Chronicles 1: The Historie of England

Raphael Holinshed
Chronicles 1: The Historie of England

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Title: Chronicles (1 of 6): The Historie of England (1 of 8) From the Time That It Was
First Inhabited, Vntill the Time That It Was Last Conquered: Wherein the Sundrie
Alterations of the State Vnder Forren People Is Declared; And Other Manifold
Observations Remembred
Author: Raphael Holinshed
Release Date: August 9, 2005 [EBook #16496]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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THE ***

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THE
HISTORIE OF ENGLAND,
FROM
THE TIME THAT IT WAS FIRST INHABITED,
VNTILL
THE TIME THAT IT WAS LAST CONQUERED:
WHEREIN THE SUNDRIE ALTERATIONS OF THE STATE VNDER FORREN
PEOPLE IS DECLARED; AND OTHER MANIFOLD OBSERVATIONS
REMEMBRED:

* * * * *
BY RAPHAEL HOLINSHED * * * * *
NOW NEWLIE READ OVER, AND DILIGENTLIE DIGESTED INTO BOOKES AND
CHAPTERS, WITH THEIR SEUERALL ARGUMENTS PREFIXED, CONTEINING
AN ABRIDGEMENT OF THE WHOLE HISTORIE, FOR THE HELPE OF THE
READERS IUDGEMENT AND MEMORIE:
WITH TWO TABLES OF PARTICULARS,
THE ONE SERVING THE DESCRIPTION, THE OTHER THE HISTORIE:
_BY ABRAHAM FLEMING._
* * * * *
LAUS HISTORIÆ EX I. LELANDO.
QUOD SOL ÆTHEREO PRÆSTAT PULCHERRIMUS ORDI, HISTORIA HUMANIS
VBIBUS HOC TRIBUIT.

TO
THE READERS STUDIOUS IN HISTORIES.
* * * * *
The order obserued in the description of Britaine, by reason of the necessarie diuision
thereof into bookes and chapters growing out of the varietie of matters therein conteined,
seemed (in my iudgement) so conuenient a course deuised by the writer, as I was easilie
induced thereby to digest the historie of England immediatlie following into the like
method: so that as in the one, so likewise in the other, by summarie contents foregoing
euerie chapter, as also by certeine materiall titles added at the head of euerie page of the
said historie, it is a thing of no difficultie to comprehend what is discoursed and discussed
in the same.
Wherein (sith histories are said to be the registers of memorie and the monuments of
veritie) all louers of knowlege, speciallie historicall, are aduisedlie to marke (among other
points) the seuerall and successiue alterations of regiments in this land: whereof it was
my meaning to haue [Sidenote: Pag. 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 26, 27, 28, 49, 50, 51, of the
description: and pag. 765, 766, of the historie of England.] made an abstract, but that the
same is sufficientlie handled in the first booke and fourth chapter of the description of
Britaine; whereto if the seuenth chapter of the same booke be also annexed, there is litle
or no defect at all in that case wherof iustlie to make complaint.
Wherfore by remitting the readers to those, I reape this aduantage, namelie a discharge of

a forethought & purposed labour, which as to reduce into some plausible forme was a
worke both of time, paine and studie: so seeming vnlikelie to be comprised in few words
(being a matter of necessarie and important obseruation) occasion of tediousnes is to and
fro auoided; speciallie to the reader, who is further to be aduertised, that the computations
of yeares here and there expressed, according to the indirect direction of the copies
whense they were deriued and drawne, is not so absolute (in some mens opinion) as it
might haue beene: howbeit iustifiable by their originals.
Wherin hereafter (God prolonging peace in the church and commonwelth that the vse of
bookes may not be abridged) such diligent care shall be had, that in whatsoeuer the helpe
of bookes will doo good, or conference with antiquaries auaile, there shall want no will to
vse the one and the other. And yet it is not a worke for euerie common capacitie, naie it is
a toile without head or taile euen for extraordinarie wits, to correct the accounts of former
ages so many hundred yeares receiued, out of vncerteinties to raise certeinties, and to
reconcile writers dissenting in opinion and report. But as this is vnpossible, so is no more
to be looked for than may be performed: and further to inquire as it is against reason, so
to vndertake more than may commendablie be atchiued, were fowle follie.
ABRAHAM FLEMING.

* * * * *
THE FIRST BOOKE
OF THE
HISTORIE OF ENGLAND.
* * * * *

_Who inhabited this
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