abbey Church of S. Peter, Westminster, on Tuesday the 22nd of September, 1761. London: Mark Baskett and assigns of Robert Baskett, 1761. (Yor a copy of this order I am indebted to the Rev. J. P. Kane.) Geo. III.*: Heralds' College, MS. S.M.L. 30. p. 198. Geo. I v. : The Form and Order of the Service that is to be performed, and of the Ceremonies that are to be obser^'cd, in the Coronation 128 NOTES. of His Majesty King Gcorij^e III/, in tJic Ahhcy Church of S. Peter, Westminster., on Thurstioy, the 19/// of July 182 1. London: (leorge Eyre and Andrew Strahan, 1821. Geo. IV.* : Sir George Na) ler, The Coronation of His Most Sacred Majesty King George the Fourth, London, 1839. pp. 120-126. Jac. L : See above, Car. L The Manner of the Coronation of King Charles the First, pp. 1 10-137. Jac. IL : Francis Sandford, The History of the Coronation of . . .James If. In the Savoy, Thomas Newcomb, 1687. pp. 82-103. Jac. II.*: the manuscript volume in the Heralds' College which also contains W. and M. Liber Negalis : Missale ad usum Ecclesiac W'estmonasteriensis, H.B.S. 1893. f^sc. ii. col. 673-col. 725. Stewart Orders : those of Jac. I. Car. I. and II. \'ictoria : The Form and Order of the Service that is to be performed, and oj the Ceremonies that are to be observed, in the Coronation of Her Majesty (2ucen Victoria, in the Abbey Church of St. Peter, Westminster, on Thursday, the 28//^ of June 1838. London, Cieorge Eyre and Andrew Spottiswoode, 1838. W. and M. : the order of William and Mary printed in this volume. W. and M.* : An Account of the Ceremonial at the Coronation . . . of King William and Queen Mary, published by order of the Duke of Norfolk. In the Savoy, Edw. Jones, 1689. W'm. IV. : The Form and Order oj the Sen'ice that is to be performed, and of the Ceremonies that are to be observed, in the Coronation of Their Majesties King William IV. and Queen Adelaide, in the Abbey Church of S. Peter, Westminster, on 'Thursday the 8th of September, 1831. London, George Eyre and Andrew Strah^/n, 1S31. W'm. l\\* : The Ceremonies to be obserz'ed at the Koyal Coronation of . . . King William the Fourth [London] 1831. Bearing imprimatur o\ the Earl- Marshal. NOTES OX THE CORONATION OF KING WILLIAM AND QUEEN MARY. p. 3. The text of the Prochimation is given in Appendix II. p. 68. The Council Register of William III. contains several minutes dealing •with matters which concern the coronation, of a date earlier than this report, :a.nd they are given above at length, in Appendix II. p. 70. Proclamations and Commissions of like purport may be found in Jac. II. (7-10.) Car. II. (28-42.) and Geo. IV* (1-56.) The bishop of London spoken of in this minute was Dr. Henry Compton. Dr. Sancroft, tliough still Archbishop of Canterbury, had not taken th- oaths. At King James II.'s coronation Dr. Sancroft had been directed to -view the earlier forms and abridge them, keeping to the essentials (Jac. II. 4.) and this doubtless served as the unfortunate precedent to Dr. Compton for the changes made by him. P. 4, The warrants for the refitting of the Crowns and the preparation of the rest of the royal ornaments may be found in the Public Record Office, Lord Chamberlain's Record, Coronation accounts, 429. 428 of the same accounts contains the charges and description of all the ■necessaries for this Coronation. (See Appendix \T. p. 78.) The Warrant for the making of the two Coronation rings is in Appen- di.x V. p. 76. Queen Mary's ring is now in the possession of the Duke of Portland and is figured in a paper on "The Queen's Coronation Ring" in Archaological Journal^ 1897, vol. liv. p. 3. What follows is quoted from this paper : "Queen Mary II.'s ring, belonging to the Duke of Portland, is of gold and the hoop is narrow, hardly a millimeter broad ; the diameter is 18 milli- meters. The stones are : an oblong ruby, ten millimeters long by eight wide, set flush, facetted, eight sided, and not engraved ; a diamond at each end of the ruby, oval, five millimeters by three. None of the stones is a jour. [Here appears a woodcut of the ring.] "This ring was exhibited at the Grafton Gallerv in the autumn of 1894. Accompanying it was a paper on which was written : "* In this paper is contained Queen Mary's Ruby Coronation ring y*^ old setting shews how it was when she had it first ; y*^ paper with y"^ ring is Queen Marv's hand writing and gives a reason why it was set in y'^ manner. A. A.'" "This must refer to the writing which follows: 'this Ruby so set was given me by the Prince three days after we wear married w'''' being the first thing he gave me I have ever had a perticular esteem for it when I was to be crowned I had it made big enough for y^' finger for y'' occasion but by mistake it was put on y<= King's finger and I had to put on [his ?] Mine was designed for him, but we changed iX: I have worn it ever since till last ihursday y<= y- of Nov. 1689 y stone dropt out at diner I was extreamly troubled at it upon the account forementioned, therefore having found it lockit up for .fear of y* like mischance againe' COR. ORDERS. K 130 NOTES. "The writinjf that follows has been added later and in some parts is hard* to make out, the paper having been folded through the second line. " ' Oct. y« [date illegible] 1694 1 gave it at \j to] Beauvoir 10 set fast' [here- the writing is almost illegible]." Heauvoir was the court jeweller. (See Jac. II. 42 mariiin.) Set flush is an expression used by jewellers to signify that the stone is- closed at the back with gold ; a jour means that the stone is open at the back. In the paper in the Archcrolo(^iial Journal there are also woodcuts of the coronation rings of King William IV. and Queen Adelaide, and of the Queen. Other particulars seem to be almost copied from Jac. II. Indeed ir» the robes, jewels, and other details, excepting the Church service, there seems to be a great wish to follow the precedent of "the last Coronation." See also Car. II. (30,) and Geo. IV.* (35.) For the King-. P. 5. In \V. and M. the royal ornaments themselves do not seem to- have differed much from those of Liber rcj^al/s, or of the .Stewart orders. The charges for their making are to be found in Appendix \'l. p. 78. The first ornament named is " the colobiuin simionis of fine linen or sarsenet in fashion of a surplice without sleeves." The permission to use silk or linen for a vestment identical with the alb or rochet may be noticed. The rochets of Edward III. were of wliiie silk. As a matter of fact "superfine cambric hoUand" was used, and it was laced with "fine Flanders lare with wings to it of the same hoiland." (See Appendix \T. p. 79.) Holland, not silk, was also used for the colobiunt simionis of Queen Anne,. George I. and II., and it was to have been of hoUand in licorge Ill.'s >:oronation. (See Appendix VH. p. SS.) There is evidence that in Germany and elsewhere the surplice of canons had been made of silk in the sixteenth century ; but it is an abuse, just as making the corporas of silk is an abuse, and it is well so far as we can tell, that in modern times this vestment of our sovereigns should have been of linen, as its very name indicates. The colobiuin simionis was to be without sleeves, thus precisely reproducing the episcopal rochet, as in Edward lll.'s case. But sleeves are very plainly shown in the Corpus picture (see Plate I.) and Liber rci^alis says that the colobiuin simionis is to head niodum dahnaticat\ which involves the addition of sleeves, and the same direction appears in King Charles 1., and the drawing accompanying King Charles U.'s order plainly shows sleeves, thus exhibiting a vestment not to be distinguished from the alb. But the drawing in Sandford of James II.'s colobium simionis shows no sleeves and the order for providing it says it is to be without sleeves. ("Jac. II. Plate I. p. 19.) Dr. Sancroft says the same, describing the colobiunt sindonis as 'a white fine Linen or silken vest, Tabcrt, or Surplice, doun t> the Foot, in the Form of a Dalnialica, save it is without sleeves." (St. John's College, Cambridge, L. 14, |). 36.) Apparently William and Mary have but followed James II., and the later orders have followed these. 'Ihe .Supcrtunica, or Close pall, must early in its history have been closctl in front, but in the representations of Charles II. and James I I.'s Supcrtunica it is already open, a change most likely made for the convenience of putting on, just as the Surplice in the early nineteenth century opened in front, 'i'he supertunic a is the same ornament as the tunide or dalmatic, a pair of which was worn by the bishop under the chasuble. In the Corpus picture of :i prince's coronation (see Plate I.i two lunicles are plainly being worn ; NOTES. 131 and in Edward III.'s coronation robes two timicles arc spoken of, though on the other hand two rochets are also given. (Sir Francis Palgrave, Anticiit Kalcndars^ &c., Public Records, 1836. vol. iii. p. 225.) Sporlcy gives both tunica and supcrtiinita^ and the tunica may be only tlie colobiuin sindonis. (Brit. Mus. Cotton MS. Claud. A. viii. fo. 37/'.} In Liber rcgalis (699) the supertunica is described as tunica longa et talaris intexta niai^nis imaginibus aurcis ante ct retro. The supertunica is to be put on next after the colobiuin sindonis, and it is then to be girt with a broad girdle of cloth of gold to support the sword. This girdle is very plainly seen in the Corpus picture (see Plate I.) The armiila in fashion of a Stole was not worn precisely as a stole is worn, either by bishop or priest. It was placed around the king's neck, but it did not hang pendant : but by the ribands with which it was supplied at its ends, it was tied to the elbows above and below that joint. This may be the origin of the name armiila, which signifies a bracelet. The royal stole does not seem to have been always worn in this way. In the account of the opening of King Edward I.'s coffin it is said that the stole, made of white tissue, was crossed over the breast {Arc/uroloi^ia, 1786, vol. iii. p. 382) thus resembling the way in which the imperial stole was ordered to be worn at certain coronations. (M. Goldast, Collectio Constitutionuni Iinpcrialiuni, Francofurti ad Moenum, 1713, t. iii. p. 402.) The idea that this crossing was made like that of a priest's stole, is confirmed by the picture of Albert Diirers at Nuremberg, representing Charles the Great in coronation robes ; which has evidently inspired the frontispiece to Fr. Bock, Die Kleinodien des /leilii^en rdmischen Reic/ies, Wien, 1864, and travellers may remember the same feature in the imperial figures around the tomb of Maximilian in the church at Innsbruck. But Maximilian's immediate successor, Charles V. is said to have worn the stole like a deacon's, at his coronation at Bologna. " Stola broccati auri riceii ab humero sinistro in transversum sub dextro, Manipulum de eodem broccato ad sinistrum brachium," iS:c. (J. B. Gatticus, Acta Sclecta Caercnioniaiia, Romae, 1753, t. ii. p. 108.) And to this may be added an earlier instance in the coronation of William, Count of Holland, as King of the Romans in 1248. " Vestitum ornamentis Leviticis in modum Diaconi " (I. de Beca, Historia Veieruin Episcoporutn Ultraiectiftae Scdis, &c., Franequerae, 161 2, p. 67.) At the last coronation, as far as can be made out so long after the event, the Queen wore her stole pendant, not tied to the elbows. The armiila is not visible in the Corpus picture, but it is spoken of very distinctly in Liber regalis (700) and the Stewart orders. In Car. II. the ends are adorned with crosses like a modern continental stole ; and to the ends are attached the strings or ribands by which it was tied to the elbows. So also in Jac. II. but there are no crosses at the end. There were crosses on the Victorian armiila. "The pall of cloth of gold in fashion of a cope" is ordered in LJber regalis {yo\) to be square and woven throughout with golden eagles. These golden eagles may be a token of the claim of the King of England to be Emperor of Britain. They do not appear in the Corpus picture (see Plate I.) though double-headed eagles within circlets are clearly seen in the chasuble of the prelate below the King on his right. The pall in this picture is arranged with a sexfoil pectoral fastening it in front. One angle is seen below the right knee. It is lined with ermine, the word which seems to be wanting in the text (p. 24) but which appears in Anne and all the later orders. The Victorian pall was not lined with ermine, however, and taffeta was used for Jac. II., W. and M., Geo. I., and Geo. II. (see Appendices VI. and VII.) In Geo. IV.* the pall is said to have been lined with ermine. K 2 132 NOTES. The shirt of fine linen, of red sarcenet, the surcoat of crimson satin, the under trousers and breeches over them with stockings, represent all the clothes that the King iiad on when the parliament robes were taken off immediately before the anointing. Hence the pail held by the Knights of the Garter to conceal the King during his anointing, provided on p. 6. The linen gloves and coif were to protect the places anointed with the holy oil from irreverence, and are put on immediately after the anointing. These linen gloves are ditTerent from the rich silk gloves brought by the Lord of the manor of Worksop, which are for dignity, to be worn while the King carries his sceptres. The silk towel or houseling cloth, held at time of communion before the King and Queen to prevent any particle of the Eucharist from falling to the ground, continues from Henry VII.'s time {Rutland l\ipcrs^ Camden Society, 1S42. p. 22) to that of George IV^ At William I\'.'s coronation it was discontinued. The three swords, Curtana, and the other two have borne in the procession from Westminster Hall to the .\bbey Church since the days of Richard 1. {Chronica Magistri Rogcri de Houcdcnt\ ed. W. Stubbs, Rolls Series, 1870, vol. iii. p. 9.) In R'-^hard III.'s days they were interpreted thus : Curtana to be the sword of mercy, from which the point was removed : .Mr. St. John Hope derives its name from its being Curt or shortened. The second sword signified justice to the temporality. The third, justice to the spirituality. (Bodleian Library, Ashmole .MS., 863, p. 439.) On pp. 93, 95, and 97 above (Appendix VIII.) besides Curtana, the point of which is cut off entirely, there are mentioned a sword pointless, and a sword with a point. The same thing is shown in the plates of the three swords in Jac. II. There is, first, curtana, the end of which has no point, and is a mere rectangle ; the second sword, that of justice to the spirituality, has a point the angle of which is little less acute than a rightangle ; the third, that of justice to the temporality, shows a sharp point. This may, perhaps, signify lliat the King's justice, exercised through the civil courts, could punish the wrong doer with any extremity, such as hanging, drawing, and quartering, while the King's justice, exercised through the courts Christian, could at its worst do nothing more than inflict stripes and imprisonment. 1 he persons representing the Dukes of Normandy and Aquitaine are mentioned at the coronation pageant soon after the end of the hundred years' war. They disappeared from the procession in the coronation of Cieorge IV. perhaps in consequence of the change in style made about 1800. P. 6. The number of Barons of the Cinque Ports left blank in line 1 should be, it seems, sixteen. Another chair, like .St. Edward's chair, still exists, opposite to the shrine of the Confessor in his chapel at Westminster. Thouj^h the coverings and cushions for the second chair, which is to be '"suitable" to St. Edward's chair, are paid for (see Appendix \'l. pp. 82 and 85) yet the charge for tlie making of this second chair iloes not clearly appear in the accounts. It may liave dropped out at the bottom of some page of the accounts, such as may be seen on p. 83 in Appendix \T. For the Queen. The Queen does not seem to have had the sacerdotal ornaments provided for her ; so that the i)ossil)ilily of the Heralds' account (see above, p. 102. \l)|)endix VIII.) being in a(cordan(e with facts is again somewhat liminished. NOTES. 133 For the King:. P. 7. These robes are put on over the shirt of linen, that of red sarcenet, the surcoat of crimson, and the trousers and breeches spoken of on p. 5. These crimson robes tlie King is arrayed in on his rising in the morning, after the ceremonial bath. Also the robes of purple velvet of tlic same fashion are laid upon the altar at the head of St. Edward's shrine for the King to put on after the coronation service is over, when he passes behind the hij^h altar and is divested of the ornaments given to him during the coronation service. St. Edward's Cronn is also taken off, and the ini])crial crown, doubtless intended to be lighter, is put on. P. 8. Specimens of this medal, in gold, silver, and lead, are in the British .Museum. The artist was John Roettier. (See Hawkins, Franks, & (irueber, ATcdallic Illustrations, London, 1885, vol. i. p. 663. No. 25.) They are " Inscribed on one side Ne tot its absiimatiir, and on the other side Guliclnius u-^ Maria Rex Hr^ Rci^inn." (W. and M.* 3.) For the warrant for the anointing oil see .Appendix V. p. 76. P. 10. The direction that the coronation shall be on some Sunday or holiday may be traced back through Car I. and Jac. I. to Liber regalis. On this occasion, however, the rule was not observed, as April nth was a Thursday, unmarked in the Prayer Book Calendar. The church of Westminster is mentioned ; but it would have been inconvenient to have remembered the rights of the see of Canterbury on this occasion. Whether they really were intrenched upon is disputed. Mr. W. H. Hutton {Dictionary of National Biography, s.v. Bancroft) holds that "on 15 March 1689 he [Sancroft] issued a commission which virtually empowered his suffragans to perform the coronation." A commis- sion to consecrate bishops was issued on March 15th by Dr. Sancroft ; and by special pleading the clause at the end, beginning Cactcraqite oiiuiia, might be made to empower Dr. Compton to perform the coronation ; but the word prciiiissis seems fatal to such a contention. (See the commission, printed in App. III. p. y2i-) Morning' Prayer, No other coronation Order that I have seen has a similar service prefixed to it. But Richard II. heard divine service and mass before his coronation. (T. Rymer, I'^ocdrra, Lond. 1869, t. iv. p. 9.) This Order for Morning Prayer is derived from Tlie Form of Prayer 7oitJi 'rhanksi(ivi)ig to Almighty God; authorised by James II. for the -Sixth of February, the day of his accession. In the proclamation dated at Whitehall, Dec. 23, 1685, tlie king notes that the "Pious Custom" of celebrating the accession with thanksgiving had " received lately a long and doleful Interruption upon Occasion of the Barbarous Murder of Our most Dear Father of l)lcssed .Memory, which changed the Day, on which Our late most Dear Brother .Succeeded to the Crown, into a Day of Sorrow and Fasting. But now We thinking fit to revive the former Laudable and Religious I'ractice, and having caused a Form of Prayer and Thanksgiving to be Composed by Our Bishops for that purpose ; Our Will and Pleasure is,"cncdictus {ox Jubilate. In Queen Anne's morning prayer the proper psalms are xx. xxi. ci. Lessons and Canticles as in text above. In King James II.s book in the British Museum which I have used [3406. f. i 5.] the proper psalms in the text have been added by hand before morning Prayer. The suffrages after the Creed are much the same in Charles I. James 11. and the text, except that the text omits the versicle and respond for peace. P. 13. This conflation of the two collects for the King in the Communion Service appears in substance in James II. At the first occurrence of "whose Minister he is" in James II. the text has in its place "whose authority they have." The second prayer seems new ; and, in accordance with the compact made, there is no mention of Queen Mary. (See Appendix II.) The same may be said of the prayer before that of St. Chrysostom. In the last line of p. 13. the change of ''honesty" into "honor" is remarkable. Cap. I. The Entrance into the Church. At the beginning of the Coronation Order of dco. II. and thence to Victoria is set this rubric : /// the mornino upon the day of the Coronation Early, Care is to be taken that the Ampulla be filled with Oil, and together wiih the Spoon, be layd ready upon the /lltar in the Abby-Church. There is something like it in MS. L. 14, St. John's College, Cambridge, Sancroft's copy of James II.'s order. "In the morning of y'" Day of Coronation early, Care is to be taken, y' y" Ampulla, in form of an Eagle, w"' y"' Holy Oil in it, & the Spoon w"' it; ' already begun to- mean, not a folding chair upon which one may sit, or at which one may kneel, but a desk like a.prietiieu. (See Dr. J. A. H. Murra>''s New English JH:tio7iary, s.v. faldstool.) Cap. 2. The Becognition. This rubric and address are found in all later orders with the necessary alterations to confine the recognition to the reigning Sovereign. The Lord Keeper is altered to Lord Chanee/Ior in Geo. I. and later orders^ " Undoubted King and Queen of this realm ' continues in all later orders. Tiie interlineations and erasures are noteworthy. It may have been that ai first it was not intended to make any allusion to the claims of W. and M. like those made by the ancient phrase " Rightful Inheritor of the Crown of this Realm" (Jac. II. 84; so also Car. II. and I. and Jac. I.) which was- piainly inappropriate for W. and M. but afterwards it may have I>een considered more politic to state the bare fact of possession. In William 1 1 1.'s declarations he announces that he has been called by God to the throne. {His Majesty^ s most gracious ansicer to the address, 1689, and Jhclanition against the French A'ing.) This anthem is quite new. The psalms are from the Prayer book version. In Lil>er rega/is (682) Jac. I. Car. I. and II. and Jac. II. it is Firmetur /nanus and ps. 89. Misericordias Domini ; which last, however, is omitted by Jac. II. possibly to shorten the service, though in Car. I. only the first six verses of the psalm were sung. In the early stages of the coronation order, no doubt the psalm Alisericordias Domini \vas the important thing, to which Firmetur manus was merely the anthem. Then by a process of liturgical corruption, just as we see in the history of the introit, the psalm almost disappears, and the anthem remains, and is looked upon as the important thing. From Anne to Geo. III. the anthem has become: The Queen [k'ing] shall rejoice ; but at the last three coronations the anthem has altogether disappeared from this place, and its words are sung after the jiutting on of the Crown. In B.M. MS. Add. 6336. fo. i6<5. the anthem as in W. and M. is first written, but afterwards struck out, and The Queen shall rejoice is interleaved. " Being entred the Church .... the Bishop of London, who perfomi'd this great Solemnity, began the A'ecognition, which being concluded with a mighty shout of all the People present. Their Majesties came to the .Mtar, and made their first Oblation ; which done the Lords who carried the /ugalia, presented them severally at the Altar to be there deposited." (\V. and M.* p. 3.) Cap. 3. The First Oblation. This rubric throws into definite shape the customs practised in earlier coronations. It has continued with some unimportant variations to the hist coronation. The Jiishops 7i'ho are to I'ear any part in the Ojfice is altered In tin- later orders from Geo. I. to ////• JU'shops "who are to sing the Litany. Also in Cieo. II. and following orders there is prefixed before the sccontf' paragraph • And here, Jirst the Jiilde, Taten, and Cup are to l>e I'rought and NOTES. 137 placed upon tJic Altar : but in \'ictoria tlicre is prefixed to the first paragnipli, apparently because there was no procession bearing these ornaments from Westminster Hall, the following : T//i' HibU\ Patcii^ and Cup Ivini^ broiii^lit by the Bis/iops lu/io had borne llicni, and placed upon the Altar, the Archbishop i^oeth to the Altar, &-'c. In Geo. III.* immediately- after the Recognition there is : "Then the Choir sung the 2'': Anthem Psal. 21. v. i. 2. 5. 6. In the mean time the Bible, Paten and Cup, were brought and placed on the Altar ; And the carpets and cushions spread for the offering &ic." But at the word " Cup" there is a footnote which neutralises what has been said in the text, for it says : "The Bible Paten and Chalice were carried directly to the Altar as soon as the King sat down." (p. 207.) In Geo. II. III. and Wm. W. where there was a queen consort, the following'' rubric is inserted after the offering of the king : Then the Queen ariscth from Her Chair, and beiit^ likewise supported by tivo bishops, and the Lords which carry Her Regalia ^^oing before Her, goeth down to the Altar, and kneeling upon the Cushions there layd for Her, on the left Hand of the King's, malceth Her Oblation, which is a Pall, to be receii'ed also by the Archbishop, and layd upon the Altar. The prayer " O God who dwellest " is a following of Deus huniiliuni of the Liber regalis. Up to Car. II. a \\ord for word version was used ; but altera- tions set in with James II. 's coronation. In Jac. II.* the following is the form : " O God who dwellest in the high & holy place, with them also, who are of an humble Spirit ; Look down graciously vpon these thy servants JAMES our King, and MARY our Queen, here prostrate before thee at thy Footstool ; and mercifully receive these Oblations, which in humble acknowledgement of thy Soveraignty over all, & thy bounty to them in particular, they have now offered vp unto thee. Thine O Lord, is the power, and the Glory, and the matie ; Thine is the Kingdom ; & thou art exalted, as head above all Both Riches, & honour, & all things come of thee ; and of thine owne ha\e they given thee. Accept, Wee beseech thee, this their free v.ill offering ; and let it be an odour of a sweet smell, a sacrifice acceptable, and well pleasing vnto thee ; through the merits [originally merritts] & Intercession of Jesus Christ, our only mediator and Advocate. Amen." This prayer may be also found, as above, in Bancroft's notes for the coronation of King James II. opposite the old text struck out. (Bodleian Library, Oxford, MS. Tanner 31. fo. 98. b.) After the first few words the whole of the prayer is new. The sentence beginning: "Thine O Lord is the power" down to "Accept we beseech thee" is a quotation, not verbal, from I Chron. xxix. 10-12. The passage is used at the presenting of the alms in the Liturgy of the Scottish Episcopal Church, and was a part of one of the sentences for the offertory in the Scottish Prayer Book of 1637. The passage from Chronicles is left out in W. and M. The last sentence "Accept" pre- ceded by the prayer " in time of War and Tumults" of the Book of Common Prayer. It was the time of the se\en years' war. The Deus qui populis of W. and M. is the same as that of Jac. II.* and is like that of other Stewart orders. But Omnipotetis scmpitcrnc Dcus has been shortened in Jac. II.* and is as follows : "Almighty and Everlasting God, Creator of all things, King of Kings, and Lord of Lords ; Give ear, wee bcsecht thee unto \jhcsc tiuo iL'oriis art- alltreif\ Our humble Praicrs and multiply thy Blessings upon this thy Servant JAMES ; whom in thy name with lowly Devotion wee Consecrate (Jur King: That being strengthened with y'= Faith of .\braham, indued with the mildness of Moses, arm'd with the Fortitude of Joshua, exalted with the humility of David, adornd with the wisdom of Solomon, and established with thy princi])alt .S])irit ; He may walk \prightly in y*' way of Righteousness ; nourish, instruct, ti Defend thy Church, and People ; and please thee in all things, through Jesus Christ Our Lord, who liveth and Reigneth with thet and the Holy Ghost, now, and for ever. Amen." There can be little doubt that this dislocation cf the Litany is due to the refusal of King James II. to receive Communion at his coronation. No part iee/i esto/e and ends with Jfaee es/ cniin i^riitia. hi C/iristo lesu domino nosfro ; that is, 1. Peter ii. I3"'9' Car. II. and W. and .M. begin with Deor/y />elo7'ed \\\\k\ end with Honour NOTES. 139 t/tc King. Car. I. Anne and the later orders begin with Sitbuiit yourselves, and end \\ ith Honour the Kiiii^. "The Epistle . . . was read by the Bi.ihop of Carlisle." (\V. and M.*) The gospel in Liber rei!;alii begins with Abeuutes pharisaei and ends with quae sunt Dei Deo, that is, Matth. xxii. 15-22. The orders in English have the same with the addition of a verse : Wlicn they hud heivd these ic'ords &.C. "The Gospel . . . ^\as read b) the Bishop of St. Asaph." (W. and M.*) Then the Abp. bcginneth] This rubric continues to Geo. I. In Goo. II. it stands : The Nicenc C?-ecd, by the Arehbishop, the Kins;- and Queen li'ith the People standings, as before. In Geo. III. it stands : Theii the Arch- bishop beg^inneth the Xicene Creed, and the Choir sing;eth it, the King and (Juee/i iL'ith the People standing;, as before. In Geo. I\\ it is altered to : Then the Archbishop readeth the Nicene Creed; the King; ivith the People standing, as before. With some necessary verbal alterations it is the same in Wm. I\'. and \'ictoria. At the end of the Creed, a strange rubric appears ' in \'ictoria, and in no other : Tlie Ser7'iee being; concluded, the Bishops who assisted ivill return tc their scats. Can Ser-r'ice possibly be a misprint for Creed.' Cap. 6. The Sermon. The substance of these rubrics appears in all the later orders. They may be seen in an early form in Car. II. (94) and fulh" in Jac. II. (87). At James II.'s coronation, "Then Sermon begins & y'-' King puts on his Cap, being bare till now." (B.M. Harl. 6815. f. 107.) "After which followed the Nicene Creed; which ended, the liishop of Salisbury being ready in the Pulpit, repeated the Lords Prayer, and took his Text 2. Sam. xxiii. 3 and 4 7'er. The God 0/ Israel said: The Rock of Israel Spake to me. He that ruleth over men must be just, ruling in the fear of God. And he shall be as the light of the morning, when the Sun riseth, evc7i a Morning without Clouds ; as the tender grass springing out of the Earth by clear shining after Rain. Upon which words he made an excel- lent Discourse. Their Majesties sitting in their Chairs on the South side of the Area, and hearing the same with great Attention. After Sermon, which lasted just half an Hour, Their Majesties took the New Establisht Oath," (W. and M.*y The queen here certainly takes an inferior position to the king, as she sits on his left hand. Dr. Gilbert Burnet was consecrated bishop on Easter Day, March 31, immediately before. At the end of the sermon he tells the Sovereigns that '• from You we expect the Glorious Reverse of all cloudy days. You have been hitherto our Hope and our Desire : You must now become oitr Glofy and Crown of ?rJoycing : Ordinary \'ertues in You, will fall so far short of our hopes, that we shall be tempted almost to think them Vices.''' {A sermon preached at the Coronation of William III. and Mary IL . . . by Gilbert, Lord Bishop of Salisbur\-, London, Starkey and Chiswell, 1689. p. 28.) I am indebted to our Treasurer, Mr. Dewick, for the loan of this remarkable j^roduction. We are told that " One Grey, Late Chaplain to y'" Bishop of Durham pleade[dj to an Information in y*" King's Bench for turning the Coronation Sermon into a virulent Ballad." (Cireenwich Hospital Newsletters, 3, No. 76, Public Record Office, quoted in Oct. 29. 1689. Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, 16S9. iCjQO, Stationery Oftke, 1895, P- 308.) In (ieo. II. III. and Wm. IV. where there was a queen consort there is a rubric about her based on the third in this chapter. In Geo. II. it is : I40 NOTES. The two Bishops that support the (J'tccn are to stand on cither hand of Her., and the jt^reat Lady Assistant, and she that bears up the Trains, constantly attend Her Slajesty durim^ the 7uhole Solemnity. The other great Ladies i^o to the seats prepared for Them. Cap. 7. The Oath. The Declaration against Transubstantiation, Invocation of Saints, and the sacrifice of the mass, as now used in the Church of Rome, was made here in Anne, Geo. I. II. and III. In the later coronations the Declaration had been already made before Parliament. The Coronation Oath of the kings of England has been the subject of so much discussion that no attempt will be made to deal with it here. For the convenience of comparison, the Coronation Oath of James II. has been printed as an Appendix. (See p. 65.} The history of the oath is given in .Arthur Taylor, The Glory of Rci^ality,. London, 1820. p. 329. See also William .Maskell, Monumenta Ritualiu Ecclesiae Anglica7tae, Oxford, 1882. \oI. ii. pp. xlv. and 109. The text of the oath given in \V. and M. agrees word for word with that in .Statutes of the Realm, Lond. 18 19. vol. vi. p. 56. The final rubric persists to Victoria, even with the mention of the great bible carried in the procession. Though in Wm. IV. and \'ictoria there was no procession from Westminster Hall, yet bishops carrying the regalia received the sovereign at the west door of the collegiate Church, and went in procession to the altar. (See Wm. I\'.*) The signing of the oath appears at the end in Geo. I. and continues in later orders. Cap. 8. The Anointiner. This rubric before Veni Cr^v/Zr'/- appears with the necessary' verbal altera- tions in all the orders after W. and .^I. The Archbishop bej^ins the hymn in lac. 1. and Car. I. but the Quire only are spoken of in Car. II. and Jac. 11. In W. and M. and all orders after the Archbishop begins the hymn. This version, or rather variant, of rV///0'£Vj/<>;- appears first in W. and M. and continues in the later orders with some few verbal changes : such as " .Anoint our hearts and chear our face " in the ninth line, which are in Geo. III. and continue after. In the text of Car. I. (25) there is the version of ]'eni Creator now second in the ordering of priests in the Hook of Common Prayer, while at the end of Car. I. (57.) is given the version now first in the ordcrinj^ of priests. It is this version that was used in Jac. II. though in W. antl .M. the variant printed in the text was adopted. In Li/ier rej^idis and the Stewart orders there is inserted, between I'cni Creator and tlie consecratory preface for the blessing of the oil, the Litany and certain prayers mentioned above. (.See p. 138.) The seven penitential psalms said in J.il/er re^idis with the Litany do not appear in the .Stewart orders. In Jac. II. there is inserted between Veni Creator and the consecratory preface a version of Te im'oca/nus, somewhat altered at the end. It was .said immediately after Veni Creator \n the Stewart orders and IJber ret:^alis. It is one of the most ancient of the Coronation prayers, being found in Egbert's Tontifual. (Surtees Society, 1853, ». 100.) Hut it disappears from this place in W. and .M. and is not restored in any later order. .Sursum Corda before the preface appears in Liber re^i^al is mmX the Stewart NOTES. 141 .orders ; but it is left out for tlic first time in W. and M. and it does not appear again in any later order. This form for blessing the oil is derived indirectly from the preface in Liber rci^alis and the Stewart. orders, which is made up of reminiscences of the preface for the blessing' of the oil on Maundy Thursday in the Gelasian and Gregorian Sacramentaries. (L. A. Muratori, Litiiri^id Roiiiana Vettis, \'enetiis, 1748. i. 556. ii. 55.) The mediaeval preface persisted until the coronation of James II., when it took the shape gi\cn below, the allusion to Noah's llood and the olive branch in the mouth of the dove being left out ; but the mention of the anointing of Kings, Priests, and Prophets being pre- served. This form is now printed, it is believed for the first time, from Jac. II.* It may be noted that there is no direction for the Archbishop to lay his hand upon the Ampulla. ''' Arc/iBp. It is very meet, right, and Our bounden Duty, that We should at all times, and in all places, give thanks vnto thee O Lord, Holy Father Almighty Everlasting God, the Exalter of the humble, and the strength of thy Chosen : who by the anointing with Oil, didst make & consecrate Kings, Priests & Prophets to Govern thy people Israel. We beseech thee to bless *& Sanctifie this thy Servant JAMES Our King now to be anointed with holy oil [^t/iis -word is interlined o%ie7- an erasure] by our Office & Ministry ; And plenteously to endue him with all the Gifts, and Graces, of thy holy Spirit, which thou didst of old Conferr vpon thy Chosen Servants by this jninistry ; through him who was anointed with the Oil of Gladness above his Fellows, Jesus Christ Our Lord Amen. This Preface being ended the Quire sing Zadock " i!i:c. In the corner of the leaf on which the preface is written, and thus immedi- ately under the preface, encircled by a black line, are the copies of signatures of six bishops, thus : W. Cant. H. London N. Duresme P. Winchester W. Asaph Fran : Ely Thos : Roffeii : The place of the last three words of the preface has clearly been influenced by these signatures ; and it may thus be interred that they were written by the scribe before he finished the concluding lines of the preface. They are all the names of bishops who took some part in the coronation of King James II. The Archbishop of Canterbury consecrated the King. The Bishop of London with the Bishop of Winchester supported the Queen. The Bishop of Durham with the Bishop of Bath and Wells supported the King. The Bishop of St. Asaph sang the Litany, with the Bishop of Oxford. The Bishop of Ely preached the sermon, and the Bishop of Rochester was Dean of Westminster. I think they ha\e been copied from the end of MS. L. 14. in St. John's College, Cambridge, Sancroft's own manuscript of James II.'s coronation, where they are real signatures. With the alterations in W. and M. the consecration of the oil took the form which it has in the text. The earlier half preserves some of the older ideas, while the latter half is almost new for this office, being derived from che form of confirmation. The Exalter of the Humble, and the Strength of thy Chosen.] These words are survivals from the old consecratory preface in Liber Kegalis and the Stewart orders. They continued until Geo. III. when they were omitted, and they have not reappeared since. 142 NOTES. Regard we beseech thee] This clause is borrowed from the blessinj,' of the font in the Pubhck Baptism of Infants in the liook of Common Prayer. It appears first in W. and M. This clause is left out in Geo. III. and later orders. Bless this Oil] The words " this oil" are left out in .Anne, so that in this matter the form is brou;^ht back to the preface of Jac. II.* while the moment at which the .Archbishop is to lay his hand upon the ampulla is transferred to the saying of the words "now to be anointed with this oil." In the same way the words are left out and the direction transferred in all later orders. Confirm & Stablish] This sentence is a conflation of the twelfth verse of the fifty-first '^%2\vn^ Miserere inci Dcus. "Confirm" and '* princely'' are the words in the Latin version; " stablish " and "free "are in the Prayer Book version. The end of this form is taken from that of Confirmation in the Book of Common Prayer ; which in its turn is a version of the Latin form of Confir- mation in use in the Church of EnL,dand before the Reformation. There is a prayer for the descent of the sevenfold pjifts of the holy Ghost upon the kiny in the collect said after the prayer for the church militant in !he order for King James II.'s Accession (Feb. 6) in the prayer books of that king. (See above p. i 33.) It must be admitted that the form for the blessing of the oil is better in W. and M. than in Jac. II.* In putting this jjraycr or consecralory preface together, the author may very well have had in his mind opinions like those contained in a letter of Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln, to Henry III. " Hoc tamen non ignoramus quod regalisinunctio signum est praerogativae susceptionis septiformis doni sacratissimi Pneumatis quo septiformi munere tenelur rex inunctus praeminentius non unctis regibus, omnes regias ct regiminis sui actiones dirigere. {Roberti Grosseteste cpiscopi quondam Lincolniensis episiohu\ Rolls Scries, ed. Luard, 1861, p. 350.) This passage may have been commonly known in the latter half of the seventeenth century, for it is quoted by John Selden from a manuscript. {Titles of Honor, Part i. Cap. viii. .^ i. sec. ed. Lond. 1631, p. 144.) In the middle ages few kings were anointed, only the Kings of F"rancc, England, Jerusalem, and .Sicily. {Modus Eli^endi . . . Intperatorent, Basileae, apud Pamphilum Gengcnbach, 15 19. A. iii. recto.) But by 1519. the right had been given by the holy see to other crowned heads. In Car. II. the tinscn hose and sandals were put on before the anointing, certainly by a mistake, as they should have been put on just before the spurs. But, curiously enough, if we can trust Hovedene, there is an exact precedent for it in the coronation of King Richard I. {C/troniea Afni^is/ri de //ourdene, ed. W. Stubbs, Rolls Series, 1870, vol. iii. p. 10.) The anthem Ziidocl; the priest appears after the form of anointmg in the .Stewart orders up to Jac. II. In Jac. II. it is placed before, and continues thus in W. and M. and later orders. The anthem Unxerunt Saloiuonent, of which Zadock the priest is .1 trans- lation, is as old as any coronation service known to us. It appears in the Ponlifuid of Ei^bert (Surtees Society, 1853, p. 101) thought to be of the eighth century. in the meantime] The first clause of this paragraph remains much the same after W. and M. until \Vm. IV'. when the paragraph is : /// the ntfatt time, the k'in_i^ risinif from His De-i'otions, h(i7'in^' been disrobed of his Crimson Robes, und htn>i)ii^ taken off his Cap of State i^oes before the Altar, supported and attended as before. In Victoria it is : At the Com- meneement of the Anthem the (Jueen, risini^ from Her Ih-','otions, t;i>€< before the Altar, attended by Her Supporters, and assisted by the Lord Creat N07ES. 143 Chamb'^rlaitt, the Siuord of State being carried before Her, ivhen Her Majesty is disrobed of Ner Cri})isoii Robes. The second clause is omitted in all the Georgian orders. The third clause And the Kings under Garineitt disappears with Anne, and is not seen again. With the diminution of the numljer of places to be anointed, the openings in the shirt at the boughs of the elbows, the shoulders, and between the shoulders would not be needed. The shirt of fine linen and the shirt of red sarcenet appear among the particulars of George III.'s coronation as well as amongst those of William and Mary (see above, p. 5). But of King George III.'s we are expressly told that though the shirt of fine linen and the red shirt were provided, yet they were not used. (Sec Appendix VII. p. 90.) The red shirt was not used at James I. or Charles I.'s (Car. I. 9.) or Charles II. 's coronation. (Car. II. 99.) The King and Queen sit down] This paragraph remains almost un- changed until \'ictoria. "re/// Creator being Hung-, and the Holy Oyl Consecrated, Their Majesties wereconducted to Their Regal Chairs placed on the Theatre (near the East side thereof) that they might be more Conspicuous to the Members of the House of Commons, (who, with their vSpeaker, were seated in the North Cross,) and were disrobed of their Crimson Velvet Mantles, and being Solemnly Anointed, were Presented with the Spurs." (W. and M.* 3.) The exposure of the anointing to the view of the House of Commons was rather a serious innovation. The pall held over the sovereign by four Knights of the Garter was in the first place intended to hide the ceremony of anointing from sight. The rubric does not well agree with the statement that the chairs were placed on the Theatre ; " plac'd in the midst of the Area over ag'ainst the Altar," is the wording of the rubric. Possibly arrangements were altered at the last moment. In Liber regalis and the Stewart orders as well as in Jac. II. the anthem Zadoek was sung while the anointing took place. But in W. and M. the anthem comes before the anointing, until in Victoria the rubric declares that the anthem is to be concluded before the anointing shall be begun. In the early Plantagenet coronations there is reason from the rubrics for believing that the King of England was anointed sitting in a chair. This may be gathered from the order said to be that for the coronation of Edward II. : Finitis orationibus istis, assedeat princeps in cathedra coram metropolitano, vel episcopo, apposita. Qui vero cum accesserit metropolitanus vel episcopus, vestem qua indutus fuerit princeps pallio super eum extenso, [sjcindat propriis usque ad cingulum manil)us : deinde manus principis sancto inungantur olco, liaec dicente metropolitano, vel episcopo. (T. Rymer, J-'oedern, Lond. 18 18. vol. ii. pars. i. 1307- 1327. p. 2,3-) But later on, in the days of tlie Tudors, it seems most likely that the King of England was anointed kneeling. At least it was so at the coronation of Henry VII. the " Cardinall, sitting, shall annoynte the King, kneling on quisshons, with holy oile." {Nut/and Papers, Camden Society, 1842. p. 16.) It does not seem certain whether James I. was anointed kneeling or sitting". (Car. I. 121.) Charles I. was anointed sitting; for the chair on which he is to be anointed is spoken of; whether the "aunticnt Chayrc " (Car. I. 31. note 1 1.) be the chair of St. Edward is not made plain. I'ut it is clear that Charles II. was not anointed in King Edward's chair, for the account (Car. II. 99.) runs thus after the blessing of the oil : "After which the King arose from before the fifaldstoole, and went to the Altar (supported as before) where hee was disrobed by the Lord great Chamberlaine, «.\: a Chaire being placed on the Northside between the Altar J 44 NOTES. ^ St. Edwards Chaire hcc sate downe therein." In this chair between the Altar and St. Edward's chair the King was anointed. James II. was anointed in King Edward's chair (Jac. II. 91.) but it is not so clear concerning the coronations from W. and M. to (ieorge II. "Which Ended his Miitie. removes to the Chair placed in the middle of the Area before the Altar, with a Faldstool before it, Wherein he is to be anointed by the Archb''." (Geo. I.*) In (jCO. III.* we are told, after the anthem : " In the mean time the King removed to St. Edward's Chair and sat down therein, and four Knights of the Carter" (S:c. (p. 207.) So in Geo. IV.* and Wm. I\'.* we read: "St. Edward's Chair (covered with cloth of gold,) having been placed in front of the altar" the King sat down in it. In \'ictoria the rubric itself is plain : The (Jiicen will tJien sit do^cn in King Edward's Chair placed in the midst of the Area over against the Altar. It would seem that it must be concluded of the majority of the coronations where we have data since the time of Charles I. that the Sovereign was anointed sitting in St. Edward's Chair. The only precise evidence to the contrary is given by that of Charles II. The changes made in W. and M. for the anointing are considerable. First of all, the number of places anointed is diminished ; from six to three In Jac. II. and the other Stewart orders the places anointed were i. the hands, ii. the breast, iii. between the shoulders, iv. both the shoulders, v. the bowings of the arms, vi. the crown of the head ; this order agrees with that of Liber recalls. But in W. and M. there are only : i. the crown of the head, ii. the breast, iii. the palms of both hands. Thus the order was inverted, the head being anointed first, and the hands last. This diminution may again have been suggested by the reading of John .Selden's J'itles of Honor {loc. cit.) who quotes, strange to sa\-, St. Thomas of Canterbury, " Inunguntur enim Rcgcs tribus in locis ; in Capite, in I'ectore, in Hrachiis. quod significat (iloriam, .Scientiam, Fortitudinem.' Richard I. was anointed only in three places, "in capite, in pectore, in brachiis, quod significat gloriam, fortitudinem, et scientiam." {Chronica Magistri /\Ot,'eri de J/o//edene, ed. by W. Stubbs, Rolls Series, 1870. iii. 10.) It should be noted that the same mystical significations arc given. The mediaeval coronation orders do not precisely agree with this. It should be noted that in the account of the Coronation furnished by the heralds in .'\ppcndix X'lll.the places anointed arc the same as in Jac. II. At the end of .Vppcndi.x VIII. the heralds expressly disclaim responsibility for the liturgical part of the ceremonial ; and the variations between their account and W. and M. and W. and M.* are so great that for the account of the service in the church the heralds' document and the /'nuessi/s fa, tits must be scanned very closely. (See Introduction, p. xxiv.) In Wm. IV. and Victoria the number of the anointings was still further diminished, and were only two in number ; viz., on the CnKon of the Heatt and on the Taints of both the Hands, and the forni at anointing instead of being repeated three times and expressing the part anointed, was said only once, thus: "He Thou anointed with Holy Oil, as Kings, Priests, and rmi^hets were anointed." The word "consecrated" in the form of anointing is an addition made in W. and M., and continued ever since. The prayer Trospiec onmipotens l^eiis was said before the anointing in Tiber recalls and the Stewart orders, until Jac. II. when it was oniitled, ami it does not appear to have been rcplaieil in any later order. Then the King and Queen kneel down] This rubric remains as in W. and M. in Anne and Geo. I. cxce|)l that standini; is inserted in both these ilater ortlcrs after Archbishop. AZOTES. 145 In Geo. II. and later orders the rubric appears as: T/nwi the Dean of \\'estminstcr laycth titc Ampulla and Spoon upon the Altar^ and the King kneeleth down at the Fa ids too/, and the A?rhl)ishop standing on the North- side of the Altar, saith this Prayer or Blessing oi'cr Ilitn. Our Lord Jesus Christ] In Liber Regalis and the Stewart orders up to Jac. II. two prayers were said at this place, Dens Dei filiiis, and Dens qui cs iustoruin. But in Jac. II. only one prayer was said, beginning Deus Dei Jilius, but soon passing into a different form, as the following prayer taken from Jac. 1 1.* and now printed will show, " So by this visible gift thou may receive invisible grace" is altered in Jac. II.* into "the assistance of that Grace" and in W. and ]\I. into "by the assistance of his heavenly grace.'' "God the Son of God ; Jesus Christ Our Lord, who was anointed by his Father with the Oyl of Gladness above his Fellows ; by his holy annointing pour down upon thy head, and Heart the blessing of the holy Ghost : That so by y'' assistance of that Grace, loving Righteousness and hating Inicjuity, and leading thy People in the ways of Vertue and Holiness ; after a glorious Course of Governing prudently \inte7-lined over an erasure^ and justly this * Temporall Kingdom ; thou mayest be [interlined^ made partaker of an eternal Kingdom, through the Same Jesus Christ Our Lord, Amen." In W. and INI. it was again considerably altered, as may be seen by comparing this form with that in the text. " Wealth, peace, and godliness " is a phrase taken from the second collect for the King in the communion service ; and the remainder of the prayer is an ill-conceived expansion of the end of the older prayer. In Liber regalis and the Stewart orders it was directed that as soon as these prayers were over the shallow coif was to be put upon the King's head (in Jac. I. and II. the linen gloves are spoken of) the other anointed places having been dried with cotton wool ; but in W. and M. the rubric in the text appears, while in Anne the mention of the closing of the undergarment disappears. (See above, p. 143.) The drying of the places by the Dean of Westminster lasts up to Geo. IV. In Wm. IV. the rubric appears as : This Prayer being ended, the King arises, and sits down again in his Chair, when the Dean (t/ Westminster will invest His Majesty with the Supertunica. In \^ictoria the rubric is : This Prayer being ended, the Queen arises, and sits dowit again in Her Chair. In the Stewart orders the linen coif and gloves, colobiuni sindonis, supertunica, with its girdle, the tinsen hose and sandals were put on here (the first two by the Archbishop of Canterbury, the others by the Uean of Westminster) accompanied b)- the prayer O God the Kitig of Ki/igs. (Deus Rex regum.) But in W. and I\I. no mention of these ornaments occurs here, though they are provided in the " Particulars from the great Wardrobe." (p. 5.) The prayer also is omitted. The later orders also arc silent, except Wm. i\;. Still, if the sword is to be attached to the girdle of the supertunica, it would be necessary that the King be already invested with the supcitunica before the Sword is girt upon him : And as the eolobiu/n sindonis is put on before the supertunica this also must have been put on. Without illustrative documents, therefore, the time at which these ornaments were put on would seem to be the old place, to wit, immediately after the anointing, and while the anthem Behold O God was being sung. And this opinion is confirmed by the manuscript account preserved at the Heralds' ofilcc of King George I.'s coronation. For in (ieo. I.* there is: "That done his Majesty arises and Sits down again in his Chair, and the Dean of \Vestnl^ dries or Wipes the Places anointed with fine Wool, or Linnen delivered to him by the Lord Great COR. ORDERS. L 146 NOTES. Chamberlain, Closing again the places in his Garment, Which are to he opened for his Anointing. "Then a Coife of Lawn or fine Linnen is to be delivered to the Archb''. by the Lord Great Chamberlain, Who is to put it on the King's head, and the Linnen Gloves are to be put on his hands ; While these things arc doing, an Anthem is to be Sung. " After this the Dean of Westm'. (the King standing up) is to put on his Majesty the Colobium Sindonis ; The Supertunica, or Close Pall of Cloth of Tissue is next to be put on his Majesty, with r. girdle of the same by the Dean of Westm^ "The King sitting down, the Dean is to put on the Tissue hose, or Buskins and Sandalls of Cloth of Gold upon the King." In Geo. III.*: " The Prayer being ended, the King sat down, and the Dean dryed the Anointed places. After which his Majesty put on a tine Linnen Coif Laced, and a pair of fine Linnen Gloves, presented him by the Lord Great Chamberlain, and returned to his chair on the south side the Area.'" (p. 2IO.) It may be noted that at King George IIl.'s coronation neither the colobium sindonis nor supertunica was put on. (See Appendix \'1I. p. 90.) In Geo. III.* there is also no mention of the buskins and sandals. In Geo. IV.* iy]^) among the " particulars" there is mention of: "A Colobium Sindonis of fine Holland, and a pair of Linen Coifes and Gloves. ****** "A shirt of fine Linen laced for the Anointing, and another of Red Sarcenet to put over it, with a surcoat of Crimson Satin. "A pair of Under Trowses and Breeches, with Stockings fastened to the Trowses, all of Crimson Silk." The buskins and sandals are not to be found in this list ; nor are any of the above-mentioned particulars named as bcinj^ worn during the ceremony itself (p. 123.) Immediately after the anointing we read in Geo. I\'.* : " The Dean of Westminster then received from the officers of the Wardrobe, the Supertunica of cloth of gold, and a girdle of the same for the Sword, with which the Dean arrayed His Majesty." Wm. I\'.* is to the same cft'ect. In the proof of the ceremonial of the last Coronation preserved at the Heralds' College there is direction here to invest the Queen with the supertunica ; but the direction has been struck through by two crossed pencil lines, while the other corrections are made in ink ; and the published Ceremonial contains no longer the clause as to the supertunica. Yet we know the supertunica with the colobium sindonis is still among the corona- tion robes at St. James'. The contemporary jiortrait of the Queen in her coronation robes shows these ornaments l)eing worn. The arj^ument from omission is so uncertain that without further evidence it would harilly be safe to conclude that the supertunica was not used at the last coronation. Thus it can hardly be doubted that, with the exception of the one coronation since W. and M. in which it is known that the colobium sindonis and supertunica were not worn, these ornaments have been put on very soon after the anointing, and in the old place indicated in the Stewart orders. The Spurs are lhcn| In .\\\\\c and all succeeding orders the presenting of the .Spurs is moved int<} the section with the presenting of the sword. In the older orders, and the I.ilur tri^a/iSy the sjiurs and swonl were prcsenteil together; so that this peculiarity of W. and M. may be an oversight. liehokl O (k)d our defender) This is the introit of the Mass in tJbcr rci^alis: and it was sung at the beginning of the Kucharist in Car. 1 and II. Ikit in Jac. II. it was suny inunediately after the anointing and was NOTES. 147 continued in this place until (iCO. III. Hut in Geo. I\'. its origin seems to have been forgotten, and it does not appear in any following order. Behold O God {Protector rioster aspi'ce) is the anthem to the 84"' psalm, Qiiam dilecta. Even when the anthem is dislocated in Jac. II. a remembrance of this psalm is preserved, as the anthem contained nothing but its 9"'. 12"'. 13"'. verses : while in W. and M. there are added, at the last, verses from ps. 18. and the first book of Samuel. The verse from Samuel is left out in Anne and the other later orders. Cap. 9. The oblation and girding: on of the Sword. In .\nne and all later orders the title of the chapter is : T/ie presenting of ihe Spurs and Sword and the girdini^ and oblation of tite said Sword. The first rubric of this chapter in Anne and the following orders relates to the Spurs : T/ie spurs are brought from the altar by the Dean of IVest- jiiinster^ and delivered to a nobleman appointed thereto by the Queen, who, kneeling down, presents thetn to her, and forthwith sends them back to the 'altar. Thus the rubric continues until Victoria, when the nobleman appointed, &c., is changed into the Lord Great Chamberlain, who, kneeling, ike. After this the following rubric appears in Anne and the later orders : Then the Lord tvlio carries the Sword of State returning the said sword to y' officers of the Jewel House, which is thereupon deposited in the traverse in King Edward's Chapel ; he recciveth thence in lieu thereof another sword in a scabbard of purple velvet provided for the Queen, to be girt withal, which he delivereth to the Archbishop, and the Archbishop laying it on the altar, saith the following prayer. Hear our prayers, (Src] Instead of " sanctify and bless '' in the second line there appears in Geo. III. and following orders "direct and support.'"' In Geo. II., III., and IV^ after the name of the King appears : "who is now to be girt with this Sword that he may not bear it in vain," a return to the form of Jac. II. " Hear our prayers" is a version of Exaudi qucrsuinus in Liber ?-egalis, v.-hich in Jac. I. and Car. I. appears in a word-for-word translation. In Jac. II. instead of "bless and sanctify this Sword" there is "Bless and Sanctify this Thy Servant James our King, who is now to be guirt with this Sword," a very material alteration. After the word " Sword " the remainder of the prayer is new, and continues in \V. and M. and the later orders. The following is the text of" Hear our prayers" taken from Jac. II.* : " Hear Our Praiers wee beseech thee O Lord, and by the right hand of thy ma''' : vouchsafe to bless and Sanctifie this thy Servant JAMES Our King, who is now to be guirt with this Sword ; that he may not bear it in vain, but vse it as the minister of God, for the punishment of evil doers and for y" Protection and Encouragement of all that doe well through Jesus Christ Our Lord. Amen." Then the Archbishop takes the .Swor({] This rubric remains the same in later orders until \'ictoria. In Victoria, in place of the Bishops assisting, there is : (the Archbishops of York and Armagh, and the Bishops of London ^j//(/ Winchester ««(^ other Bishops, assisting and going along with him. The address "Receive" &c., and rubric with the following address, " Remember Him," remain much the same in the later orders until Wm. IV. and Victoria, when the rubric disappears, and the first part of the address from " Remember" to " followers of him " disappears also, the remainder of the second address following immediately upon the first address. Thus in Wm. IV. and Victoria the ancient girding of the sword seems to disappear. 148 NOTES. Then the King ^ Queen rising; ttfi] This rubric continues in substance in all the later orders, except that in Wm. I\'. and \"ictoria the words uni^ififs his siuor-d are omitted. In \'ictoria, after scabbard there is : (fclii'ering it to the Archbishops 7L' ho places it upon the Altar ; the (2ueen then returns and sits down in King^ Edward's Chair. Also in Wni. \\ . and Victoria the price, a hundred shillings, is also left out. A rubric is added in \'ictoria : The Archbishops and Bishops who had assisted during this Oblation will return to their Places. Cap. lO. The Investing with the Royal Robes and the delivery of the Orbs. The rubric remains in .'\nne as in \V. and M. "ermine " being supplied in Anne and the later orders where the dots in W. and M. are. But in Geo. I., II., III., and IV. a rubric and address on delivering the Armill are prefi.xed. In Geo. I. it is : Then the King arising the Dean of Westniinster takes the Armill from y' Master of t lie great IFardrobe and putteth it about his Majestys Xeck, and tic til it to the Bo7uings of his Arms ami below the Elbows, the Archbishop saying. Receive this Armill as a Token of Divine Mercy Embracing thee on every Side. Geo. II., III., and IV. add after Elbows the words : with silk strings : the Archbishop standing before the King, and saying j In \Vm. IV. and Victoria the rubric and delivery of the .\rmill arc again omitted. The delivery "Receive this Armill" follows the Liber Regalis in the Stewart orders. Though not mentioned in Victoria, the Armill was put upon the Queen, apparently not tied to the elbows, but hanging pendant, like a priest's stole ; not, as I once thought, like a deacon's. (See " The Sacring of the English Kings "in Archicological fournal, 1894, vol. li. p. 37, and plate iii.) In Geo. I.* the armill is certainly said to be delivered after the roy.d Kobe or purple Rol:)e, but this must be a mistake. Next the Robes Royal\ This rubric continues up to Victoria. In Gee. I.,. II., III., IV. and \Vm. IV. after the King standing is added ///<• O/wjo/; Robe which he wore before being first taken off by the Lord Great Chamber- lain, but the addition again disappears in X'ictoria. It is somewhat hard 10 understand how the removal of the crimson robe can have been delayed to this moment. If the jjarliament robe worn during the procession anil earlier part of the service be meant, it was most likely rcmo\cil earlier as in W. and iM., and taken into St. Edward's Chapel. (See above, p. 21.) Neither can it very well have been the crimson shirt. In Geo. IV.*: "His Majesty then standing in front of his chair, was invested by the Dean of Westminster with the Imperial mantle, or Dalmatic Kobe of .Stale, of cloth of gold, the Deputy Lord Great Chamberlain fastening the clasjjs thereof. The richness of this Kobe of .State can scarcely be described. The ground, or outside, is shot with golil thread, broiadeil with gold and silver, with large and small flowers of the same frosted ; all the ornaments and llowers being edged with j)urplc or deep, .Ma/arine blue. It is lined with ermine." A collotype and coloured i)latc of the like vestment, worn by the Queen at the last coronation, arc given in Arclurological Journal quoted above. (li. plates iv. and v.) The imi)erial eagles may plainly be seen in the coloured plate. NOTES. 149 Receive this imperial] The lines struck out in W. and M. are omitted in Anne and following orders. In Geo. III. and following orders after "Christ" the delivery of the orb ends thus: "our Redeemer. For he is the Prince of the Kings of the Earth ; King of Kings, and Lord of Lords : So that no man can reign happily, who derives not his Authority from Him, and directs not all Actions according to His Laws." The delivery of the Orb at the same time as the pall is first directed in Jac. II., and the words of delivery are altered. Before Jac. II. they were : " Receive this Pall which is formed with four corners to let thee under- stand that the four quarters of the world are subject to the power of (iod and that no man can happily reign upon the earth who hath not received his authority from Heaven."' In Jac. II.* they are : " Receive this Imperiall Pall and Orb ; and Remember that the whole world is subject to the power and Empire of God, and that no man can reign happyly up \intcrUned\ on earth, who hath not received his Auctority from Heaven.'' The addition to the form of delivery of the pall has been made necessary by the interpolation of the delivery of the orb at this place. There seems good reason to believe that the orb and the sceptre with the cross are the same, but that the advisers of King James II. did not recognize this. In Jac. II. the orb was delivered to the Dean of Westminster and the sword redeemed after the crowning and before the delivery of the ring. In Car. II. and I., Jac. I. and Liber regalis^ the sword was ungirtand redeemed after the crowning and after the delivery of the ring, and before the delivery of the sceptres. In \Vm. I\\ and Victoria there is this rubric : The King dclii'ers his Orb to the Dean ^Westminster, to be by him laid on the Altar. Cap. II. The Investiture per annulum et baculum. In Liber recalls and the Stewart orders this section came after the crowning. The rubric continues as in W. and M. in all the later orders ; save that instead of Ruby Anne and all after readyW^W. In the delivery of the rings in W. and M. there seems to have been some confusion, if we judge from the Queen's own words given above, (p. 129.) for she received the ring intended for the King. And the heralds have marked the paragraph concerning the rings with a query. (See above. Appendix ATII. p. 104.) Receive the Ring] Anne and the later orders have the first two lines somewhat different : " Receive this ring, the ensign of kingly dignity and of defence of the catholick faith, that as," &c. The older orders read as in W. and M. Liber regalis. Car. I. and II. had a blessing of the ring before its delivery, but it is omitted in Jac. II. and a prayer was said after the delivery of the ring in Jac. I., Car. I. and II. and Liber regalis, but not in Jac. II. In Geo. IV.* : "The Lord Chamberlain then delivered the Ruby Ring on a crimson cushion to the Archbishop." The Scepters and Rods\ In Anne, the rubric is altered. Tlic (2ueen re- delivers her orb to the Dean of Westminster to be again laid upofi the altar, and then the Dean of Westminster brings the scepter and rod to the A>rh- iishop., and the Lord of the Manor of Worksop, i<.'ho usually claims to hold 1 50 NOTES. an estate by the sen'icc of presentim^ to the Queen a right-hand ghn-e on the day of her coronation^ and siipportin<^ the (2ueen^s rii^ht arm whilst she holds the scepter -with the cross, delivers to the Qiteen a pair of rich glairs, and upon any occasion happening aftenuards, supports her Majesty's right arm, or holds her scepter by her. This continues in Geo. I. and substantially in (]eo. II., III. and l\". But in Win. 1\'. and \'ictoria the first lines about the orb are left out. The presentation of rich Gloves before the sceptres, though mentioned in Liber regalis, does not appear in Jac. I. or Car. I. but in Car. II. (104) the claim being allowed to the Lord of Worksop "to Support the Kings right Arme whilest hee held the Scepter," he "first delivered him a paire of Rich Gloves, which the King putt on before hee received the Scepter." In Jac. II. (95) the " Lord of the Manor of Worksop in Nottinghamshirey presented His Majesty with a Rich Glo7'e, which the King put on His Rit^ht Hand, immediately before He received the Scepter" The London Gazette (Aug. 3, 1821, Number 17732, p. 1608. "i says that "Bernard-Edward Duke of Norfolk, as Lord of the Manor of Worksop, then presented His Majesty with a Pair of Gloves, richly embroidered with the arms of Howard, which His Majesty put on ; and the Archbishop delivered the Sceptre with the Cross" &c. At the last Coronation the Queen did not wear the gloves presented by the Lord of the manor of Worksop. The delivery of the two sceptres continues through the later orders as in W. and M. save that a few verbal alterations are introduced in the longer form in Geo. III. and succeeding orders. Considerable changes were introduced in Jac. II. in the forms at the delivery of the sceptres. They are now printed from Jac. II.* On delivering the sceptre with the Cross was said : " Receive the Scepter, the Ensign of Kingly power, and Justice." This with the addition of " Royal" before "Scepter" is the same as in W. and M. and later orders. On delivering the Sceptre with the dove there was said in Jac. II.* : " Receive the Rod of Equity, and Mercy. And Ciod from whom all holy Desires, all good Ccuncells, and all Just Works do proceed. Look Down (iraciously upon thee ; Direct, and assist thee in the administration of that Dignity, which he hath given thee: That thou mayst Defend the Holy Church, and Christian people, committed by (iod unto thy Charge ; punish the Wicked ; protect and Cherish the just, and lead them all in the way of Righteousness ; show the way to those, that go astray ; ofier thy hand to those that fall ; repress the proud, and lift up the lowly : And so in all things follow him, of whom the i'rofittt David sailh. The Scepter of thy Kingdome is a right Scepter ; thou lovest riiihteousness, and ha test iniquity ; even Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen." The beginning and the end (which is unfortunate) of this address are evidently reminiscences of the Stewart orders and Liber regilis ; but the central pari is more new. This again in W. and .M. has been changed, and is less like the old. Liber rcgalis, Jac. I. Car. I. and II. arc almost identical in form, and the delivery of the scejjtres is followed in Liber regdis by a blessing in form of an episcopal bcnedii lion ; in Jac. I. Car. I. and II. by a shorter blessing, and /<■ Dcuin. The blessing in W. and .M. ami later orilers is postponed until immediauly before Te Deitm. In Jac. li.at which coronation there was no communion, after the delivery of the sceptres, the second oblation was made, followed by the blessing, and Te Pen III. AZOTES. 151 Cap. 13. The Putting: on of the Crown. The rubric remains the same in the later orders, though in Anne and Geo. I. after Crozc/i is added called K. Ediuard's croo.'}i : but the prayer " O God the Crown of the faithful" is altered at once. In Anne, Geo. I. and II. it begins thus : " O God, the Saviour and Rewardcr of them that faithfully serve thee, who alone dost crown them with mercy and loving kindness, bless and sanctify this thy Servant" &c. In Geo. III. and following orders it is thus : "O God who crownest thy faithful servants with Mercy and loving Kind- ness ; Look down upon this thy Ser\ant " &c. The remainder of the prayer is the same in all the orders after \V. and M. The change in Jac. II.* and W. and M. from Liber rcgalis and the Stewart orders is considerable. In these it is a prayer for a blessing on the crown, so that he who weareth it may be filled with grace. The prayer in Jac. II.* and W. and M. is a new prayer preserving nothing of the old form but the opening words, and these are lost immediately in Anne and later orders. The first change in Jac. II.* is thus : " O God the Crown of the P'aithfull ; Bless we beseech thet and sanctify this thy servant James our King : and as thou dost this Day set a Crown of pure Gold upon his head ; so Enrich his Royall heart with thine abundant (irace, and Crown him with all Princely Virtues, through the King Eternal Jesus Christ our Lord Amen." Tlic?i the King ii;-^ (2iieeii\ This rubric evidently could serve for only one occasion. In Anne accordingly it is altered to : Then (lie (liceen sitting down in her chair, the Archbishop, assisted with other bishops, comes from the altar, the Deaji of Westminster brings the crown, the Archbishop taking it of him, reverently piitteth it on the (Jneen^s head. The rubric remains thus in Geo. I. but in Geo. II., III., IV. and Wm. IV. the chair is called King Edward's Chair. In Victoria the beginning of the rubric runs thus : Then the Queen still sittittg in King Edward'^- Chair, the Archbishop, assisted with the same Archbishops and Bishops as befo?'e, comes from the Altar; &c. In W. and M.* "at Four of the Clock the Crowns were put upon Their Majesties Heads by the Lord Bishop of Zc/^c^'ci;/, assisted by the Lord Bishop o{ Rochester, [Dean of Westminster] at sight whereof all the People shouted, the Drums Beat and Trumpets Sounded, and the great Guns at the Tower^ and in St. fames's Park, &c. were discharged, and all the Peers and Peeresses put on their Coronets." At siglit whereof^ This rubric continues in Anne and later orders. In Victoria at the end of this rubric is added : jIs soon as the Qiteefi is crowned, the Peers is^c pid on their Coronets and Caps. In the earlier orders this does not appear until after the anthem. 7'he noise ceasing^ Thus in all later orders, save in Victoria, which has : The Acclamation ceasing. In Jac. II. there is : The noise and acclamations ceasing. God crown You] This continues unaltered till Geo. III. when the first part is as follows : " The Lord of Hosts be unto You for a Crown of Glory, and for a Diadem of Beauty. And may You be also a Crown of Glory in the hand of the Lord, and a Royal Diadem in the hand of Your God. Be strong" (S:c. In Geo. IV. and following orders all this first part is left out and the form begins with " Be strong." 152 NOTES. In this, Geo. IV. has in " holy ways " and Geo. 1 1 1, after " eternal life " inter- polates : " that in this World He may crown You with Success and Honour and when You have finished " &c. Both alterations are continued in later orders. This form is a combination of the two forms in Lihcr ri-j^alis, one Coronet ie Deiis and the other ConJ'ortarc ct cslo, originally an anthem. Both begin with the same words as in Liber rcgalis and the Stewart orders, but are difl'crent afterwards. In Liber regalis and the Stewart orders a \>r:i\cr Dc::s pcrpcfi/ita/is \\a.s, said between Coronet te Dcus and Confortare. It was omitted in \V. and M. and does not appear again. In Jac. II.* there are two forms differing somewhat from those \n Liber regalis and the Stewart orders, but more like them than the form in W. and M. They run thus : "God crown thcc with a Crown of Fortitude, and Honour, of Righteous- ness, and Glory : that having a right Faith, and abounding in all the Fruits of Good Works, thou mayst at last Obtain the Crown of an Everlasting Kingdonie, by [whose erased^ his Gift, whose Kingdome endureth for ever. Amen. " O Eternal God, King of Kings Fountain of All Auctority, and power ; Bless wc Ijeseech thee this \thcse t7co 7i.'or{fs inter/ined] thy Servant, who in lowly Devotion boweth his head un [intc'r/ined] to thy Diwine Majestic. " The King must here be put in mind to do so. " Let him allwais in Godly Devotion wait upon thee ; and be thou ever present with him, preserve him long in health, and prosperity ; protect, and Defend him from ail evill ; prevent him with the blessings of goodness ; and Crown him with thine Everlasting mercy, through Christ Our L"'. Amen." Praise the Lord] This anthem continues from W. and M. to Geo. III. The .Stewart orders and Geo. I\'. and succeeding orders have Dcus invirtute "The king shall rejoice in thy strength O Lord." As soon as tJie Ling] This rubric continues unchanged till Geo. II. where it is : As soon as t/ie L'ing is crowned., t/ic Peers iJtc. put on their Coronets and Caps. It remains here till Victoria, when it disappears from this place. Cap. 1 3. The presentine: of the Holy Bible. This is an entirely new ceremony. The rubric remains substantially the same in the later orders as in W. and .M. In .Anne and all the later orders the substance of the address remains unaltered to Geo. III. But with (iCO. I\'. and following orders the first fourteen lines are omitted and the address begins: "Our Gracious King; we present unto Your Majesty this liooA-" «S:c. (last line of p. 27.) and it continues much the same in Wm. IV. and Victoria. Geo. II. and the following orders have this rubric after the delivery of the bible. 77/(7/ t/ie L'ino dcliTcrs back the Hi hi c to the Archbishop, who gives it to the Dean of Westminster, to be reverently placed again upon the Holy Altar. Victoria adds to llie rubric: the Archbishops and Hishops toho had assisted returning to their .Seats. Cap. 14. The Benediction aud Te Deum. The ruijric remains the same in the later orders with some few verbal alteniiions. The first section of the blessing remains the same, until Geo. III. and the later orders when the last three lines, after "evil thing" arc changed into "and prosper you in everything good. Amen." xVOTES. 153 In the second section of Geo. II. there is " Victorious Fleets and Armies " in place of "victorious armies." The second section of the Ijlessing in Geo. III. is : The Lord give you a fruitful Country and healthful Seasons ; victorious Fleets and Armies, and a quiet Empire : a faithful Senate, wise and upright Counsellors and Magistrates, a loyal Nobility, and a dutiful Gentry ; a pious and learned and useful Clergy ; an honest, industrious, and obedient Com- monalty. .llllOl. In Geo. I\'. Wm. I\'. and Victoria, the second section is : "The Lord give you a faithful Senate, wise and upright Counsellors" and so on as in Geo. III. The third section remains the same till Geo. II. when the second sentence becomes : " May Mercy and Truth meet together and Righteousness and Peace kiss each other." ' In Geo. III. and the later orders it begins thus : "In your days may Mercy and Truth meet together, and Righteousness and Peace kiss -each other" and then it ends as in W. and M. The fourth section remains the same till Geo. III. when it becomes : "The Lord make your Days many, and your Reign prosperous : may you be reverenced and beloved by all your Subjects, and ever increase in Favour with God and man. Amoi.'^ In Geo. IV. Wm. IV. and Victoria after "prosperous" is added "your Fleets and Armies victorious." The fifth section remains the same until Geo. III. when it is broken up into two ; and reads thus : "The glorious Majesty of the Lord our God be upon you : may he bless you with all temporal and spiritual Happiness in this world, and crown you v\ith (ilory and Immortality in the world to come. Amen. "The Lord give you a religious and virtuous Posterity to rule these Kingdoms in all Ages. Amen." Thus it remains in Geo. IV. but in Wm. IV. and \'ictoria the last section, the prayer for posterity, is wholly omitted. This long blessing is descended from the episcopal blessing of IJber 7ri;a/is., a version of which appears in Jac. I. with three sections. In Car. I. and II. there is a short blessing, followed by a prayer for the clergy, inspired by the second section of the blessing of IJber rei;ialis and Jac. I. In Jac. II. we have the blessing which was doubtless the immediate ancestor of that in W. and M. though the opening clauses are not the same. They run thus in Jac. II.*: " The Lord bless thee, and keep thee : And may all the Blessings of Heaven, & Earth, plentifully descend upon thee. Amen. "The Lord give thee of the dew of Heaven." And so on as in W. and M. Then the Archbishop] This rubric and the prayer following remain with, a few verbal alterations after Geo. III. in all the orders. The blessing being thus given'\ This rubric persists till Geo. IV. but in Wm. IV. and Victoria it disappears entirely. This is another of those de\iations from antiquity which characterise these two orders. 'J'/ien the (Juire] This rubric remains \\ith a few changes up to Wm. I\'. But in Victoria it is in this form : Then the Choir begins to sing the Te Dcum, and the (2iieen goes to the Chair ■on which Her Majesty first sate on the East Side oj the Throne, the two Bishops Her Supporters., the Great Officers, and other Peers, attending Her, £very one in his place, tlie two t Swords being carried be/ore Her, and there reposes Herself. The te.xt of Te Deuin first appears in Geo. II. and thence in all later orders. 154 AOTES. Cap. 15. The Inthronization. The rubric remains as in \V. and M. until \'ictoria wlien Uie beginning is changed into : T/ie Te Deum bcini; e/idcif, the Queen will ascend the Theatre, and de lifted up into Her Throne^ &i. The rest as in W. and M. with the needful changes. The exhortation remains the same in all, except that "God's altars" is changed into "God's Altar" in Geo. II. and succeeding orders. The plural is used in the Liier re^a/is, the singular in the Stewart orders. Geo. II. and later orders leave out : "and to wait there." In Jac. II. the opening runs: Stand firm and hold fiist from henceforth that Place of Royal Dignity, whereof Thou art the Lawful and Undoubted Heir, by Succession y>-(>w Thy Forefathers iS:c. In Car. I. and Jac. I. the expressions are much less strong : "Stand and hold fast from henceforth that place whereof hitherto thou hast been heir by the succession of thy fore-fathers," which is almost word for word a trans- lation of Liber rcg;alis. The changes in Jac. II. represent opinions current in his time and in W. and M. the words have been modified, just as they were modified in the Recognition. (See p. 16. above.) In Geo. I\'.* : "A loud and general acclamation of ' God save the King I' accompanied by clapping of hands and huzzaing now burst from every part of the Abbey." Cap. 16. The Homag-e. This rubric remains the same in all the orders excepting that in Geo. II. and following orders the words concerning the pardon are left out. The Archbishop] This rubric remains unchanged in the later orders. There was a similar rubric in the -Stewart orders. The Archbishops and Bishops gave their oath of fealty to the King in Car. II. Geo. I\'.* and Wm. I\'.* before the Dukes of the blood royal did their homage. But, though the order in Anne is that the first estate shall do homage before the second estate, yet it would seem that Prince George of Denmark really performed his homage before the Archbishop of Canter- bury. {London Gazette, No. 3804, .April 23-27, 1702.) The oath of fealty remains the same in all later orders. In Geo. I., II. and III. "Kings of England" is changed into '"Kings of Great Britain"; in Geo. I\'. and Wm. I\'. into "Kings of the I'nitetl Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireliind" ; in \'ictoria into " Kings or Queens of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland." The substance of the oath is the same in the .Stewart orders. And then the Archbishop hisseth] In Anne this is changed to "the Queen's left cheek or hand." So in Oo. 1. and II. changing "Queen"' into "King." In Geo. III., I\'. and Wm. I\'. it is "the King's left check" only. In X'ictoria "the Queen's Ihinil." It is the left cheek in the Stewart orders. After this the other J'eers] This ruliric is unaltered in the later orders. In Car. II. the Duke of York did his homage after the bishops. In .\nnc, I'rince (Jeorge did his homage before them. The homage of the temporal jieers remains the same in all the later orders. There is a similar form in tiie Stewart orders. (ieo. II. and the later orders adil after the homage this rubric : Note, That Copies of this Homage must be provided by the f/craldsfor every Class of the Mobility. The Peers ha',-inu; done their Homage] This rubric remains substantially the same in all later orders. NOTES. 15,5 Caps and Coro/ic/s, thus includinj,' the spiritual peers, remain till (]eo. III. and later orders, when Caps are left out. In Anne the final words arc : kisseth (lie (lucoi's check or hand. In \'ictoria kisseth the (Jtfeen^s hand. There is a similar rubric in Car. I. and II. a much shorter one in Jac. I. While their Majesties' j^cneral Pardo7{\ This rubric continues the same in Anne and Geo. I. But in Geo. II. and later orders the rubric begins differently : Wliile the Peers arc thus doing their Homage and the Medals thrown about, the King,. and so on, as in W. and M. See above p. 133 for a note on the medals. Cap. 17. The final Anthem. This remains a separate chapter until Wm. I\'. and Victoria when it becomes part of Cap. 16. While the general pardon^ This rubric remains the same until Geo. II. In Geo. li., III. and I\'. mention of the general pardon is omitted. In Wm. IV. the rubric is merely : At the same Time tJie Choir sing this A)itlieni ; and in Victoria : During the performance of the Homage the Choir sing this anthem. The anthem was slightly altered in Anne and remained thus until Geo. III. In Geo. IV. it is " Blessed be Thou Lord God of Israel." (Chron. xxix. 10. II. 12. 13.) In Wm. IV. " O Lord grant the King along life." In Victoria : " This is the day which the Lord hath made." This anthem is a survival of the introit " Behold O God our defender" of Car. I. and 1 1, and of Protector nostcroi the Liber regalis : for the celebration of the Eucharist in the Stewart orders and Liber rcgalis, when there was no Queen consort to be crowned, began at this place : always excepting Jac. II. when " there was no Communion." At the end of this Atithciii] This rubric remains the same in Anne and Geo. I. In Geo. II. and following orders there is added: The Solemnity of the King's Coronation being thus ended, the Archbishop leaves the King in His Throne, goes doivn to the Altar, a)id begins, ikz. In place of: At the end of this Anthem ihaxe is in Wm. IV.: When the Homage of the Lords is ended ; and in Victoria : When the Homage is ended. In Geo. II., III. and Wm. IV. the section for the coronation of the Queen Consort is inserted here. It has been printed by Mr. William Maskell,, {Monumenta Ritualia Ecclesiae Angiicanac, Oxford, 1882, vol. ii. p. 149.) and it appears in this work as Appendix X. p. 1 17. Cap. iS. The Communion. The rubric continues thus until Geo. I. In Geo. II., III., IV., Wm. IV. and Victoria after C^'r/^^ry <^ri,'/;/.y the rubric is changed to the Archbishop reading these sentences " Let your light," t^c, followed by " Charge them." In Geo. IV. and later, the singing of "Let my prayer " by the choir is discontinued. In the mean Tuhile] This rubric persists to Geo. IV. and Wm. I\'. wlien the anthem being discontinued, the words /;/ the mean ttme are left out, but the substance of the rubric remains unchanged. In Victoria the first section of the rubric is this : The (Jucen descends from Her 'J hrone, attended by Her Supporters, and assisted by the Lord Great Chamberlain^ IS6 NOTES. the Sword of State beim; carricit before Her, and goes to the Steps of the Altar, 7^'here takim^ off Her Crown, which She de/nrrs to the Lord Great Chamherlai)! to hold. She kneels down. The remainder of the rubric is as in \V. and M. Bless O Lord we beseech] The prayer remains the same in all later orders. "This weighty ofifice " in \V. and M. and Anne becomes in Geo. I. "his weighty ofifice," and in like manner in the later orders. Then tlie Kin}^ and (2ueen kncclinif\ In substance it remains the same; in place of a Mark 7i.'eii^ht of Oold, \'ictoria has a Purse of (iold ; after "] This rubric rem;iins the same in Anne with the need- ful verbal alterations, only accoin|)anied with a note, "The preacher ami thos(! who read the E|)istle and Gi)spel to receive." In Geo. I. the rubric is expanded as follows: ll'hcn the Archbishop the Jh'an of West- NOTES. 157 Diinstcr and the Bishops assist'' (viz') the Preacher and those tK^o luho read the Litanie, and those t^uo that read the Epistle ^ Gospel) hai'e eoin- niiirJcatcd in both kinds, the Archbishop Adniiiiistreth the Bread and the Dean of ll'est/ni/ister the Cup, to the King, the Bishops Assistants holding a Toxuel of luhite silk or fine liniicn before the King luhile he receii'es. The first part of this rubric remains with a few verbal alterations until \'ictoria ; but in Geo. II. III. and I\'. the part about the towel is put off until after the words of administration, and in Geo. IV. it is only a bishop in the singular who holds a towel ; while in \Vm. IV. and Victoria the direction for the towel disappears altogether. (See above, p. 132.) In Victoria there is a slight change at the end ; ?i{x.&x coniinunicated iit both kinds is the Queen advances io the Altar atid kneels dozen, and the Archbishop shall administer the Bread a/id the Deati of Westminster///^ Cup, to Her. This direction to advance to the altar is a return to a direction in Liber rcgalis. In Car. II. the directions are : " Then the Bishop proceeded to the Consecration of the Sacrament, who Comunicated first, then the Deane of Westm'"' & after the Bishops of Durham & Bath. "Then the Bp. administered the Bread to the King, And the Deane of Westm'^'' the Cup. " The Bishops of Carlisle & Hereford held the Towell before him whilst hee received. "After a little pause the King arose, putt on his Crowne, & tooke the- Scepters in his hands and (attended as before) went to his Throne." In Car. I. as far as the additions made to the original manuscript allow us- to judge, the direction seems to be : And when he and his Assistants haue coniuiunicated (the King still kneel- ing before the Altar) He adininistreth the Body^ y' Deane of Westminster y' Cup io y' K.ing. An addition has been made : Two Bishops then present are to hold before the King a totuell of white si Ike. At James I.'s coronation (T. Milles, Catalogue of Honor, London, W> Laggard, 1610, p. 60.) there is : "After the Archbi. hath communicated himselfe, and those which assisted him, the King and Queene come to the steps of the Altar, there to receiue the holy Sacrament. " The Archb. ministreth the body, the Abbot t the Cup." Neither in Jac. I. nor in Liber Begalis is the houseling cloth spoken of. In Wm. IV.* : " When the Archbishop and the Dean have communicated. Their Majesties will approach the Altar, and receive the Sacrament." The Arch B\ goes on] From Geo. II. to Geo. IV. this rubric is pre- ceded by the direction concerning the houseling cloth. While the Kiny: and Queen receive, the Bishops appointed for that Service, shall hold To\\els ^y white Silk, or fine Linen, before Them. In Victoria it is preceded by this rubric : The Queen then puts on Her Crown., and takinci the Sceptres in Her Hands agaift, repairs to Her Throne. The (Quire sing CAory] Thus in Anne and Geo. I. In Geo. II. and III. Then shall be sung CAory. In (ieo. IV. Wm. IV. and \^ictoria Then shall be said Glory. After Gloria in excelsis in Victoria is : " 'Lite Choir sing the folloiving Anthem. "ANTHEM. Hallelujah : for the Lord (iod Omnipotent rcigneth " &c. followed by this rubric : After the anthem the Archbishop reads tJie final Prayers. And in the mean time] This rubric continues with the needful alterations 158 NOTES. to \Vm. I\'. but in \'ictoria the rubric given immediately above takes its place. Cap. 19 The Final Prayers. These remain, with the necessary changes, the same in all succeeding orders including that of \'ictoria. There is no appearance of these final prayers in Jac. I. Car. I. and II. nor in Liber j-ej^alis. They appear for the first time in Jac. II. as a sort of substitute for the Communion service ; and they follow immediately upon the coronation of the Queen. This rubric precedes them : "After the Anthcvi, (there being no Com/itunion,) the KING and QUEEN descended, and kneeled at Their Faldcstools upon the Theatre, at the Foot of Their Throies, whilst the Arclibishop said the Final I'rayers." The final prayers in Jac. II.* are first: "Assist us mercifully O Lord" &c., as in the Book of Common Prayer. Secondly : "O Lord, Our God, who upholdest, & governest all things in Heaven & earth ; Receive our humble Praiers, with Our Thanksgivings, for Our Soveraign Lord JAMES [i/i/er/ined 07'er James in ordinary letters] set over us by thy Grace, and Providence to be Our King : And so together with him, bless his Royall Consort, Our gracious Queen M.-\RY Catherine the Queen Dowager, Their Royall Highnesses Mary y'' [interlineil] Princess of Orange [in inanj^in'] and the Princess Anne of Denmark, and the whole Royal Family, with y*" dew of thy Heavenly Spirit ; that they ever trusting in thy goodness, protected by thy Power, and Crowned with thy gracious, & Endless Favour ; may continue before thee in Health Peace, Joy, & Honour a long, & happy Life upon flarlh : tS; after Death obtain Everlasting Life, & glory in the Kingdom of Heaven, by the merits, iV mediation of Christ Jcsu Our Saviour ; who with the Father, s!^ the holy Spirit, liveth. ^: Reigncth ever one God. World without end Amen." Thirdly : "And grant O Lord we beseech thee that the course of this world" &c.. as in the Prayer Book. Fourthly: "The peace of God" tS:c., as in the final blessing in the communion service. Cap. 20. The Recess. This chapter remains much the same in .Anne and Geo. I. saving the necessary verbal alterations ; but in Cieo. II. though the directions remain essentially the same, yet the wording is a good deal altereil, besides the changes jjrou^ht about by the pari tnkcn bya Queen Consort in the ceremonial. Geo. III. and I\^ are very much the same as Geo. II. excepting in Geo. I\'. the parts which deal with the presence of a Queen Consort. In \Vm. I\'. the first p'lragraph is the same as in Geo. II. but in the seconil paragraph there is no mention of the King taking otT his crown : but there is added : And t/ie (.',o\(\ Spurs and St. ICdwanls Su\ff are i,'^i''en into t//e /lands 0/ //le Dean ^y Westminster, and by hint laid there also. In the second jjaragraph the "royal and imperial crowns" are said to be taken off, and laid on the altar in Si. Edwartl's chapel. This error continues in Anne and (ieo. 1. and the misiake is only remedied in Geo. 11. It is of course St. Edward's crown wilh whi( h ihe king is crowueil after the anointing, and ihe im|)erial crown is given to him during the recess. Tiu' same in- attention may be noticed in the warrant for the regalia. (Sec Appendix \'. p. 77.) The heralds, however (Ap|)eiulix X'lll. p. 107.) say correctly that the nnj)erial crowns were delivered at ihe recess. NOTES. 159 The third and tourlh paragraplis in \Vm. I\'. are as folhiws : The Archbishop, Ih'hii^sti/l 7'es/cd in /lis Cope, ivill then place the Orb /;/ His Majesty s Left Hand. WhicJi being done, the Archbisliop and Bishojjs tuill divest themselves of their Copes, and leave them there, proceediiig in their usual Habits. Then Their Majesties 7vill proceed through the Choir to the West Door oj the Abbey, in the same maftncr as They came, wearing Their Crowns. The Kinij bearing in His Right Hand the Sceptre toith the Cross, and in His Left the Orb ; tlie Queen bearing in Her Right Ha?id Her Sceptre ivith the Cross, and in Her Left the I\ory Rod -uit/i the Dove ; all Peers wearing their Coronets, and the Archbishops and Bishops their Caps. In \'ictoria, the paragraphs are much the same as in Wm. IV'. omitting whatever refers to the Queen Consort. At the end of the first paragraph there is the Organ and other Instruments all the while playing instead of the Organs. The directions as to the Gold Spurs and King Edward's Staff come in the third paragraph immediately before IVhich being done. The original of the rubrics of this chapter in W. and M. may be found in Jac. II. Jac. II. again is an expansion of the directions in Car. II. and I. and Liber regalis. NOTES OX THE ANGLO-FRENCH VERSION. /• 39- The two first paragraphs of this page arc a summary of the longer recension of the rubrics in Liber rcgulis {Missalc , . . IWstiit. ii. 677-681). line 2. qairc. The four great nobles are spoken of in Appendix XI. p. 121. They are to support the king tiie whole day. line 19. siith orrctz is in the Latin dcauratis : Appendix XI. has >>ti.< orrcz. C'est la manere. Here begins the version of the shorter recension of the rubrics of Liber rcgalis. P; 40- ... line I. cJiaucec sancz plus de chances. Here again appears the direction that in going from Westminster Hall to the church the King is to wear only stockings, not shoes. In an English Forma et modus (Hritish Museum, Tib. E. viii. fo. 32) it is expressly said " without Shoone." So also another M.S. in the British Museum (Harl. 2115, fo. 124/', formerly 152/^), describing the coronation of Richard III. in 1483, it is said of the procession, " the kinge and qucene going upon red clothe barefote." line 9. Here Ed'ward is given as the name of the prince to be crowned, and the same name occurs in several other places below (p. 42, lines and 42, p. 44, line 19, p. 45, line 6, and elsewhere). The manuscript was certainly written at the time when an Edward was reigning ; but it may be considered as a mere symbol, to indicate any English King, much as Louis is used of any French King. Epuis serra chante. Here Appendix XI. gives more light than the Latin or French. The seven penitential psalms are to be said pitr das 7'oici\ while the litany is sung by two bishops or chanters ; which may correspond to the Latin infra litaniam. P- 43- line 7. coucit dun drap dor. The Latin does not speak of a cloth of gold, merely pallio super eum interim e.xtenso. The parliament robes being taken off the king, he had only his linen and silken shirts, his crimson coat, his breeches and stockings left upon him : and the shirt was torn by the archbishop tlown to the giriUc, as ilirecled on line 10, so that sonic covering became needful. This developetl afterwards into the pall of cloth of Kold lu 1(1 l)y four knights of the garter over the King during his anointing. line 19. a losue is probably a mistranslation of laeti. line 6 from bottom : englcis is in the Latin ecclesiarum. P'U- .... Meintenant lo pia. Pis is no iloubt the breast ; m the Latm it is Postea vcro pectus. IJul it may be that the word pis has been mistaken to NOTES. i6i mean fccf, and thus a sort of opinion tliat the feet of the King of England were anointed in his coronation, has come into existence. A late Elizabethan manuscript in the British Museum (Harl. 3504, fo. 234) says plainly that Edward VI. was "anoynted on the breast, on the soles of his feete, his elbowes, his wrest of his handes, and his crowne of his heade." There is, indeed, another instance of the practice of anointing the feet of a King at his coronation, which has been pointed out to me by Mr. Dewick. It is contained in the pontifical of Peter de Tregny, bishop of Senlis from 1351 to 1356, printed by Martene in De nntiqids Ecclcsiae Ritibus^ Lib. ii. cap. x. Ordo ix. (.-\ntuerp. 1736. t. ii. col. 637). Dcindc inicm^itautur pedes, £-=■ scapulae antbacqiie coinpages brachioriuii, &^c. There may be here the same confusion ht.\.\\&t.vi pectus and pedes which has been hinted at above. For if we omit the head, which is anointed first in the French coronation, the order of places to be anointed is the same as that of the French King (see ]\Iartene, /oc. cit. Ordo vi. Col. 613) if we suppose pedes to be a mistake for pectus. line 8. In this collect we may notice that in the French there is no equivalent of Spiriius paracleti. line 5 from bottom, note 20. 7»- may be here atire., attire, equipment. {Henry Bradley, Stratmann's Middle English Dictiofuiry, Oxford, 1891, p. 610.) A- ^j- line 7. There is nothing in the French equivalent to Ecclesiarurn in the Latin. line 6 from bottom : Jiuretz has opefationcs as its equivalent in the Latin. P--17- line 13. There is nothing in the French version equivalent to the prayer Deiis cuius est omnis. p. 48. line 3, Eops is apparently a substitution by a would-be clever scribe for what is ver\- probably ids in the original ; which he confused with lies., the equiva- lent oiopus. p. 49. line 9. ualeys is a translation of the colhbus of Ltber regalis. This is repeated in line 19, where the aeternorum colliuni of Liber regalis is translated by pardurables ualeies. line 3 from bottom. The P>ench text omits anything equivalent to tingat in oleo pedetn sinanj co7'7iua rhifiocerotis corn u a illius, &^c., of Liber regalis. COR. ORDERS. M NOTES ON THE CONSECRATION OF THE ANGLO-SAXON KING. Symbols used in the notes on the Coronation of the Saxon Kings. CI. British Museum, Cotton, Claud. A. 3. This will be found printed in Arthur Taylor, Glory of Regality, London, 1820, Appendix, pp. 393-405. Egbert : The Pontifical of Egbert, Archbishop of York, ed. by W. Green- well, Surtees Society, 1853, p. 100. Leofric : The Leofric Missal, ed. by F. E. Warren, O.xford, 18S3, p. 230. Men. Di7'i Gregorii Papce . . . Liber Sacramctitorum . . . opera ct studio Fr. Hugonis Menardi, Parisiis, 1642, p. 278. Muratori : Liiiirgia Roinaiia ]'etus, Venetiis, 1748. in two volumes. Rob. Bcnedictional and Pontifical of Robert of Ji/inieges, a manuscript in the Rouen Public Library (Y. 7, Bib. de la \'ille). A transcript belonging to the Society has been followed. CCCC.146 : A transcript of the coronation service in this manuscript be'onging to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, made by Mr. \. Rogers. Dou. : A transcript made by .Monsieur A. Lebettre of the coronation service in a pontifical, attributed to .St. Thomas of Canterbury, MS. 67, formerly 94, in the public library of Uouai. Dun. : 943, fonds latin, fo. 67, in the national library at Paris. .-\ ponti- fical ascribed to St. Dunstan. The collation has been given me by my son. Vit. : British Museum, Cotton MS. \'itcllius \. vii. The variants given in these notes represent as a rule the text of the manuscript that appears first among the symbols after the variant. NOTES OX THE CONSECRATION OF THE ANGLO-SAXON KING. Incipit consecratio.J The following variations at the opening are found in Rob. and Men. Incipit consccratio regis. Rex aiiiem cum ordiitandics fiicrit. dc comicntu scuiorum diicaiiir per vianns a dicobus po)itificibiis ad Basilicam choris interim Jianc antip/iofiam cantantibics diiobus tamen episcopis initiantibics. Firmetur manus tua et exaltetur dextera tua iustitia et indicium preparatio sedis tue misericordia et ueritas precedent faciem tuam. Gloria Patri et Filio et Spiritui Sancto. Perucnietis ad ecclesiam prostcrnat se coram altarc. et yninizctiir. Te Deum laudamus finetinus. Quo yvinizato crigatur de solo et ab episcopis a plcbe elect us haec triplicia iura se seruaturum promittat. Haec tria : Rob. Incipit percunctatio siue electio Episcoporum ac Clericoruni necnon Populorum ad Regent consecrandum siue ad Bcnedicenduni. Aninionitio Episcoporum vel Clcricorum seu Populorum ad Regem dicenda ita legatur ab utw Episcopo coram omnibus. A nobis perdonari petimus, ut unicuique de nobis, & Ecclesiis nobis commissis canonicum priuilegium ac debitam legem atque iustitiam conseruetis, & defensionem exhibeatis, sicut rex in suo regno unicuique Episcopo & Ecclesiae sibi commissae per rectum exhibere debet. Rcsponsio Regis. Promitto uobis & perdono, quia unicuique de nobis & Ecclesiis uobis commissis canonicum priuilegium & debitam legem atque iustitiam seruabo, & defensionem quantum potuero adiuuante Domino exhibebo, sicut Rex in suo regno unicuique Episcopo & Ecclesiae sibi commissae per rectum exhibere debet. Deinde alloquantur duo Episcopi populum in Ecclesia inquirentes eorum uoluntatem^ ct si Concordes fuerint, agant Deo gratias omnipotenti decantantcs. Te Deum laudamus. Et duo Episcopi accipiant eum per manus, et deducant ante altare, et prosternet se usque ad fincn:., Te Deum laudamus. Inuocatio super Regem : .Men. Hcec tria appears at the end of the ordo in Men. (see below, p. 170.) Pritish Museum, Harl. 2901. a coronation service written early in the fourteenth century-, has on its last leaf (fo. 51. recto) written in a hand of the mid fourteenth century : In pontificali ecclesie Cantuar' de iuramento Regis in coronatione sua sic continetur. In christi nomine promitto hec tria populo christiano michi subdito. In primis me precepturum et opem pro viribus impensurum, vt ecclesia dei et omnis populus christianus veram pacem nostro arbitrio in omni tempore seruet. Aliud vt &c. : as in text (p. 53.) 1. 2. CCCC. 146 has c/iorus for clerus. 1.4. Firmetur manus tua &c. Psalm. Ixxxviii. 14. J5. It is printed above in full from Rob. M 2 1 64 NOTES. CCCC.146. Dun. & Dou. jjive this anthem at length, as in Rob. Dou. has alleluia in place of Vcr. before Gloria patri. Perveniens rex.] 1. 2. Te deum laudamiis. Te doniinum confitemur : CI. Dun. Dou. Te deum laudamus. Finctcniis. Quo yninizato criisatur tie solo, et ab Episcopis ct a Plebc elect us /tec triplicia sc seruaturum pronittat : CCCC. 146. Dun. 1. 5. iioc viodo : 0)11. CI. Dou. His peractis.] Ti/zic dicant oiiines Aiiicn : CCCC. 1 46. Postmodum cantetur . . . deum.] This respond is omitted by all other texts. The text of the respond seems to be : Omni tempore benedic deum et pete ab eo ut vias tuas dirigat. Et omni tempore consilia tua in ipso permaneant. (Tob. iv. 20.) See Brcviariutn . . . Saruiii, Ed. Procter & Wordsworth, Cantab. 1882. i. mccxcix. In the Pian Roman breviar\' it is the respond to the second lesson at Mattins of the third Sunday of September. {Brev. Rom. Salmantiae, 1575. p. 650.) et sequantur] Hac sequatitur oratiofies ab episcopis [(Upiscopo : Dun.] : Rob. Dun. P OS tea orationes he : CCCC. 146. luuocatio super Rci^etn : Men. It may be inferred from this rubric common to the text, Dou. & CI. that at least three bishops were to be present at the consecration of the king. There arc three prayers, each one of which is to be said by a difterent bishop. In this the consecration of a king resembles once more the consecration of a bishop in that three bishops are necessary. (See the fourth canon of the first Council of Nic;ra.) Te invocamus] 1. 2. et hunc famulum itt. : CI. ut hunc famulum tuum N. : Rob. Dou. CCCC. 146. Dun. 1. 3. prouidentia : 0)n. Rob. 1. 4. diem iuucnili flore laetantem crescere concessisti cum tuae : CI. Rob. Men. Dou. CCCC. 146. Dun. 1. 7. summi regiminis solium gratic, supernae largitate gaudens : CI. Rob. Men. Dou. CCCC. 146. Dun. 1. 9. V or pace, Men. has preee. The variations in the text of 7e im'ocainus in CCCC. 44. arc nearly all peculiar to itself and not found in the other texts known to me. /■ J-/- Oratiu alia.] Aliii Oratio : C\. Dou. Alia: Rob. CCCC.146. Dun. //uliintijue : ct dicat 7>nus(juisijur iiiTat A'e.v feliciter in .senipiterni/in, trilnif licibus^ viTat Rex, I't supra, ct post livani^eliuni oj/'crat Re.v ad man u in Archiepiscopi ohlationcm ct vinutn., et sic pcrat^atur A/issa sua ordine. Deinde lOimnunicetur af> Archiepiscopo cor pore et sani^uine C/iristi : et sic referant Deo ^^-atias, post pendant ad inensiiin. Finit consecratio reg-is] This rubric is the same in CI. CCCC. 146. Don. Dun. NOTES. 171 1. 3. opii))iaiihus tit in sequcnti pagina donoustratiir. cian : Dun. 1. 5. bcnedicaiur ct consccretur. sed ct lianc ctiatii nmclo : CCCC.146. Dun. 1. 6. gloria dccorari dcccniiinus : CCCC.146. Dun. Rob. has only : Finit consccratio Regis. IMen. has : I ton ad Reg i nam bcnediccndam. Debet eniin additci in Ecclesiain et prosterni ante At tare, elcvata ab Oratione ab Episeopis, et inclinato capite dicat Arcliiepiscoptis hanc Ora- ■tioneni. Aclesto, Domine supplicationibus nostris, & quod humililatis nostrae gerendum est ministerio, tuae virtutis impleatur effectu. per. 'Time debet Caput eiits iingiii oleo. In nomine Patris, &c. p. 62. Tncipit] This rubric is in CI. CCCC.146. Dou. and Rob. CI. adds est after dicenda. CCCC.146. Dun. and Dou. have the somewhat important variation : ab episcopo vel presbitero [sacerdote : Dun.] dicenda. Dun. omits dicenda. In nomine] 1. 2. recte fidei is found in CCCC.44 only. 1. 3. in secula seculorum amen : otn. CCCC.146. Rob. Dun. Men. Exinde . . . deus] This rubric and anthem are found in CCCC.44 only. The text of the anthem may very likely be : Benedicet te hodie Deus ; & unguet te oleo laetitiae prae consortibus tuis : memor esto nominis Domini Dei tui. This is the introit at the consecration of a bishop in Thom- asius. Opera, ed. Vezzosi, Rome, 1750, t. v. p. 222. Cf. p. 281. Quam sequatur oratio] Oratio : CI. CCCC.146. Sequatur oratio : Rob. Scquitur oratio post unctionan : Men. Sequatur hec oratio : Dou. Dun. Omnipotens sempiterne] 1. 2. hanc : oni. CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Rob. Dun. Men. For iit. CI. CCCC.146. have N., but Rob. Dun. & Men. no symbol. 1. 3. infunde ut que : CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Dun. Rob. 1. 4. instituitur. sanctificatione tua digna {oni. Rob.] & electa permaneat : CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Rob. Dun. Men. Hie detur] Hie detur ei anulus : CI. Hie detur anulus : CCCC.146. Dou. Rob. Dun. Tunc debet ei anulus initti digito : Men. Accipe anulum] 1. I. signaculum sanctae trinitatis. quo possis omnes hereticas : CCCC.146. CI. Dou. Rob. Dun. Accipe tidei signaculum sanctae Trinitatis quo possis : Men. 1. 3. virtute tibi premere : Rob. CCCC.146. Dun. barbaricas gentes virtute tibi prtestitere ad : Men. {For prcestitere rea.d pr^estita.) 1. 4. prestante eodem domino nostro ihesu christo : Dou. Praestante &c. : om. CCCC.146. Rob. Dun. Men. Postea moduletixr . . . anulo alleluia] The rubric and anthem arc found in CCCC.44. and in \'it. Subsequente] alia : CI. oratio: Dou. Dun. sequatitr oratio : CCCC.iii,6. Rob. Sequitur oratio : Men. Deus cuius est] 1. I. huic : oni. CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Rob. Dun. Men. 1. 3. semper firma maneat : CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Rob. Dun. Men. At this place in V'it. appears an anthem with neumes above the words, a very slight variant of the anthem Tola pulchra es aniica niea, which in the ^arum and York breviaries is one of the anthems for the first vespers of the Assumption. The main variation is the change of arnica vtca into regina 172 NOTES. nostra at the beginning and end of the anthem, the choice of which seems to have been determined by the word loronabcris at the end. The words within square brackets have been supphed for the spaces where the writing is illegible. Tunc cantctiir antiphona. T[ota] pulchra es regina nostra et macula non est in te ' fauus distillans labia tua mel et lac sub lingua tua • odor unguento[rum] tuorum super omnia aromata " iam cnim hiemps transiit [ymi)er abiit] et recessit flores apparuerunt ' uinee florentes odorem dederunt et vox turturis audita est in terra nostra • Surg[e propera] regina nostra • ueni de iibano " ueni coronaberis. The anthem may be found in its original form with aniica inca instead of rci^ina nostra in a manuscript almost contemporary, or perhaps a little earlier, as Mr. Warner judges (British Museum, Harl. 2961. fo. 134} where it is the anthem to the last psalm of the second vespers of the Assumption. The first words of the anthem, Tota pulchra cs^ may also be found on p. 274 of CCCC.44. from which the edition of the coronation service printed above is taken ; it was sung after the reception of the pall by the archbishop in the chapel of our Lad)-. Angclico nantque indutus ucstimine\ porticum ij;enitricis clwisti inccssu pcr;^at iociindo cJtoro antiphonam concincntc Tota pulchra es. Fini'ta antip/iona sumiiio pontt/icc ucrsuiii diccntc coram altarc .Aug maria gratia plena cum collccta sibi placentc. Hie coronetur] Tuiic debet imponi corona in Capitc : Men. Accipe coronam] ]. i. cjuoque : om. CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Rob. Dun. Men. 1. 2. a domino : o)n. CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Rob. Dun. Men. coroneris. per dominum : Dun. Post datam . . . dicamus alleluia :] The anthem and ruljric are found in CCCC.44 and in Vit. This anthem reminds one of the Christmas anthems beginning Hodie ; as the anthem at Hcncdictus on Twelfth-day and the respond for the second lesson on Christinas-day, and at Procession. Hanc sequatur oratioj Alia: CI. Oratio : CCCC.146. Dou. Scquatur oridio : Rob. Dun. Item oratio : Men. Omnium domine] 1. 2. huic : om : CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Rob. Dun. Men. 1. 2. in ca bonis operibus : CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Rob. Dun. Men. 1. 4. gioriam. per dominum : Dun. p. 63. In consummatione . . . Quod ipse] This episcopal benediction is to be found only in CCCC.44. Missa pro reere ordinato] The mass is not in Rob. or Men. Sec .Muratori ii. 1.S8. Missa c|uotidiana pro rcge. Quaesumus omnipotens] 1. 1. For /t'.r //^.f/.v CCCC.146 and Dun. have iii. 1. 4. deuitare et hostes superare et ad te qui : CCCC.146. Dun. has Super oblata instead of Secreta. 1. 4. i^roficiant : CI. CCCC.146. Don. Dun. Munera domine] |. 2. et sauKuis liant. i\; iH : CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Dun. I. 4. pr()ti( iant : CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Dun. (•f) aeterne] 1. 5. sapientiae ccterarunuiuc uirtutum : CI. CCCC.146. Dou. Dun. 1. 6. derorari. Qualinus et transitorii regni gubcrnat ula pU-bcin subicc- tam incul|)abililer teneat. et ail eterni inlinita gaudia te miscranlc pcrvcniat. per christum dominum : Dou. 1. 8. fundatus pcccatoruin labe abstersus de uisibilibus & inuisibilibus NOTES. 173 hostibus triumphator effectus subiecti populo augmento prosperitate & sccuritate exhilaratus. cum eis mutua dileciione conexus. cJc transitorii regni gubernacula inculpabiliter teneat. tS: ad itterni [s. regni : interl. Dun.] intinita gaudia te miserante perueniat. per christum : CI. CCCC.146. Dun. p. 64. Benedictio eiusdem] Bcncdu'tio : CI. But CCCC.146. & Dou. omit the benediction wholly. Providentia] 1. 2. regale dignitatis solium hodierna : CI. 1. 3. triumphabiliter : CI. 1. 4. Amen : ovi. CI. 1. 6. praeuideas : CI. 1. 8. munitus. ense trophei stipatus. galea quoque salutis redimitus. securus uitae tempore subtiliter & prospicaciter possideas. ut cum christo rege regum : CI. Ad complendum] so also CI. & CCCC.146. but Dou. and Dun. have postcommioiio. With ad coiuplciuium CI. ends abruptly, the last leaf having . disappeared. Haec domine oratio] See IMuratori, ii. 188. 1. I. regem nostrum : on. CCCC.146. Dou. Dun. Omnipotens sempiterne] See Muratori ii. 189. a collect from Missa ieiuporc sy nodi pro Regc dicenda. 1. 4. muniatur et ad eterne : CCCC.146. Dou. Dun. INDEX. INDEX. A.F. is the symbol for the Anglo-French version. A.S. „ „ for the Anglo-Saxon order. W. & M. „ for the order of William and Mary. Others will easily be recognised as Geo. I. etc. ,-/ vobis perdonari petimiis, 163. Abbot of Westminster. See Westminster. Access, humble, prayer of, 34. Accession, prayers at, 133, 142. Accipc aniihiin Jidei signaciilum videlicet saiutcu integritatis, 62, 171. Aaipe antiiii/n signaculutn videlicet sanctae Jidei, 56, 167. Accipe ariiiillam [sinceHfatis] 45, 123. Accipe coronam gloriae honorein quoqiie iucimditatis, 62, 172. Accipe gladimn [per iitamis] 45, 123. Accipe huiic gladiiim cunt Dei, 57, 167. Accipe nunc vestetii sii/niiii honoris regalis, 59. Accipe pallium \jjuattuor initiis] 123, 45. Accipe sceptriint regalis cleiiicntiae signuni , A.S. 58, 168, xxxix ; regiae potestatis, A.F. 47, 123. Accipe virgaiii virtntis Deiaeqtiitatis, 58, xxxix; atque aeqtiitatis, A.F. 47, 123, 169. Addington, Manor of, gruel, 109. Address, prayer of, 34. Adesto Doinine stipplicationilnts nostris, 171- Aethelred II. Coronation, viii. xxxviii Almighty and everlasting God the fountain, WJ. Almighty everlasting God by whom Kings reign, 33, 156. Almighty God unto whom all hearts, 18. Almighty God who hast promised to hear the petitions, 34. Almighty God whose kingdom is everlasting and power infinite — we arc taught, 13, 18; have mercy upon the whole church , 1 38. Almoner, chief, basons provided for, W. & M. 5, IT. COH. ORDERS. Almoner, chief, Beauchamp, cloth from hall to church, A. K. 39- ,, ,, Hertford, Earl of, 121. Altar, north side, Archbishop and bishops, 16, 19, 98, 99, ICO. Altar, south side, King on, 17, 18, 19, 100. ,, in choir, robes laid on, 5. ,> ,, regalia laid on, 17, loi. ,, cloth or pall, 17, 100. ,, piece, charges for, 81. ,, St. Edward's chapel, 35, 100, loi, 106, 107, 133. Ampulla for oil brought from altar, ^^'. & M. 21. ,, ,, provided, 77. ,, ,, set on altar, 134. ,, ,, hand laid on, 21, 141, 142. Amsterdam, arms of, xv. Anglia iion es oblita in coiispectu, 55, 166, xl. Anointing, W. & M. 20, 140, x.xiv.//. ,, changes made, W. & M. 144, xxii. xxiv. ,, A.F. 43, 122. A.S. 55- ,, of Queen Consort, A.S. 62, 118. ,, kneeling or sitting, 143. ,, what kings anointed, 142. ,, places anointed, 144, xxiv. ,, if anointed in St. Edward's chair, 143 4. Apothecary, anointing oil, 8, 76. ,, allowance, 87. A'juitainc, Duke of, robes provided, W. & M. 5. >> )) 11 puts on cap, 104. N 1 87 INDEX. Aquitainc, Duke of, charges for, 86. ,, ,, ,, in proceeding, 93, 97, IIS- ,, ,, ,, place at table, 108. ,, ,, ,, at Recess, 107. ,, ,, ,, discontinued, Geo. IV. 132. Archbishop. Sec Canterbury. Area over against altar, 21. ,, defined, 98. ,, anointing in, W. & M. 143. Armilla, king's, providetl, W. & M. 5. ,, ,, charges for, 79. ,, ,, put on, A.F. 45, XXV. xxvi. xxvii. xxviii. ,, ,, one of roval ornaments, XXV. xxvi. xxvii. xxviii. Anne, 88. ,, ,, (leo. I. 88, 148. ,, ,, (leo. II. 89, 148. ,, ,, Geo. III. 148, 90(2). ,, ,, Geo. IV. 148. ,, ,, Victoria, 148. ,, ,, not in Corpus picture, xxxiii. ,, ,, described, 131. Arms, Imperial, marshalled, 9. Assist us mercifully Lord in these our supplications, 34, 158. Attorney-General, prepares proclamation, 3- ,, ,, place in proceeding, 92. ,, ,, at table, 108. Badges, officers of arms, provided, 5. Baptism, blessing of font, 142, xxiii. Basons, gilt, provided, 5. ,, used for oblations, 17, 33, 105. Bath and Wells, Bishop of, during ser- mon, 19. Bath before coronation, .\.F. 40, 121, Bayeux tapestry, xxvii. Be these shoulden anointed, I02. Be thy breast anointed with holy oil, 22, 102. Be thy hands anointed -oith holy oil, 22, 102. Be thy head anointed with holy oil, 22, 102. Behold O Ciod our Defender and look, 22, 138, 145, 146, 147.. 155. XX- Benedic Doinine fortitudinem huius principis, 170. Benedic Doinine hunc rej^eni fp-atia tiiae iiiiserationis, 61, 170 ; no\truiii, \.V. 42 : discontinued, 13S. Benedicat te J), us, 62, 171. Benediction and 'J'e Deuiii, \\. iS: M. 28, 152; A.I'. 48. Benediction, episcopal, A.S. 60, 61 ; of Queen, A.S. 63. Betudietionis suae Doiiiinus oinnipotens aueillae, 63. Bible carried in procession, 20, 94, 95, 97, 112, 115, 140. ,, used for oath, 20. ,, presentin^^of, 27, 105//., iii//., 152. ,, at Proceeding, 94, 95. ,, laid on altar, 101, 136, 137. ,, and Edward VI., xxviii. ,, ,, Oliver Cromwell, xxviii. Bilsinglon, Manor of, 1 10. Bishops, chairs for, provided, 6. ,, attend morning prayer, 10. ,, vest, 16, 100. ,, sing Litany, 17, lOi. ,, read epistle and gospel, 18. ,, sermon by, 18, 101. ,, sit on north side at sermon, 19, 101. ,, support sovereigns, iS, 19, loi, 140. ,, deliver sword, 23, 103. ,, bring crowns from altar, 26, 103- ,, present bible, 27, 152. ,, inthronize sovereigns, 29. ,, treat of coronation, A.F. 39, 121. ,, lead king to altar, A.F. 40. ,, say Te iinwaiuus, A.F. 41. ,, deliver sword to king, A.F. 45. ,, two, lead king to church, A.S. 53- ,, support queen consort, 117. ,, signatures, 14 1. ,, consecration like that of king, 164, xxii. xli. ,, kiss the king lufore TV Deum, \V. & M. 29, 105, A.F. 48, 123. ,, do homage, 30. ,, ease king by supporting crown, 3^ ,, receive communion, 34. ,, wear caps at Recess, 36. ,, sup|)ort king at oath, 66. ,, place at table, Ir8. ,, in procession, 122, 143. ,, three, at coron.uion, xli. 164. Bless O Lord we btseech thee these thy .K'iffs, 33. 156. Blessed art thou Land when thy Atnj,', 16. Bowls and covers, provided, 4. Bradley, Dr., Denn of Wcstminsli-r, xxxvii. Bread offered by King, W. & M. 32 ; A.F. 48, 123; A.S. 170. Hreast anointed, \V. iS: M. 22, 102, \xiv ; A.F. 44, 123. INDEX. 179 Breast, (Jueoii Consort's, uS. Breeches, King's, provided, W. & M. 5. ,, ,, Charges for, 79, 132. ,, ,, spoken of, tieo. I. 88; Geo. III. 90; Geo. IV. 90, 146. Burnet, Dr. Gilbert, sermon, W. & M. loi, 139. Buskins ftir king, provided, W. & M. 5- ,, ,, ,, charges for, 79. ,, ,, ,, put on, xxv;;. 102. ,, ,, ,, Anne, 88. ,, „ Geo. I. 88. ,, ,, c;eo. II. 89. ,, ,, ,, Geo. III. 89, 90. ,, ,, ,, discontinued Geo. IV. 146. ,, ,, ,, place among orna- ments, XXV, xxvii, xxviii. Butler, Chief, gold cup, provided, 476. Canopy, anomting. See Pall, anointing. Canopy, in procession. .SV;.' Cinque Ports. Canterbury, ^Vrchbishop of — at l\ecognition, 16. puts on cope, 16. receives first oblation and regalia, 17- says O God who providcst, 18. begins communion service and Nicene Creed, 18. sits on north side at sermon, 19. tenders oath, 19. begins Veni Creator, 20. anoints king, 21. receives from and delivers sword to king, 23. delivers robe and orb to king, 24. delivers sceptres, 25. crowns the king, 26. presents bible, 27. blesses king, 28. joins in inthronization, 29. fealty, 30. reads offertory, 32. receives bread and wine from king, receives second oblation, t^t^. gives communion to king, 34. reads final prayers, 34. lays crowns on St. Edward's altar, 35. puts on crowns at recess, 35. treats of coronation, A.F. 39, 121. leads king to altar, A.F. 40. sermon by, A. F. 40. tenders oath, 40. sings Veni creator, i,\, says Preface for oil, 43. anoints king, 43, 44. blesses and delivers sword, 45. Canterbury, Archbishop of (tonliiiiied) — delivers pallium to king, 45. blesses and puis on crown, 46. blesses and delivers ring, 46, 47. delivers sceptres, A.F. 47. blesses king, A.F. 48. Hp. of London officiates in place of, 98, 99. Heralds conferred with, 1 1 1. takes no part in W. & M. U2. place in proceeding, 115. queen consort's coronation, 118. in Corpus picture, xxxiv. Canterbury, rights of see at coronation, 133- ,, pontifical assigned to, xxxviii. Cap for crown, provided, W. & M. 7- ,, of holland, charges for, 80. ,, of state provided, W. & M. 7. ,, king wears his during sermon, 18. Caps for Dukes of Normandy, &c. , pro- vided, 5. ,, ,, ,, ,, Normandy, put on, 104. ,, bishops take off, 31. ,, ,, wear during recess, 36. Carpets, spread before altar, W. & ISI. 16, 100 ; A.F. 40, 122. Ceremonies, W. & M. by heralds, 91. Ccstez mains seint oy7it de seiiit oille, 43. Chairs for bishops, provided, W. & M. 6. ,, ,, ,, charges for, 82, 83, 84. ,, ,, archbishop, 19. ,, ,, ,, where placed, 98. ,, ,, King and Oueen, provided, W. & M. 4, 6. ,, ,, ,, ,, Oueen, charges for, 82. ,, ,, Westminster church, 15, 16, 17- ,, ,, St. Edward's, 6, 21, loi. ,, ,, )> charges for, 82, 83. ,, ,, ,, where placed, 98. Chalice, provided, W. & M. 77. ,, in Proceeding, 94, 95, 97, 1 15. ,, laid on altar, loi, 136, 137. ,, stone, St. Edward's, A.F. 39, 122. ,, in Corpus picture, xxxvi. Challenge at Coronation, 109. Chamberlain, Lord, warrants, 4, 5, 6, 9, 70. ,, ,, furnishing of West- minster, 7. ,, ,, writes to Gentlemen of Privy Chamber, 8. „ ,, writes to Chaplains, 8. N 2 i8o INDEX. Chamberlain, Lord, appoints waiters at table, 8. ,, ,, anointing oil, 8, 76- ,, ,, habits for Musitians, 8. ,, ,, warrants for pro- visions, 9, 76, 77. ,, ,, delivers ring, 149. Chamberlain, Lord Great — Bason, ewer and cup provided, 5, 77. Regalia delivered by him to Ixsrds, 9. 94; issues tickets of admission, 9. warrants, 9, 70. at Recognition, 16, 99. at first oblation, 17, 100. during Sermon, 19, loi. during Oath, 20, 66. disrobes King, 21, loi, 142, 143, 148. delivers coif, 102. delivers fine linen to dry places anointed, 22, 102, 145. girds king with sword, 23, 103. in Proceeding, 93, 97, 113, 115. puts spurs on king, 103, 147. clasps of pall, 148. in Corpus picture, xxxv. Champion, bowl, provided, 4, 77. ,, arms, horse, and trappings, 8, 71- ,, ,, ,, order for, 9. ,, ,, ,, charges, 86. ,, challenges at Coronation dinner, 109. ,, receives cup, no. Chancellor carries stone chalice, A. F. 39, 122. ,, altered from keeper, 136. Chaplains, King's, attend coronation, 8. ,, ,, ,, morning prayer, 10. >> »> M i» Proceeding, 9«, 95. '«3- Chari^e them that are n\h, 32, 155. Charles the Great, coronation robes, 131. Charles L coronation, ix.(2) x. xii. xvii. Charles II. coronation, ix. xv. in. ,, ,, supertunica, 130. ,, ,, mistake with sandals, 142. ,, ,, riding from lower, xvii//. ,, ,, manuscripts, xv. Charles V. Roman Fmperor, stole like deacon's, 131. Charles V. of France, version of order, xxxvii. Chasubles in Corpus picture, xxxiv. Chester, earl of, carries curlana, A.F. 39. >22. Chrisma. .SVr Cream. Chrismalories in Corpus |)itture, xxxvi. Chrisle perunge hutu res^em in ret^imen, .55. 166. ( inque I'orts, barons — canopy provided, W. & M. A.F. 6, 39, 76, 121. ,, charges for, 80. ,, in proceeding, 95, 98, 116. ,, stay at quire door, 99. place at table, 107. number of, 132. Circle of gold, queen consort, 118. Classification of Coronation Orders, vii. Cloth, blue, provided, 4, 6. ,, ,, charges for, 87. ,, ,, proceeding on, 95. Cloth of gold, provided, \V. & M. 5, 6, 7 ; A.F. 40, 43- ,, ,, ,, charges for, 78, 79, 80, 81. ,, ,, ,, to cover throne, 98. Cloth, fine linen, to dr)' anointing, provided, 6, 22, 102. ,, ,, ,, ,, See wool. Coif, linen, provided, W. iS: M. 5, 6. ,, ,, spoken of, 132, 145, 146, XXV. xxvii. xxviii. ,, ,, charges for, 79. ,, ,, put on, \V. iS: .M. 102, .\xv//. A.F. 44, 123. ,, ,, in'Corpus picture, xxxiii. ,, ,, Anne, 88. „ (;eo. L 88, 146. „ ,, Geo. n. Sq. ,, ,, Cieu. III. So, 90, 146. ,, ,, Geo. IV. 146. ,, ,, (^ueen consort's, iiS. Collars, officers of arms, provided, 5. Colobium Sindonis, pntvideil, \V. iS: M. 5. ,, ,, charges for, 79. ,, ,, put on, 102, 145, xxv//. ,, ,, blessing of, xviii. ,, ,, one of ri>yal orna- ments, xxv. XXTi. xxvii. xxviii. ,, ,, .\nne, 88. ,, ,, Geo. I. 88, 146. ,, ,, Geo. II. 89. ,, ,, (ieo. III. 89, 90, 146. ,, ,, Ge«>. I\'. tx), 146. ,, ,, Vieliiria, 146. ,, ,, de.scrilied, 1 30. ,, ,, if discontinued, 145, xxvi. ,, ,, wlu-n put on, xxv. xxvi. ,, ,, in Corpus picture, xxxiii. Come holy Ukost our souh itis/ "S- ,, ,, ,, set bible on table, 94- Cook, canvas for master, 87. Cope, royal, provided, W. & M. 5. ,, ,, See also /a// and ^/a/wrr/Zc. ,, archbishop puts on, 16. ,, bishops wear, 17. ,, ,, divest themselves of, 35, ,, procession in rich, A.F. 40. ,, proceeding in rich, W. & M. 94, 96. ,, in Corpus picture, xxxiv, xxxv. Corona iiisliliac cl iociindilatis .ui/>er caput, 57, 168. Coronation Orders — classification of, vii. comparative table, xii. Coronet te Dens corona i^loriae, A.S. 57, 168 ; A.F. 46, 123, 152. Coronets, peers put on, W. & M. 27, 104. Coronets, peers, put off for In image, 30, 31- ,, ,, wear at Recess, 35, 159. ,, peeresses put on, W. & M. 27, 104. ,, ,, Queen's consort's coronation, 119. Corpus book described, xxxi. ,, picture, xxxii. Cotton wool for anointing. Sec Wool. Court of claims, W. & M. 3. ,, ,, members of, 6S. ,, commission for, 69. requests, fitting up, 7. ,, proceeding, 93. ,, wards, 8, 93, in. Cream, holy, A.P'. 44, 123, xxiv. xlii. Cromwell, Oliver, inauguration, xxviii. Crowns, royal, provided, W. ^: M. 4, 77, 129. ,, ,, put on, W. & M. 26, 103, 104, 151; A.F. 46, 123; A.S. 57. _ ,, ,, St. Edward s, in proceed- ing, 94, 95. 97. "2, "3, "S- ,, ,, laid on altar, loi. ,, royal ornanient, xxv. xxvi. xxvii. (4) xxviii. xxix. ,, taken off at communion, 156. ,, ,, ,, at offertory, 156. ,, resumed after communion, 157. ,, in Corpus picture, xxxiii. ,, Queen Consort, 119, A.S. 62. Crown, imperial, 35, 77, 107, 158. ,, of head anointed, W. & M. 22 ; A.F. 44, 123. ,, ,, Queen Consort, 118. Crowns, officers of arms, provided, 5. ,, ,, ,, put on, 27, 104. ,, ,, ,, worn at Recess, 36. ,, ,, ,, in proceeding, 97- Cup bearer, chief, bowl, provided, 4, 77. ,, and cover, given to Lord Mayor, no. ,, .SV'6' chalice. Curtana, provided, W. & M. 5. ,, carried by Earl of Chester, A. 1''. 39, 122. in Proceeding, 93, 95, 97, n3 "5- ,, interpreted, 132. ,, Edward VI. xxviii. Cushions, provided, W. & M. 6, 7. ,, charges for, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85. ,, spread before altar, 16. Dalmatic. See Pall, king's. Dearly hc/orcd, 138. i8: INDE\. Delivery of ornaments, order of, xxvi. xxvii. xxviii. Derby, Countess of. See Groom of the Stole and /.ady assistant. Dcu k f essoin- dc tut Ic tiioiiitde, 42. Dili (flic ionsaillez a vostrc people par veritc, 42. Dcu ijucstcs fouiitaii^ue de tuz bens, 47. Deii <]ucst -'isitur des umhles, 40. Deu tut pussaiint nous vous prtovips, 41. Deus ruins est oinnis potestas et dit^nitas da hiiie fai/iu/ae, 62, 171, xxxix. Deus niiiis est oinnis potestas et dii^nitas da f'aiiiii/o liio, 56, 167, xl. Deus Dei Filiiis lesus Christ us Doininus, A.S. 56, 167; A.F. 44, 123; San- croft's text, 145 Deus electoruiii fortitudo et humiliuin, 56, 166, xxxix. (3). Deuiii liiiinilium visitator, A.F. 40, 122, 137. Deus in virlute, 152. Deus ineffahilis, A.F. 42 ; discontinued, 138. Deus perpetnitatis dux virtutnm et eunc- toruin, 57, 168. Deus i/iti es iustoruiii, 145 ; A.F. 44. Deus i/ui popu/is tuis virtute eonsulis, 54, 164; A.F. 42; discontinued, 138; spoken of, xli. Deus qui providentia tiia caelestia, 57, 168. Deus rex reifuii/, A.F. 123, 44, 145, xxv. xxvi. Deus tuortiiii \eoronafidelinin\ 123, 46. Dieu iji estes la eorone de vos icalx i^entz, 46. Dieti que feistes eccl et tere et totes I real in us, 46. Dieu tut pussant voiis benefietz de la bene scon, 49. Dieu tut pussant voiis doint pleiilce de la rosec, 49. Dieu vous eorone de la eorone de i^loyre, 46. Dieux bene/let: et seinttefietz ces anel, 47. Dieux tut puissant le creour de totes c hoses, 41. Diex qui estes la _t;loyre de droyt tires, 44. Dinner, coronation, 3, 36, 107. Di'.'iiui protect ione 111 unit us et eoinitatus, 57, 168. Doiiiiiius de throiio iiiaicstatis suae te i^lorificet, 60, 168. Dii treshatit, trcspiiissant, 1 10. Durban), bislioj) i)f, during; sermon, iS. Eagles, tjolden, on king's robe, \V. ^; f\\. 24, 131, 148, wxiii. Ka^jlel or ampulhi provided, W . i\: M. 77- Faglet. See ampulla. Earl Marshall, 3. , cup of gold, 4, 76. ,, warrant by, 5, 70, 71. , letters to peers, 7. , orders solemnity, 8. ,, Lords and Regalia, 8, 9. , peers' servants, 9. , to issue warrants, 9. ,, at recognition, 16, 99. , at proceeding, 97. Edward, St., Altar, rol)es and crown at, 7. 35. 106. „ ,, ,, See St. Edward's chapel. Edward, St., chair, to Ix; furnished, 6. ,, ,, ,, charges for, 82, 83. ,, ,, ,, where placed, 98. ,, ,, ,, king anointed in, 101. ,, ,, ,, king crowned in, ,, ,, ,, chair like it, 6, 82, 83, 98, loi, 103, ,, ,, ,, Corpus picture, xxxiii. ,, ,, chapel, robes to be carried to, 21, 101. ,, ,, ,, bread and wine brought from, 32. ,, ,, ,, king proceeds to, 35- king goes from, 35. ,, ,, ,, crown and robes there ready, 35, ,, ,, crown, dismantled, 4. ,, ,, ,, taken otV, 35. 133. ,, ,, ,, in proceeding, 94, 95- ,, ,, ,, put on, 103. ,, ,, laws and customs, A.F. 40, 122, 05. , , , , robes of, xxv. ,, ,, .SV<' also pall, colobium sin- donis, armil, supertunica. ,, ,, staff, provided, 77. ,, „ ,, m I'rocecding, 94 (2), 97- ,, ,, ,, laid on altar, loi. ,, ,, ,, given to Dean of Westminster, 15S. ,, stone chalice of, 39, 122. Fdvvanl I. stole, 131. lidward II. |K)rtrait, xxxvi. i:d\\ard ill. ri>clut, 130. tuniile, 131. portiaii, WW i. Edward VI. feet iinoinieil, lOl. ,, change in marriage service, xviii. INDEX. 183 Edward VI. asks for bible, xxviii. Egbert's coronation order, vii. xxi. xxvi. xxix (2). Elbows, king's, anointed, W. .& M. 102 ; A.F. 44, 123, xxiv. Eleclorum fortitudo, xxii (4), xxiv. ,, See Deus electoriim. Entrance into church, W. & M. 15, 98, 134- Epistle, bishop reads, 18. ,, epistoler brings bread, 32. ,, ,, receives communion, 156. Esteez et recevez desorceuevant le l»i, 48. Eucharist at Coronation, xvi. xx. ,, ,, ,, See Mass. Everlasting Cod (proper preface), 33, 156. Exaitdi (/tiaesunius, 45, 123, 147, xvii. Exlendat omnipotens Dominus dexteratn suae benedictionis, 60, 169. l-"ealty, by bishops, W. ^: M. 30, 105, 154, xvii;/. Feet of king, anointed, 161. Final anthem, 31, 155. ,, prayers, 34, 157, 158. Eirinetur mantis ttia, A.S. 53, 163 ; A.F. 40, 122, 136. Fleurs de lis on King's robe, 24. Forms of Divine Service, 3, 9. Galea, xxvi. xxvii. Garter King of Arms at Recognition, 16, 100. ,, ,, „ ,, allowance, 86. ,, ,, ,, ,, in Proceeding, 94, 97, 112, 115. Garter, knights of. See I'all, anointing. George, Prince, of Denmark, 92. ,, ,, in Proceeding, 97. ,, ,, does homage, 105. ,, St., cross engraved on ring, 25. ,, III. many verbal changes, xxx. Girdle, king's, provided, \V. & M. 5. ,, ,, charges for, 79. ,, ,, Anne, 88. Geo. I. 88, 146. Geo. II. 89. ,, ,, Geo. III. 90 (2). ,, ,, Geo. IV. 146. William IV. 146. ,, spoken of, 145. Gloriosits vivas rex in conspectit Dei, 59. Glory be lo God on high, 34, 157. Gloves, linen, provided, \V. & M. 5. ,, ,, put on, 102. ,, ,, drawn off, 104. „ ,, charges for, 79. ,, queen's, provided, 6. „ Anne, 88. Gloves, (leo. I. 88, 146. „ C;eo. II. 89. ,, (leo. III. 89, 90, 146. ,, Geo. IV. 146. ,, spoken of, 132, 145. ,, rich silk, delivered by lord of manor of Worksop, W. tS: M. 25, 104, 150. ,, spoken of, 132; A.F. 123. ,, royal ornament, xxv. xxvi. ,, in Corpus picture, xxxiii. xxxv. God crown you with a croiun of righteous- ness, 26, 151 ; Sancrofl's text, 1 52. God save King Williatn and Queen Alarj', 16, ICO. God save King V/illiani and Queen Mary, long live, 32. God save the knig and queen, 26. Gospel, bishop reads, 18. ,, oath taken on, 2C, 66. ,, gospeller brings wine, 32. ,, receive scommunion, 156. Grant O Lora we beseech thee that the course, 158. Grant we beseech thee Almighty God that our Sovereign, 13. Groom of the stole, queen's robes, 7, 9, 71- Grosseteste, letter to Henry III. 142. Gruel, mess of, Addington manor, 109. Haec Do/nine oratio salutaris faiiiuluiii tuuni rcgein, 64, 1 73. Haec tria populo chi-istiano, 53. Uallelujah for the Lord God, 157. Hands, king's, anointed, W. i!c M. 22, 102, xxiv; A.F. 43, 122. ,, imposition of, at coronations, xli. Head, king's, anointed, W. & M. 22, 102 ; A.F. 44, 123. ,, covered for 7 days, A.F. 44, 123. ,, queen consort's, 1 18. Hear our prayers we beseech thee O Lord, 23, xvii. ; Sancroft's text, 147, xvii. Henry I. coronation, viii. Heralds. See officers of arms. Hodie nobis Dei Proz'idcntia caeli stil- laverunl, 62, 172. Holy Ghost, piayer for descent of, 142. Homage, W. & M. 30, 105, 154, xvii//. Hosen for king, provided, 5. Houseling cloth, provided, W. & M. 5. „ ,. "sed, 34, 157. ,, ,, spoken of, 132, 156. ,, ,, discontinued, Wm. I\'. 132, 157, XXX. Huntingdon, Earl of, carries sword, A.F. 39. ,, Countess of, xxxii. / exhort therefore that first of all, 10. iS4 INDEX. I Geot^e, Duke of Ctimberland, 105. I /Henry, Bishop of Loudon, 105. / N. Archb. of Cantcrhtiry vjill he faith- ful, 30. I / N. Duke or Earl of N. do become your liege man, 31. 1 I was glad when they said, 15,99, 135. ! Jj any person of what degree soever, 109. j Jhesu Christ le fiz dieti nostre seignur, 44- . . i Imposition of hands at coronation, xli. , /// Christi nomine promitto haec tria, I 163. i /// die bus tuis oriatur omnis, 54, 164. /// nomine Patris et /'ilii el Spirit us, 62, ; 171- I /;/ the name of the Father, 1 1 8. Jncffabilem misericordiam tuam omnipo- tens, 59. Ingots of gold, provided, W. & M. 4. ,1 ,, offered, 17, 100, 104, 156. j .. )) ,, A.F. 40, 49, 122, 123. Jnnoeentia lustitiae Dei et cordis pru- dent ia, 58, 168. Inthronization, W. & M. 29, 105, 154. „ A.F. 48, 123. A.S. 60. I Investiture per anuluiii et ba'uluiit, W. tS; | M. 25, 104. I James I. and Liber rcgalis ix.(2) xvi. xvii. James II. coronation, xiii. xv. 1 ,, oath at, 65. [ ,, preparations for, 3, 4. ,, dinner, 107. I ,, service at, 1 11^/. ,, and Dr. .Sancrofi, 129, xv. xvi. ,, precedent followed, 130. ,, superluiiica, 130. I ,, changes made hy, xvi-xxviii. ,, unlike all other coronations, ix//. ,, absolution sent to, \\\n. ,, Kucharist omitted, xvi. James, .Montague 1\., Corpus hook, xxxi. Jewel house, master, regalia, 4, 9, 71. u ), ,• delivers ring, 25, 104. ,1 ,, ,, delivers (^)ueen Con- sort's ring, 118. >> >, ,) delivers regalia at I'roceeding, 93, j 96. li M ,, receives regalia. III. Keeper, Lord, assists at Recognition, 16. ,, ,, altered to chancellor, 136. ' King's vestments. .Str Kohes. King of the Romans, robes as deacon, ijl. Kirtle, Queen's, provided, W. ^; M. Kissing, King, bishops, before Te Deum, W. &M. 29, 105; A.F. 48, 123 : A.S. 170. ,, ,, discontinued, xxx. ,, ,, with fealty, 30, 105. Lady assistant, chief, or great- supix)rts Queen at .Sermon, 19. disrobes Queen for anointing, loi. opens Queen's clothing, 21, 102, 118. dries places anointed, 22, 102, 1 18. disrobes Queen at Recess, 35. puts on coif, 102, 118. puts on sandals, 102. Laetetur gens anglica doniini imperio regetuia, 62, 171. Laws and customs of England, A. F. 39, 40, 121, 122. Let my prayer come up into thy preseiue, 32. discontinued, 155. Let the anoint in,:; with this oil, 1 18. Let your light so shine, 32, 155. Letters to I'eers, 7, 8. ,, ,, Chaplains, 8. ,, ,, gentlemen privy chamber, 8. Liber Regalis — recensions of rubrics, viii. (3) ix.(2) x. in comparative table, xii. written in 14th centur)-, xvi. Norman-French version, xxxi. alterations by Sancrofi, xvii. xix. xxi. xxii. XXV. blessing of sword, xvii. blessing of oil, xviii. xxi. xxiii. v\iv. blessing of ring, xviii. central part of, xxi. places anointed in, x\iv. .sacerdotal ornaments, xxv. xxvii. like episcoiwl consecration, xlii. /-//? up your hearts, ^y ,, ,, ,, See ."^ursum ("ortla. Linen, colobium sindonis, proviiied, 5. ,, shirt, provided, 5. „ coif, „ 5. ,, gloves, provided. 5. ,, undei habit, (Jueen's, provided, S. Litany, \V. \ M. 17, 101, 137, .\.l". 41, 122. ,, King uncovered timing, \\ . iK. M. iS. ,, bishops sing, 17, 101. ,, desk, rarjKt for, W . \ M. Si. ,, place moved, xix. xxi. xxii. xxx. London, liishop of. See Compton. ,, lord mayor of, one cup of gold proviJetl, 70. /XDEX. 1S5 London, lord mayor of, in proceeding, 91, 97, 115- ,, ,, „ ,, place at laMc, 107. Mantle for King, provided, \V. & M. 7. ,, ,, Queen, ,, ,, 6, 7- ,, ,, Dukes of Normandy, etc., provided, 5. ,, ,, Dukes of Normandy, charges, 86. Maple cups. Manor of Bilsinglon, no. Mark of gold, W. & M. :^i, 104, 156; A.F. 40, 49, 122, 123. .SVv ingot. Mary. See Queen. Mary Tudor, xix//. Mass at Coronation, A.F. 4S, 49, 122, 123. „ ,, ,, A.S. 63, 170. ,, ,, ,, .SVd' Eucharist. Master of the Great Wardrobe — delivers pall or altar cloth, 17, loo. delivers robes, 24, 148. warrants to, 71. accounts of, 78. Master of the I lorse, provides for cham- pion, 8, 9, 71. Master of the Jewel House — charge of regalia, 4, 9, in. delivers ring, 25, 104. warrants to, 71, 77. in Proceeding, 93, 96, 113, 114. Master of the Mint, provides medals, 8, 9, 72. ,, ,, ,, Ordnance, provides for champion, 8, 9, 71. ,, ,, ,, Robes, provides robes, 7, 9, 70. Medals, provided, W. & M. 8, 9. ,, scattered among people, 30, 31, 106, 155. ,, described, 133. Misericotdias Domini, 136. Morning prayer before coronation, 10, 133- J\fiinera Doiiniie qiiaesitimts ohlata sancti- fi(a, 63, 172 ; change in text, xlii. My heart is enditiug of a i;ood iiia'.tcr, 119. Negus, secretary to Karl Marshall, in, xxiv;/, XXV. Nicaca, first council, xli. Nicene Creed, 18, 139. Norfolk, Duke of. See Earl Marshall. Normandy, Duke of. See Afjuitaine. Northside, Queen's procession, W . & M. ,, Bishops sit, 19. .SVf altar rt«rf area. Nostre seiguiir 7>us heuefic et votis ^arde, 48. O Alinii^hty God we beseech thee, 138. O God the crown of the faithful, 26, 103. O God the king of kings, 145, xxv. .xxvi. ; Sancroft's text, xxv. O God the Saviour and Rewarder^ 15 1. O God who crownest thy faithful servants, 151- God who d'u-ellesi in the high and holy place, 17, TtZ-i 156 ; Sancroft's text, 137. O God who pro-ciidest for thy people, 18. O Lord and heavenly Father '.ce thy humble, 34. O Loj-d grant the king a long life, 135. O Lord holy Father Almighty and Eva - lasting God, the exalter of the humble, 21 ; Sancroft's text, 141. O Lord our God who tipholdest and governest, 34 ; Sancroft's text, 158. O Lord our Governor how excellent, 1 1. O Lord the fountain of all good things, 119. O most gracious and poweiful Loid God, 13- most merciful and gracious Lord God, 1x8. Oath, Coronation — W. & M. 19, 74, loi, 140. James II. 65 ; A.F. 40, 122 ; A.S. 53, 163, 170. Oath, bishops', of fealty, 30. ,, peers', of homage, 31. Oblation, first, W. & M. x6, 100; A.F. 40, 122 ; 136. ,, king uncovered during, 18. ,, of sword, 23, 103, 147. ,, second, \V. & M. t,t„ 104, 156 ; A.F. 48, 123. Of the most hi<^h, most mii^^htv, no. Ofi'ertory, \V.'& M. 32, 156; A.F. 48, 123 ; Win. „ explanation of Corpus picture, xxxvi. Office, coronation, W. & M. 15. ,, source of present office, x, xxx. Officers of arms — provided for, 4, 5. proclamation by, 7. charges, 86. report on, W. & M. 91. whether trustworthy, xxiv. xxvi. at 4 corners of theatre, 99. proclaim style, no. slighted by Earl Marshall, in, xxv. (Jil, anointing — provided, W. & M. 8, 76. blessing of, \V. iV M. 21, 141, xxi. xxiii. ; Sancroft's form, 141, xviii. xxiii. ; A.F. 43. 1 86 INDEX. Oil, anointing Uoittiinied) — used, 22, 43, 55, I02, Ii8, 122. set upon allar, 134. composition of, xxiv. Omni tempore heitedic Dcutii, 53, 164. Oninipoteiis Deiis cumti honoris iusttts, 59- Oinnipotens Deus dct tiln de rare each, 61, 170. Oinnipotens sempiterne Dens afflucnteni spirit II in, 62, 171. Oinnipotens scinpiteme Dens caelestiuin terrcstriniiupte, 64, 173. Oinnipotens sempiterne Dens creator, 54, 165 ; A.F. 41 ; Bancroft's text, 138. ,, discontinued, 138, xxii. xli. ,, spoken of, xxi. (2) xxii. (2) xliii. Oinninin Doiitine fans bonornin tt cunc- tornin dator proftctunm, 62, 172. Omnium Domine Jons bonornm eiinc- tornmqiie Dens institntor, 58, 168, xl. Orb, provided, W. & M. 4, 77. ,, delivered to king, xxvi. 24, 103, 148. ,, carried at Recess, 35. ,, delivered to Dean of Westminster, 36, 104. ,, in Proceeding, 94, 95, 97, 115. ,, laid on altar, loi, 104, 149. ,, given to king at Recess, 35, 159. ,, compared to sceptre with cross, 149, xxvii. ,, in Corpus picture, xxxiii. (Jrphreys not on chasubles in Corpus picture, xxxiv;/. Our Father which art in heai^cn, iS, 34. Onr }iracions hnii; we present, 152. Our I^ord Jesus Christ the Son of God, 22. (Jxford, Karl of, redemption of sword, 104. ,, ,, ,, carries sword of state, 97. ,, Mayor of, bowl, provided, 4, 77. Painted cliamber, fitting up, 7. ,, ,, peeresses go to, 91. I 'all, anointing, provided, W. iV M. <). ,, ,, charges for, So. ,, ,, used, \\ . iV M. 21, I02 ; .\.l-. 43, 122, 160. ,, ,, s(Kikeii of, 132, 143. ,, ,, fi»r (Jueen Consoil, iiS. ,, archiepiscopal, recejition of, 172. in Corpus picture, \\xiv. I'all, frontal — ,, to offer, provided, \V. & M. 6. ,, is offered, 17, 100.; A.F. 40, 22. ,, vestment for king, provided, W. ^v M. 5. ,, ., ,, ,, charges for, "S, 79- delivered, ^^ . & M. 24, 103 ; A.I .45, 123; A.S. 59. royal ornament, XXV. xxvi. .\xvii. xxviii. xxix. Anne, 88, ,, ., Geo. I. 88. ,, ,, Geo. II. 89. ,, ,, Geo. III. 89, 90. ,, ,, Geo. IV. 148. ,, ,. Victoria, 148. ,, ,, described, 131. ,, ,, in Corpus picture, xxxiii. Palms of hands anointed, 22, 102. Parliament robes, provided, W. cSc M. 7 ,, ,, charges for, 79. ,, ,, crimson, taken off, 21, loi, 142, 143, 148, 1 60, XXV. ,, ,, purple, put on at Re- cess, 35, 106. ., statutes made in, 19. Pardon, general, proclaimed, 30,31, 155. Paten, provided, \V. \ .M. 77. ,, in Proceeding, 94, 95, 97, 115. ,, laid on altar, loi, 136, 137. ,, carried by treasurer, .\. K. 39, 122. ,, in Corpus picture, xxxvi. Peeresses, letters to, 7. ,, habits of, 8. ,, Painted Chanil>er, 91. ,, put on coronets, 27. 104. 151. Peers — Letters to, 7. hal)its of, 8. put on coronets. 27, 104, 151, 152. do homage, 30, 31, 154. put off coronets, 30, 31, 155. kiss the king, 31. Wear coronets at Recess, 35. treat of coronation, A.F. 39, 121. house of, fitting up, 7. ,, ,, peers go to, 91. Places anointed, number, 22, 102, III;*. 144, 101, xxiv. XX jx. ,, dried, 22, I02, 145. Post communion, 34. J 'raise the Lord Jerusalem, 27, 15X. Preface, proixr, eucharislic, '^^, 63, 1 56, 172. Proceeding to iliroiie in Westminster Hull, 91. 'LVDEX. 187 I'rocession before coroniition, W. & M. 95 ; A.F. 40, 122, ,, ,, discontinuedWm.lv. 135, 140, X.KX. I'rocessus factus, W. & M. xxiv. xxv«. xxvi//. rroclanialion of coronation, ordered 3, 7. 71- ,, text of, 68. ,, omitted, 91. Protector nostcr aspice Dens, 138, 147, 155, XX. I'rotestant reformed religion, 19. Provident ia et gubenialio Dei onimpolcn- tis, 64, 173. I'salms, penitential, during Litany, A.L'. 41, 122, 160, xxi. Pyx for obleys in Corpus picture, xxxvi. QnaesiiDiiis ontnipoteus Dens lit fa/nii/iis tuns rex, A.S. 63, 13S, 172. Qiiaiii dilecta, 135, 147. Queen Mary's ring, W. & M. 129. ,, ,, robes, provided, 6. ,, ,, ,, not sacerdotal, 132. ,, consort, coronation of, 117, 155; A.S. 62, xlii. ,f ,, ,, ,, mention of, 139. i55> 156. Kceetve the Croivn of Glor^', 1 1 9. Receive the ring of icingly dignity, 25, 104, 149. J\C(eive the rod of equity and mercy, 25, 104 ; Bancroft's text, 150. Receive the royal sceptre the ensign, 25, 104; Bancroft's text, 150. Receive this arinili, 103. Receiie this imperial rohc and orb, 24, 103, 149 ; Bancroft's text, 149 ; Liber reg^alis, 149. Receive this kingly sword brought now, 23, 103, 147. Receive this Ring, the seal of a sincere faith, 118. Recess, 34, 106. Recevdt les bracers de clarete, 45. Recevetz la verge de vertnc et deqitite, 47. Recevetz le ceptre de real poeste la droit ure, 47- Receuez mantel one les quatrc corners, 45. Rescevecz le anel de la dignesce du roy, 47. Resceuetz lespey que realement vous est bailie, 45. Rectitndo n\ is est noviter ordinal i, 1 70. Recognition, VV. & M. 16, 136. Red say provided, 4, 6. Redemptor miindi conservet vitain, 54, 165, xli. Regalia, provided, 4. Regalia, lords to carry, S, 9. ,, placed on altar, 17, loi, 137. ,, taken to St. Edward's chapel, 35, 106. ,, at Proceeding, 93, 94, 95, 97, 112, 113, 115. ,, held at foot of theatre, 99. Regardez den tut puissant, 43. Remember him of whom the royal psalmist, 23, 103. Repent ye for the kingdom, lO. Richard 1. swords, 132. ,, mistake with sandals, 142. ,, homage, xvii//. Richard II. ilivine service, 133. ,, orb in hand of, xxvii. Richard III. interpretation of swords, 132. ,, orb delivered to, xxvii;/. Riding from Tower discontinued, xviiw. Ring, coronation, provided, W. & M. 4, 76, 129. ,, ,, delivered, 25, 104. ,, ,, form of blessing, xviii ,, ,, described, 129, 149. ,, ,, delivery of, A.F. 47, 123 ; A.S. 56, 167. ,, ,, royal ornament, xxv. xxvi. xxvii. (3) xxviii. ,, ,, in Corpus picture, xxxiii. ,, William IV. 130. ,, Victoria, 130. ,, (^)ueen Consort's, 118 ; A.S. 62. ,, ,, Mary's, described, 129. ,, ,, Mary Tudor's, xix;/. ,, bishop's. Corpus picture, xxxv. Robes, royal, provided, W. & M. 5, 6, 7, n- ,, ,, charges for, 78, 79, 80. ,, ,, investing with, W'. & M. 24 ; A.F. 45, 123, 148. ,, taken off, W. & M. 35, 106 ; A.F. 123. ,, ,, master of the, to provide, 7- ,, ,, wrapper for carrying to Abl)ey, W. & M. 78. ,, ,, blessing of, A.F. 44, xxv. ,, ,, .SV(' Parliament Robes and Pall. Rochester, Bishop of, in Corpus picture, xxxiv. Rods with doves, delivered, \V. & M. 25- Rod delivered, A.F. 47 ; A.S. 58. ,, See Sceptres. Saaock le tirestix et Alatan li prophete 43- i88 INDEX, Sacerdotal ornaments, xxv. xxvii. xxviii. xlii. Salve ffsta dies, 135. Sancroft, Dr. William — commission lo consecrate bishops, 73. n-}>- does not take oaths to W. & M. 129. alters coronation order, xvii.-xxix. xl. powers as a ritualist, xix;/. summoned to W. & M.'s coronation, xx;/. Sanctti!:, 13S. Sandals, king's, provided, W. & M. 5. | ,, Queen's ,, 6. ' ,, ,, ,, charges for, 79. put on, W. & M. 102, A.F. 44. ,, ,, Anne, 88. ,, ,, Geo. I. 88. ,, ,, Geo. II. 89. ,, ,, Geo. III. 89, 90. ,, mistake in putting on, 142. Sandfnrd, sumptuous edition, ix//. Saruni .Manual, change of form, xviii. Say, red, provided, 4, 6. ,, as llooring, 98. Sceptres, provided, \V. ^: M. 4, 77. ,, laid on altar, loi. ,, delivered, W. cS; M. 25, 104, 150, A.F. 47, 123, A.S. 58. ,, at inthronizalion, W. & M. 29. ,, at homage, 31. ,, carried at Recess, 35. ,, delivered to Dean of West- minster, 36. ,, in jjroceeding, 94, 95, 97, 115. ,, carried in procession, A.F. 122. ,, royal ornament, xxv. xxvi. xxvii. xxviii. xxix. ,, in Corpus picture, xxxiii. ,, (Jueen Consort's, 119. Serapion, Bisho|) of Thmuis, \\\ii. Seri'ttissiiiioniiii, I'oti'itiissi/iionitn, 1 10. Serjeants at arms, proclamation hy, 7. ,, in Corpus picture, xxxv. Sermon by Mshop or archbishop, W. iV M. 18, loi, 139; A.F. 40, 122. Shirt of fine linen for king provided, W. & M. 5. ,, ,, ,, charges for, 79. So. Geo. I. 88. (}eo. II. 89. ,, ,, Geo. III. 90, 143. ,, Geo. W, 90, 146. ,, worn for 7 days, 123. ,, red sarcenet provided, 5. ,, ,, charges for, 79. ,, ,, s|)oken of, 132, 143, I4S. Shirt, openings in, 121, 143, 146. ,, not used, 143. Shoes, not worn by king in procession, 40, 160. Shoulders, king's, anointed, W & M. 102, A.F. 44, 123, xxiv. Singing at Procession, 135. Sis^iiaculiim saiulai Irinitatis intntiat cot nx's, 56, 167. S/rt- bemfietz la force cU ces/i prime Ed-i<'ani, 49. Sire (lieii.v heiiejietz cat Edward, 42. Sire dieiix de pardttrahlete dens, 46. Siie Dieii.x oiez iioitre priere et cest espcie, .45- . Stre dieiix roy de roys et sire des sires, 44. Sirs I here pieseiit unto you, 16, ICXJ. South side king's procession, W. & .M. 15. ,, King <-*v: v: M. 21. ,, ,, provided, 77. ,, ,, set on altar, 134. Spurs delivered to King, W. \ M. 22, 103, 146, 147; A.F. 44, 123. M ,. in proceeding, 93, 94, 97, 113. "S- ., laid on altar, loi. ,, given to Dean of West- minster, 158. ,, ,, royal ornament, .\xv. xxvii. xxviii. .SV<7 it rctiue rej^aleiii statuiu lioiioris, 6', xliii. aiiiotlo, A.F. 48, III/;, 12;, 170. Stand linn and hold fast, 29, 105. ,, Stewart forms, 154. Stale, sword of, provideil, 5, ., ,, carried, 20. cloth of ,, 7, 107, cap of ,, 7. Statutes made in i'arliament, 19. Steward, I.ord, provities dinner, 3. ,, ,, issues warrants, 9. ., ,, rol)es for, 86. Stole, royal, provided 5. Sec .\rmilla. ,, GrtM.m of the, 7. Stubls, William, bishop of Oxford, xxxi. Style of W. \ M. proclainu-d, no. ,, changes -n, 132, 154. Suhiecti estolc, 13S. Submit yourselves, 1 39. SulVrages next after the Creed, 12, 1 34. .Simday, day for coronation, lo, 1 33. Su|K'rtunica, king's, provided, W. \ M. 5- /XDEX. I 9 Supertunica, king's, charges, 79. ,, ,, put on, 102, 123. ,, ,. royal ornament, xxv. xxvii. xxviii. Anne, 88. ■ Geo. I. 88, 146. ,, ,, Geo. II. 89. ,, ,, Geo. III. 90, 146. ,, ,, James II. 130. ,, ,, Charles II. 130. ,, ,, Geo. IV. 146. ,, ,, William IV. 145, 146. ,, ,, Victoria, 146. ,, described, 130. ,, if discontinued, 145. Surcoat of crimson, king's, provided, W. & M. 5. ,, crimson, king's, charges for, 79- purple, 7. spoken of, 132, 133. crimson, queen's, 6, 132. purple, ,, 7. (leo. III. 90. Geo. IV. 146. Siirstiin lOrda, ix«. xxii (3) xxiii. Sword, king's, oblation and girding, W. & M. 23, 103, 123, 147, XXX. ,, ,, redemption, 24, 104, 123, 148, XXX. ,, ,, carried naked, 24, 104. ,, ,, charges for, 79, So. ,, ',, Vjlessing of, W. & M. 23, 147, xvii. ,, ,, blessing of, A.F. 45, 123- ,, offered, A.I-. 47, 123. girding of, A.S. 57, 123, 167. ,, royal ornament, xxv. xxvii (2) xxviii. of State- carried at oath, 20, 66. at Proceeding, 93, 95, 97, 113, JI5- at oblation of sword, 103. at inthronization, 29. delivered to Dean of Westminster, 36. charges for, 86. Swords, provided, W. & M. 5. charges for, 86. not laid on altar, 17. in Proceeding, 95, 97, 1 13, 115. carried, A.F. 39, 122. held at foot of theatre, W. & M. 99. 153- at first oblation, lOO. held erected during sermon, loi. interpreted, 132, xxviii. 53' 164, (2) Table of English coronations, xii. Talbot, Sir CHlbert. See Master of the Jewel House. Taylor, Arthur, led astray by Sandford, ix;/. Te Deum landaiinis, W. & M. 28, 29 (2) 105, 150, 152; A.F. 48, 123; A.S. 53, 163, 164. Te invoiaiiiiis, A.F. 41, 122; A.S. 164. ,, altered text, 140, xxxix. ,, discontinued, 140. ,, spoken of, ix;/. xxi. xxii. (2). The Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, 18. The King \^Queeii\ shall rejoice, 136, 152. The Lord bless you and keep yoti, 28 ; Sancroft's text, 153. TIte Lord God is a sun and a shield, 31. The peace of God which passeth all under- standing, 34, 106, 158. The things which I have here before promised, 20. Theatre, passed over, W. & M. 15. ,, recognition at, 16. ,, inthronization on, 29. ,, pardon read from, 30. ,, homage on, 30. ,, passed over at Recess, 35 ; A.F. 39. 122. ,, defined, 98. Thomas, St. of Canterbury, anointing, xxix. 144. Thou shalt not appear before the Lord thy God empty, 17. Throne, provided, W. & M. 4, 6. ,, charges tor, 82. ,, at Westminster Church, 15, 122. ,, defined, 98. ,, ascended, W. rbny, xx. Wine olTered by king, W. ^: .M. 32 ; A.V. 48, 123 : .\.S. 170. • Wool, iHMnKist, to dry placo anointed, 22, 90, 145, 146. Worksop, Lord of Manor of- rich gloves, 25, 104, I4<), 150. holds sceptres, 31, 150. in Corpus picture, xxxv. IXDEX. 191 Wren, Sir Christopher, estimates, 3. ., ., ,, furnishes, 7. Wyraondley, manor of, cup of drink, 109. Yc that do truly and earnestly repent, I'l,. Yeomen of the Guard — Liveries "for, 4, S7. Proceeding, 98. York, Archbishop ol, proceeding, 97, 115. ,, ,, in Corpus picture, xxxiv. Zadock the priest and Nathan the prophet — \V. & M. 21, loi, 143 ; A.F. 43. antiquity, 142, 143. spoken of, 141, 142, 143. LUNDON : HARRISON AND SONS, PRINTERS IN ORDINARY I O IIKR MAIEslY, ST. martin's LANE. ^ S§'si ^ ^ 4» .fe s g s t > III, >«# ^5 -A V S^ ^# &• ^^5 _^T^ ^4 ^ '* ^^ -^^ fr ^*# >M ^ ^* «^S c* •CT *S S2 llirstliiililtsiilf S ;B @ ^B P P 5^^ B^^^ H e S t^' ^ o a *-» ^ ^ St 1.HH iSxSS 9:^ III. HIT) muxpo '^^^'^V^'^P^^^^^ faulorum imm - Cumcjf:TTp<;fufapirTt^ cape nunc ucftnn pallium dicxt fi bi • fumvfii hoT7onf nmkffaha5c:dcc6n palimm ur fir nbi fcummfida • ^ca. fahxaf' cir que carrmr omnium mpu^ nanrium Jncmobflaculum indue oot omamennim dionitanf rtOTpqu^nnul CD uallamf undiq:uiacaf inommbuf aflibuf mif uudaiiid rpcr^poUraf fapi cnnac ui(jdrc> ul talomon • utdcdicm dicm mbonif profiaaf- (Sc^adpTrmid.far piirmd pcmmircmcTtafifiplbiuudTTr quiuinuf cvunufdf uimiD cXrajnarpa omma fdi fdonim lmcr-^^-~-4 • Tuncaniaiir AriiipKl^bnofiifuiafTpc m . confpdKj dci .tmUliif^piirpard rcQHiif pallii ciraimder a* <^JtmiiTJuffaIunf cVLcTindCindumciinffanpc^^ in CjiuTTi comiirnir onrno^ is d III. tiTP imi^o fcoqrfpurlpOTnfiTirc^ fanLoraTn dmoi - Cumq:Tpcfufapirr^ /]l ccipe nuncucftnn palluim Jicar^fi bi • 1^ fummiboTionfr^aUffahas^dccon palluim ur fir nbi fcummfida • galea, faiiraf- cirque coTTOTTornnm^ mpu^ nairaum OncmobfexiiIumindiicaOT omamcnium dioniraiif rcmpquannal CD uallamf undiq:uiacaf mornnibiif aliibuf mif urdanid rpc:^poIlcarfapi cnnac uiabrCv ut falomon • utdcdicin dicm mbcmif piDfiaaf cSc'adpTnniiifQT purrnd pcramirr riiCTtarifipfbuiiiajTr quimnuf c3^unufdf uimi: cXrojndcpa omnia fda fdoTiim 1 m a — --i . TunCaillinn^lniipKljlx^nofiifmafTpc m tonfpdlii da .iTnilhif^puTpurd rcQ^Iif pcillii ciraimder cf Jt^niiTjuffakmf csc^loindrindumninffanpcr^^ in (]iuTn comurair otutjo^ HENRY BRADSHAW SOCIETY, FOR EDITING RARE LITURGICAL TEXTS. PRESIDENT. '1"he Bishop ok Salisbury. VICE-PRESIDENTS. The Bishop of Durham. The Bishop of Edinburgh. The Bishop of Bristol. The Dean of Carlisle. Rev. F. Procter, M.A. Monsieur Leopold Delisle. The Lord Aldenham, F.S.A. Whitley Stokes, Esq., C.S.I., CLE., D.C.L., F.S.A. Sir Edward M. Thompson, K.C.B., 1-L.D., D.C.L., V.P.S.A. G. F. Warner, Esq., M.A., F.S.A. MEMBERS OF COUNCIL. Dr. J. Wickham Legg, F.R.C.P., F.S.A., Chairtnan. Rev. E. S. Dewick, M.A., F.S.A., Hon. Treasurer. Rev, H. A. Wilson, M.A., Hon. Secretary. Rev. John H. Bernard, D.D. W. J. Birkbeck, Esq., M.A., F.S.A. Rev. W. C. Bishop, M.A. Rev. F. E. Brightman, M.A. Rev. Walter Howard Frere, M.A. W. H. St. John Hope, Esq., M.A. F. Jenkinson, Esq., M.A. F. Madan, Esq., M.A., F.S.A. J. T. Micklethwaite, Esq., V.P.S.A. A. W. Pollard, Esq., M.A. Rev. F. E. Warren, B.l)., F.S.A. Kcv. Christopher Wordsworth, M.A. HONORARY AUDITORS. Rev. Edgar Hoskins, M.A. Leland L. Duncan, Esq., F.S.A. Lis.1 of U '()>-/<:•< irZ/radv iss/n-i/. 1891. I. MISSALE AD USUM ECCLESI-K WESTMONASTKRIENSIS. lasc. i. Edited by Dr. I. W'ickham Legg, F.S.A. 8vo. [Dec. 1S91.] HI. THE .MARTILOGE. I 526. Edited by the Rev. F. Proctek, M.A., and the Rev. E. S. Bewick, M.A., F.S.A. Svo. [May, 1893.] 1892. II. THE M.VNNER OF THE CORONATION OK KING CHARLES THE FIRST, ] 626. Edited by the Rev. Chk. Wordsworth, • M.A. 8vo. [Dec. 1892.] IV. THE liANCOR ANTII'HONARIUM. Edited by tlic Rev. !•". E. \V.\RREX, B.D., F.S.A. l^art I. containing complete facsimile in collotype, wilh historical and jjak^ographical introduction. 4tO. [-'^i-'g- 1893.] 1893. V. MISSALE AD USUM ECCLESLE WESTMONASTERIENSIS, fasc. ii. Edited by Dr. J. Wickham Legg, F.S.A. 8vo. [Aug. 1893.] VI. OFFICIUM ECCLESIASTICUM ABHATUM SECUNDUM USUM EVESHAMENSIS MONASTERII. Edited by the Rev. H. A. Wilson, M.A. 8vo. [Aug. 1893.] 1894. VII. TRACTS OF CLEMENT MAVDESTONE, viz. Defexsokium DiRi.CTORii and Crede Michi. Edited by the Rev. Chr. A\'ordsworth, M.A. 8vo. [Oct. 1894.] VIII. THE WINCHESTER TROTER. Edited by the Rev. W. Howard Frere, M.A. 8vo. [Nov. 1894.] 1895. IX. THE MARTVKOLOGV OF GORMAN. Edited by ^\■HITLEV Stokes, D.C.L., Foreign Associate of the Institute of France. Svo. [Ji-'b') 1S95.] X. THE I5ANGOR ANTII'HONARIUM, Part II. containing an amended text with liturgical ir.troduction, and an apjjendix containing an edition of Harleian MS. 7653. Edited by the Rev. F. E. Warken, B.D., F.S.A. 4to. [Nov. 1895.] 1896. XI. TIIK MISSAL OK ROBERT OK JUMI^CiES, BISHOP OF LONDON, A.D. 1044- 1 05 I, AND AKCHIUSHOP OF CAN riCklffRV IN A.D. 1 05 1. Edited from a MS. in the Public Library at Rouen, by the Rev. H. A. Wilson. M.A. Svo. [July, 1896.] XII. MISSALE AD USUM ECCLESI.K W EST.MONA.STERIENSIS, fasc. iii. Containing an appendix giving certain Offices from Westminster ISISS. in the Bodleian Library and the British Museum, together with full indices, notes, and a liturgical introduction. Edited by Dr. J. Wickham Li:gg, F.S.A. Svo. [Nov. 1897.] 1897. ^^^^- TliL: IRISH LIBER IIVMNORU.M. Edited from MSS. in the Libraries of Trinity College, and the Franciscan Convent at Dublin by the Rev. John H. Bkrnakd, D.D., and Robert Atkin.son, LL. D. \o\. L, Text and Glossarj-. XIV. Vol. IL, Notes and Translations of tlie Irish Preflices and Hymns. Svo. [Ju'V' 189S.] I1S98. .X\. Till': RO.ssLVX MI>SAL. .\n Irish manuscript in the Advo- cates' Library, Edinburgh. Edited by the Rev. H. J. Lawlor, D.D. Svo. [April, 1899.] X\I. THE COkONATKJN UOOK OK CII.VRLK> V. OK KRAXCK. With reproductions in collotype of all the miniatures which illustrate the ceremony, and facsimiles of seven of them in colours and gold. P^dited by the Rev. E. S. Dfwick, ^LA.. F.S.A. 4to. [Dec. 1899.] 1899. X\ 11. MISSALE ROMANUM. Milan, 1474. (The first printed edition of the Roman Missal.) Edited by the Rev. Roi5ERr LiPPK, LL.l). Vol. L Text. Svo. [Oct. 1899.] XVHI. TIIK rROCESSIONAL Ol TllK NUNS OK ST. MARV AT (HESTER, With English rubrics. Edited by Dr. J. Wick- ham Legg, F.S.A. Svo. [Oct. 1S99.] 1900. XIX. THREE COkOXATION ORDERS: (1.) The Coronation Order of William IIL and Mary IL {2.) An Anglo- Fiench version of the English Coronation Order. (3.) Consecration of the Anglo-Saxon King. Edited by Dr. J. Wickham Legg, F.S.A. Svo. [Feb. 1901.] XX. CLEMENT M AVDESTONE's DIRECTORir.M SACERDOTU.M. lulited by (the late) Rev. Canon Cooke, ^L.\.. and the Rev. Christopher WounswoRiii, M..\. Vol. L Svo. [l-cb. 1901.] The following Works are in preparation : •I'ACSIMILES Ol" 110R.1-; i;.M.\.. reproduced in collotype from English MSS. of the nth Century, Edited by the Rev. E. S. Dewick, M.A., F.S.A. 4t0. [In the Press.] CLEMENT MAYDESTONe's DIRECTOKIUM SACERDOTUM. Edited by (the late) Rev. Canon Cooke, M.A., and the Rev. ('hristopher Wordsworth, M.A. Vol. IT. Svo. [In the Press.] THE HEREFORD BREVIARY. Edited by the Rev. W. Howard Frere, M.A., and Langtox E. G. Brown, sub-Librarian ol the Hereford Chapter Library. Svo. [In the Press.] ABBOT ware's CONSUETUDINARY OK WESTMINSTER, AND THE CONSUETUDINARY OF ST. AUGUSIINE's ABBEY, CANTERBURY. Edited by Sir E. Maunde Thompson, K.C.B., LL.D., D.C.L., F.S.A. Svo. [In the Press ] THE LITURGY OF ST. JAMES. Edited by the Rev. F, E. PRIGHJ- MAN, M.A. A MISCELLANEOUS YOLUME. Edited by Dr. J. Wickham I,E(;(;, F.S.A. Containing : — An Editiox ok a Bodleian MS. (Wood MS. 17) Langfordes Meditatyons for Goostly Exenysc in the /yine of the Masse. A Reprint of Instructio sen Alphabctuin Sacerdotum. Ordinariuin Alissie. From an early 14th Century Sarum IMissal formerly in the possession of the late Mr. William Morris, F.S.A. THE BENEDICTIONAL OF ROBERT OF JUMIEGES. Edited by the Rev. H. A. \ViLS0N, M.A. MISSALE ROMANUM, Milan, 1474. Edited by the Rev. Roi.krt Lippe, LL.D. Vol. II. Supplement and Indices. FACSIMILES OF EARL^■ MSS. OF THE CREEDS, including an early copy of Quicwique lult, from an Irish MS. in the Ambiosian Library at Milan (O. 212, sup.). Edited by the Rev. A. E. Burn, M.A. 4to. THE clerk's companion TO THE FIRST PRAYER BOOK OF EDWARD VI. l-"rom the unique copy in the British Museum. Edited by Dr. J. \\"ick.ham Lecjg, F.S.A. THE PONTIFICAL IN THli LIl;kAKV OF MAGDALEN COLLEGE. OXFORD (MS. 226), an English manuscrijjt of the twelfth centurv . Edited by the Rev. H. A, Wilson. M.A. Tin: Li;oFRIC COLLECTAKi:. .An ILnglish manuscript of the eleventh century (Harl. MS. 2961.) Edited bv the Rev. E. S. Di-.wicK, M.A., E.S.A.' TUK IJRILJITTIM, liRlA'IARN <)l TDK MNS OF SION, '.vith English rubrics. Erom a MS. at Magdalene College, Cambridge. THE MONASTIC IJRIAIARN ol- TIIK ( IILRCII OF DURHAM. (Harl MS. 4664.) Tin: COLIJERTINK i;Ri:\TARN'. Fcbntar)., 1901. *^* Persons wishing to join the Society are requested to communicate with the Hon. Secretary, the Rev. H. A. Wilson, Magdalen College, Oxford ; or with the Hon. Treasurer, the Rev. E. S. Dewick, 26, Oxford Square, Hyde Park, London, W. The books are issued to members in return for an annual subscription of one guinea, payable at the beginning of each year. Harrison & Sons, rrinters, St. Martin's Lane, W.C. HOME USE CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT MAIN LIBRARY This book is due on the last date stamped below. 1-month loans may be renewed by calling 642-3405. 6-month loans may be recharged by bringing books to Circulation Desk. Renewals and recharges may be made 4 days prior to due date. ALL BOOKS ARE SUBJECT TO RECALL 7 DAYS AFTER DATE CHECKED OUT. -zr-r fSCV AH/C JAN 19 197S . MAR 19 1976 SANTA CA. ^ ?/RA 'NTERLIBRARY IQAN BEG. CIB. miO fi£c. c/^ MAy 1 1 7r LD21— A-40m-5.'74 (HH1U114 General Library University of California Berkeiiy LD 21-100»n-2,'65 (ln39Bl.'2)470 tO'tLffl l}^ Crt-nrriii I.ihniry I'nivtTMty of (!uli(ornia Ikrkclt)